Ghanaian cuisine


Ghanaian cuisine is the cuisine of the Ghanaian people. Ghanaian main dishes are organized around a starchy staple food, with which goes a sauce or soup containing a protein source. The main ingredient for the vast majority of soups and stews are tomatoes- canned or fresh tomatoes can be used. As a result, nearly all Ghanaian soups and stews are red or orange in appearance.

Main staple foods

The typical staple foods in the southern part of Ghana include cassava and plantain. In the northern part, the main staple foods include millet and sorghum. Yam, maize and beans are used across Ghana as staple foods. Sweet potatoes and cocoyam are also important in the Ghanaian diet and cuisine. With the advent of globalization, Cereals such as rice and wheat have been increasingly incorporated into Ghanaian cuisine. The foods below represent Ghanaian dishes made out of these staple foods.

Foods made with maize

A deviation to the starch and stew combination are "Red red" and "tubaani". These are primarily based on vegetable protein. "Red Red" is a popular Ghanaian bean and fish stew served with fried ripe plantain and often accompanied with gari, fish and pulses. It earns its name from the palm oil that tints the bean stew and the bright orange color of the fried ripe plantain. Tubaani is a boiled bean cake, also called moimoi in Nigeria.

Foods made with yam

Most Ghanaian side dishes are served with a stew, soup or Mako. Ghanaian stews and soups are quite sophisticated, with liberal and delicate use of exotic ingredients, a wide variety of flavours, spices and textures.
Vegetables such as palm nuts, peanuts, cocoyam leaves, ayoyo, spinach, wild mushroom, okra, garden eggs, tomatoes and various types of pulses are the main ingredients in Ghanaian soups and stews and in the case of pulses, may double as the main protein ingredient.
Beef, pork, goat, lamb, chicken, smoked turkey, tripe, dried snails, and fried fish are common sources of protein in Ghanaian soups and stews, sometimes mixing different types of meat and occasionally fish into one soup. Soups are served as a main course rather than a starter. It is also common to find smoked meat, fish and seafood in Ghanaian soups and stews.
that has been salted They include crab, shrimp, periwinkles, octopus, snails, grubs, duck, offal, and pig's trotters. Also oysters.
Meat, mushrooms and seafood may be smoked, salted or dried for flavour enhancement and preservation. Salt fish is widely used to flavour fish based stews. Spices such as thyme, garlic, onions, ginger, peppers, curry, basil, nutmeg, sumbala, Tetrapleura tetraptera and bay leaf are delicately used to achieve the exotic and spicy flavours that characterizes Ghanaian cuisine.
Palm oil, coconut oil, shea butter, palm kernel oil and peanut oil are important Ghanaian oils used for cooking or frying and may sometime not be substituted in certain Ghanaian dishes. For example, using palm oil in okro stew, eto, fante fante, red red, egusi stew and mpihu/mpotompoto. Coconut oil, palm kernel oil and shea butter have lost their popularity for cooking in Ghana due to the introduction of refined oils and negative Ghanaian media adverts targeted at those oils. They are now mostly used in few traditional homes, for soap making and by commercial food vendors as a cheaper substitute to refined cooking oils.
Common Ghanaian soups are groundnut soup, light soup, kontomire soup, Palm Nut Soup, ayoyo soup and okra soup.
Ghanaian tomato stew or gravy is a stew that is often served with rice or waakye. Other vegetable stews are made with kontomire, garden eggs, egusi, spinach, okra, etc.

Breakfast meals

Most of the dishes mentioned above are served during lunch and supper in modern Ghana. However, those engaged in manual labour and a large number of urban dwellers still eat these foods for breakfast and will usually buy them from the streets.
In large Ghanaian cities, working-class people would often take fruit, tea, chocolate drink, oats, rice porridge or kooko and koose/akara or maasa. Other breakfast foods include grits, tombrown, and millet porridge.
Bread is an important feature in Ghanaian breakfast and baked foods. Ghanaian bread, which is known for its good quality, is baked with wheat flour and sometimes cassava flour is added for an improved texture. There are four major types of bread in Ghana. They are tea bread, sugar bread, brown bread, and butter bread. Rye bread, oat bread and malt bread are also quite common.

Sweet foods

There are many sweet local foods which have been marginalized due to their low demand and long preparation process. Ghanaian sweet foods may be fried, barbecued, boiled, roasted, baked or steamed.
Fried sweet foods include cubed and spiced ripe plantain sometimes served with peanuts. Koose made from peeled beans, maasa, pinkaaso, and bofrot/Puff-puff ; kuli-kuli, dzowey and nkate cake ; kaklo and tatale ; kube cake and kube toffee ; bankye krakro, gari biscuit, and krakye ayuosu ; condensed milk, toffee, plantain chips and wagashi are fried Ghanaian savory foods.
Kebabs are popular barbecues and can be made from beef, goat, pork, soy flour, sausages and guinea fowl. Other roasted savoury foods include roasted plantain, maize, yam and cocoyam.
Steamed fresh maize, Yakeyake, Kafa, Akyeke, tubani, moimoi, emo dokonu and esikyire dokonu are all examples of steamed and boiled foods whilst sweet bread,, and meat pie similar to Jamaican patties and empanadas are baked savoury foods. Aprapransa, eto and atadwe milk are other savory foods. Gari soakings is a modern favorite. It is a blend of gari, sugar, groundnut and milk.

Beverages

In southern Ghana, Ghanaian drinks such as asaana are common. Along the Lake Volta and in southern Ghana, palm wine extracted from the palm tree can be found, but it ferments quickly and then it is used to distil akpeteshie. Akpeteshie can be distilled from molasses too. In addition, a beverage can be made from kenkey and refrigerated into what is in Ghana known as iced kenkey. In northern Ghana, bisaab/sorrel, toose and lamujee are common non-alcoholic beverages whereas pitoo is an alcoholic beverage.
In urban areas of Ghana drinks may include fruit juice, cocoa drinks, fresh coconut water, yogurt, ice cream, carbonated drinks, malt drinks and soy milk. In addition, Ghanaian distilleries produce alcoholic beverages from cocoa, malt, sugar cane, local medicinal herbs and tree barks. They include bitters, liqueur, dry gins, beer, and aperitifs.

Street foods in Ghana

is very popular in both rural and urban areas of Ghana. Most Ghanaian families eat at least three times a week from street food vendors, from whom all kinds of foods can be bought, including staple foods such as kenkey, red red and waakye. Other savoury foods such as kebab, boiled corn cob, boflot and roasted plantain are sold mainly by street food vendors.

Common Ghanaian dishes