Authentic East African Swahili Cuisine


Book Description

A photo is included to each of 85 recipes. The book has 94 photos. Easy to follow instructions. History of Swahili food and culture makes a good book for collages that teach Swahili language. Good Home Collection. Hardcover, paperback, ebook




The East African Cookbook


Book Description

The East African Cookbook boasts a selection of recipes that reflects a cuisine that is modern and yet rooted in the traditional methods and tastes of East Africa. Author Shereen Jog is a fifth-generation Tanzanian national who shares her recipes for delicious soups, salads, main dishes and desserts. Bursting with the flavours of East African and Indian spices, these recipes will inspire everyone to cook mouth-watering meals for family and friends alike. Shereen is known for her creativity as she experiments and plays with flavours, using the abundance of fresh organic produce and the influence of a multi-cultural environment to prepare dishes that reflect the traditions of Arab, Swahili, Indian and colonial cuisines.




Stirring the Pot


Book Description

Africa’s art of cooking is a key part of its history. All too often Africa is associated with famine, but in Stirring the Pot, James C. McCann describes how the ingredients, the practices, and the varied tastes of African cuisine comprise a body of historically gendered knowledge practiced and perfected in households across diverse human and ecological landscape. McCann reveals how tastes and culinary practices are integral to the understanding of history and more generally to the new literature on food as social history. Stirring the Pot offers a chronology of African cuisine beginning in the sixteenth century and continuing from Africa’s original edible endowments to its globalization. McCann traces cooks’ use of new crops, spices, and tastes, including New World imports like maize, hot peppers, cassava, potatoes, tomatoes, and peanuts, as well as plantain, sugarcane, spices, Asian rice, and other ingredients from the Indian Ocean world. He analyzes recipes, not as fixed ahistorical documents,but as lively and living records of historical change in women’s knowledge and farmers’ experiments. A final chapter describes in sensuous detail the direct connections of African cooking to New Orleans jambalaya, Cuban rice and beans, and the cooking of African Americans’ “soul food.” Stirring the Pot breaks new ground and makes clear the relationship between food and the culture, history, and national identity of Africans.




Let's Eat


Book Description

A collection of East-African Indian recipes intended to be shared.




The Swahili


Book Description

"As an introduction to how the history of an African society can be reconstructed from largely nonliterate sources, and to the Swahili in particular, . . . a model work."—International Journal of African Historical Studies




Taste of Tanzania


Book Description

Offers more than 130 colorful authentic Swahili recipes appropriate for even the greenest of at-home cooks. While most ingredients can be found in grocery stores, this book offers alternatives for those that may be more commonly available in Africa. In addition, many of the delicious recipes call for the freshest of ingredients, offering healthy and flavorful options for the everyday diet. The food taste is unique and simple to prepare. Original.




The Africa Cookbook


Book Description

Gathers information on the unique foods of Africa and the lands they come from, and provides more than two hundred traditional and new recipes.




The Recipes of Africa


Book Description




Explore the Kenyan Kitchen


Book Description

Explore the Kenyan Kitchen - Authentic Recipes for the Home Cook is a collection of the very best of Kenyan recipes and it has easy, step-by-step well explained instructions on how to prepare each recipe. It also includes colourful photos - all of which are photographed and hand edited by me and a pantry list on things one should have for the daily use.The perfect cookbook for the home cook, this book is also geared towards anyone who would like to explore the Kenyan Kitchen in a deeper authentic way.




World on the Horizon


Book Description

The multiauthored book accompanying the World on the Horizon exhibition organized by Krannert Art Museum is the first interdisciplinary study of Swahili visual arts and their historically deep and enduring connections to eastern and central Africa, the port towns of the western Indian Ocean, Europe, and the United States. At once exhibition catalogue and scholarly inquiry, the publication features eighteen essays in a mix of formats - personal reflections, object biographies, as well as more in-depth critical treatments - and includes never before published images of works from the National Museums of Kenya and Bait Al Zubair Museum in Oman. By approaching the east African coast as a vibrant arena of global cultural convergence, these essays offer compelling new perspectives on the situated yet mobile and deeply networked social lives of Swahili objects. Moving between the broader structural relations of political economic change to more intimate narratives through which such change is experienced, the essays throw light on the ways in which the material fabric of the arts structure Swahili people's sense of self and community in an ever-changing world of oceanic and terrestrial movement.