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Culture of Eswatini |
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Cuisine |
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The cuisine of Eswatini is largely determined by the seasons and the geographical region. Staple foods in Eswatini include sorghum and maize,[1] often served with goat meat, a very popular livestock there.[2] The farming industry mainly depends on sugar cane, tobacco, rice, corn, peanuts, and the exportation of goat meat and beef. Many Swazis are subsistence farmers who supplement their diet with food bought from markets.
Produce and imports from coastal nations are also part of the cuisine of Eswatini .[3] Some local markets have food stalls with traditional Swazi meat stew, sandwiches, maize meal and seasonal roasted corn on the cob.[3]
Traditional foods
Traditional foods of Eswatini include:
- Sishwala—thick porridge normally served with meat or vegetables
- Incwancwa—sour porridge made of fermented cornmeal
- Sitfubi—fresh milk cooked and mixed with cornmeal
- Siphuphe setindlubu—thick porridge made of mashed ground nuts
- Emasi etinkhobe temmbila—ground corn mixed with sour milk
- Emasi emabele—ground sorghum mixed with sour milk
- Sidvudvu—porridge made of pumpkin mixed with cornmeal
- Umncweba—dried uncooked meat (biltong)
- Siphuphe semabhontjisi—thick porridge made of mashed beans
- Tinkhobe—boiled whole maize
- Umbidvo wetintsanga—cooked pumpkin tops (leaves) mixed with ground nuts
- Emahewu—meal drink made from fermented thin porridge
- Umcombotsi—traditional brewed beer in Siswati is called tjwala
See also
- African cuisine
- Umtsimba - marriage ceremony
References
- ^ "Food habits of rural Swazi households" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-06-06. Retrieved 2008-06-27.
- ^ "Swaziland Food and Drink". Archived from the original on 2008-09-19.
- ^ a b "Swaziland Food and Dining" Archived 2009-10-12 at the Wayback Machine. iExplore (website). Accessed May 2010.