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EATING IN

Fine Nigerian cuisine is on Tom’s menu as he tries out two home-delivered boxes

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The only thing I really know about Nigerian food is that I really want some more. A double dinner – of suya and red soup, fried plantain and jollof rice – on a sultry summer night last year introduced me to flavours and textures both comforting­ly familiar and thrillingl­y alien too.

Chop, Chat and Chill Kits come from Chuku’s (chukuslond­on. co.uk), the small Tottenham ‘Nigerian tapas’ place that’s making a big noise. The House Wrapper (£26.50 plus £6.50 delivery) sees four huge, soft flour tortillas stuffed full with beef, jollof quinoa (lots of tomato and spice), a crisp salad wearing a perky honey chilli dressing, and, perhaps best of all, those sauces – ata din din, all red, sharp scotch bonnet fire. And ayamase, a pourable take on the famous ayamase stew, with green peppers, a good kick of chilli and the rich umami depth of fermented locust beans. A side order of suya meatballs (£7.75) is wonderful too, delicately spiced with whispers of cloves, chillies and ginger. My only complaint? Not enough of that magnificen­t sauce. But this is sufficient for two greedy people, and will leave you smacking your lips with joy.

If Chuku’s was a joy, then the box from Chishuru (via dishpatch.co.uk, £55 plus £5.50 delivery) is a revelation. This Brixton West African restaurant started as a supper club, and chef Adejoké Bakare sure can cook. By now, the box contents may have changed, but that talent won’t be going anywhere. Cassava fritters, like a sort of tropical rosti, crisp, chewy and laced through with onions. Dipped hot into a cool coconut sauce, they’re gloriously addictive. Pork asun, a Nigerian peppered meat dish, sees great hunks of good quality pig, laced through with lots of lovely fat, in a tart hot pepper sauce. Add exemplary jollof rice, and a kale salad (with zinging lemon dressing and rings of picked onion) that actually makes this dreary leaf attractive, and you have a glorious restaurant box kit. Easy to cook too. Even pudding – hibiscus poached pears with yogurt and a millet spiced crumble – is divine. Both Chuku’s and Chishuru offer a delectably modern take on West African classics. An entry, at least for me, into a whole new world of delight. When restrictio­ns eventually end, Tottenham and Brixton await.

These dishes are an entry into a whole new world of delight

 ??  ?? CHUKU’S HOUSE WRAPPER BOX: ENOUGH ‘FOR TWO GREEDY PEOPLE’
CHUKU’S HOUSE WRAPPER BOX: ENOUGH ‘FOR TWO GREEDY PEOPLE’
 ??  ?? CASSAVA FRITTERS WITH COOL COCONUT SAUCE FROM CHISHURU
CASSAVA FRITTERS WITH COOL COCONUT SAUCE FROM CHISHURU

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