Cape Times

African cookbook from ‘hottest new foodie collective’

- REVIEW: Nick Duerden

THE GROUNDNUT

COOKBOOK

Duval Timothy, Jacob Fodio Todd and Folayemi Brown

Michael Joseph THERE are few literary genres as unnecessar­ily overpopula­ted as the cookbook, just as there are few seasons that don’t usher in yet another French culinary compendium, an Italian one, Chinese, Japanese, Indian and so on.

But there aren’t many African cookbooks.

“We’ve seen a few North African ones, and mostly thanks to Yotam Ottolenghi,” says Duval Timothy, a 25-yearold from south London who, along with his friends Folayemi Brown, 26, and Jacob Fodio Todd, 30, is about to redress that glaring absence with The Groundnut Cookbook.

“But we’ve found nothing sub-Saharan at all. You occasional­ly come across the odd West African recipe here and there, but they are often tailored for British tastes, in the same way that chicken tikka masala is, which really doesn’t resemble any Indian dish.

“We’re quite happy to initiate a similar crossover, but what we are trying to do is make our African food authen- tic African food.”

A book that covers African cuisine, even if it’s just the subSaharan part, is undeniably asking for trouble – you can imagine the French flinching if they were ever included alongside the Brits in something called “European cuisine” – but the Groundnut boys are wellplaced to make a valiant attempt at bringing together the myriad menus of a vast continent comprising over 50 countries. Between them, they have roots in Nigeria and Sierra Leone, while one of them, Todd, grew up in Mozambique, Tanzania and Swaziland.

Formative memories comprise multigener­ational family gatherings – across Africa and south-east London, where Timothy and Brown were born and raised – in which the focal point, Brown says, was never the music and rarely the dancing but always the food piled high on the tables. “It was all about the atmosphere and the socialisin­g but mostly about the eating,” he says.

The three friends had been following respective career paths – Timothy as an artist, Brown in sports physiother­apy, while Todd was working for a research and developmen­t team in Central Africa – when they decided to host their own popup restaurant evening specialisi­ng in the food of their youth. Timothy’s architect father had offered him use of his Tower Bridge office space for an art exhibition, but instead he and his friends used it as a subSaharan dining experience for 32 friends and family seated on two long tables, where everyone was encouraged to share Yorkshire pudding with mango curd, moin-moin (black eyed beans, peppers and garlic) and edible fruit bowls made of sweet pastry. “It was a big success,” he says.

Duly encouraged, they decided to do more pop-ups, first bi-monthly, then monthly, selling tickets at £25 a head and telling acquaintan­ces to spread the word to anyone with adventurou­s tastes and a willingnes­s for communal dining, cutlery optional. “Eating with your hands can be very liberating,” Todd says.

They proved to be immersive experience­s, as much for the chefs as the guests. “Oh, it was very pressurise­d,” Timo- thy says. “If we did two nights a month – three if we were feeling particular­ly reckless – we’d have to work at it for a full month beforehand in preparatio­n: the logistics, the menu, even the furniture required for hosting that many people. We’d all cook the food, but on the night, me and Jacob would be in the kitchen while Yemi was front of house.”

The initiative was rapidly gaining both momentum and a financial incentive; as a consequenc­e, they grew in confidence. “We wanted to write a book next,” says Timothy. So they did, subsequent­ly signing to Penguin in a reputed sixfigure deal. And so what started out in a small room with a few friends is beginning to develop an internatio­nal reputation. They recently hosted an event in Paris, and Brown says that the idea of doing something similar in America “might be a lot of fun”.

If African food has hitherto failed to cross borders, he says, then this may be out of ignorance. African food is, after all, as varied as any other. “Many people may have heard of, say, jollof rice, but not much else.” He says many of the continent’s more familiar dishes – millet, and ugani, a stodgy substance not unlike polenta – can seem a little plain for the cultured palate.

“It’s certainly true that the staple foods aren’t often seasoned,” he says, “but that’s why you bounce it off some very rich and tasty sauces. The whole idea of this is combinatio­ns, putting all sorts of things together, the plain and the crisp, the sweet and sour. So, sure, ugani doesn’t have much taste on its own, but use it to scoop up the sauce and suddenly you’ve got this proper taste sensation going on.”

They make for convincing ambassador­s. And the ingredient­s they use are available across the UK. “There are so many great street markets everywhere, and not just in London, where we are pretty much spoilt for choice,” Brown says. “You can even buy yams in Glasgow now.”

The future for all three, then, seems exclusivel­y Groundnut-focused, previous careers temporaril­y shelved. Meanwhile, Penguin’s marketing campaign is going into overdrive to turn The Groundnut Cookbook into a craze – one women’s magazine has already complied, called the trio “the hottest new foodie collective in town”. “We just want to get our message out there. African food, all of it, is amazing. We’ve never met anyone that doesn’t like it. Our work now is to make it accessible to everyone.” – The Independen­t Serves: 6 Ingredient­s

Place the chicken pieces into a large bowl, add the salt, black pepper and white pepper, and mix well.

In a wide frying pan, fry the chicken with 3 tablespoon­s of olive oil on a medium heat. The chicken should not overlap, as this will prevent it from browning. If you are using a small pan, fry the chicken in batches.

Pierce the Scotch bonnet pepper with a sharp knife and add it to the pan. Piercing the pepper means that the stew absorbs the flavour of the pepper, but if it becomes too spicy it can be removed at any point. Shake the pan regularly so that the chicken does not stick. Turn over after 5 minutes. While the chicken is browning, finely dice the onions and crush the garlic to a paste. Keep separate and put to one side.

After 5 minutes, add half the garlic to the pan and fry for a further 5 minutes, so that the garlic and chicken brown together. When given room in the pan, garlic caramelise­s very quickly this gives a lovely rich flavour and texture which attaches itself to the chicken. When the chicken has browned nicely on both sides, remove it from the pan and put to one side. Using the same pan, slightly increase the heat to medium-high and add the diced onions and 2 tablespoon­s of olive oil. Cook the onions for 12 minutes, stirring regularly. When they are very soft and dark, turn the heat down to medium and add the tomato purée and the remaining garlic. Mix well and cook for 5 minutes, then add the groundnut butter and stir.

Put the browned chicken back into the pan and add the stock slowly while stirring, so that it is incorporat­ed with the sauce. Leave to cook on a low heat for 25 minutes, stirring occasional­ly. It should reduce slightly and take on a thicker consistenc­y. Serve hot.

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