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Yield:
8 portions
One of the foods
most frequently used in both East and West Africa is a
mush or gruel made by pounding fresh corn and squeezing
out the cornstarch. When it is cooked in boiling water
to a gruel consistency and used as a breakfast cereal it
is called Uji (Ogi, in West Africa). When it is cooked
to a thicker consistency, so that it can easily be
rolled into a ball, it is called Ugali (Agidi in West
Africa).
As a substitute
you can use cornmeal grits or buckwheat grits. Africans
in our country use any fine white cereal such as Farina
or Cream of Wheat. These cereals are surprisingly tasty
when served with meat and poultry gravies. Stone- ground
white cornmeal can be purchased in specialty food shops.
For added flavor,
try cooking cornmeal grits, farina, or any cereal in
chicken or beef stock instead of water. The cereals
absorb the flavor of the stock and make an excellent
accompaniment for meats. Rice and couscous, that
wonderful semolina grain used so abundantly in North
Africa, are delicious when prepared in this way. In
Swahili any thick mush is called Ugali. There is a light
Ugali made with cornmeal flour and there is a dark Ugali
made with millet flour, and often groundnuts (peanuts)
are ground in with the mush.
In a 2-quart
saucepan:
Boil
rapidly 1 quart WATER or CHICKEN BROTH.
Add: 1 tsp.
SALT and
1
cup ANY FINE WHITE CEREAL.
Swirl the
cereal into the boiling water and cook according to
package directions to a thick heavy mush.
Keep warm
over hot water (in a double boiler) until ready to
serve.
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