Nkwobi Recipe
Ingredients
- Cow leg (goat limbs – substitute)
- Edible ground potash ( also known as akanwu )
- Blended scotch bonnet peppers ( 1 table spoon)
- Bitter leaf (also known as Utazi leaves)
- 3 Maggi cubes
- Palm oil ( 2 cooking spoons)
- Onions ( 1 medium size)
- Dry blended red pepper (chilli flakes)
- Salt ( to taste)
- Dry Cray fish ( 1 cooking spoon)
- Bitter leaf (or Utazi leaves if you reside in Nigeria)
Cut, wash and season the cow leg with salt, dry pepper and 2 cubes of Maggi and bring to boil with 3 cups of water. Boil cow leg on medium heat for 30-40 minutes. Taste to see if it is soft. Once the meat is tender, transfer into a bowl.
Combine the blended pepper, onions, blended crayfish, salt and 1 cube of Maggi. Add water and mix thoroughly.
Place a clean cooking pot on medium heat and pour in the palm oil. Bleach the palm oil and add the edible potash and then cover up the pot for about 1 minute. Stir the oil and potash thoroughly until a thick paste is formed. Add some water to the mixture to dilute the paste.
Add the pepper, Cray fish, onion and seasonings to the pot with the paste and allow to simmer on medium heat for 5 minutes.
Place the cow leg in the serving bowl and pour in the mixture. Garnish with the bitter leaves.
Nkwobi is best served with Boiled Yam or can be used as a stand-alone dish.
Tip from one of our Afrolems Fans as a substitute for Potash.
Growing up, Mother always used dried plantain peels in place of potash. She’ld burn it and then use the ash (mixed in water). The result is almost the same.
She made me to understand that too much consumption of potash is not very healthy. Infact, most people react to it. They tend to have running stomach after eating any food that was prepared with akanwu. (African salad, nkwobi, isi ewu, abacha, etc)
So for some of us who reside in areas where potash might be scarce, why not try plantain peelings. #mytwocents#
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