The
other Central African treat that I got to enjoy in Yola this past weekend was ntete, again I’m using the name used in
Congo (Kituba). Known as “egusi pudding” in parts of Cameroon, this can supposedly
be obtained at a couple Cameroonian restaurants in Maryland (in the DC Metro area), for example--The Roger Miller Cafe and A Kitchen Near You--but
only on special order with ample notice of interest ahead of time. I was never
able to arrange this while in DC but I had consequently built up an appetite
for this a few months back and ended up finding a recipe, testing it out, and
then making a big batch as part of an international foods cook-off at my old
office, for which I won prize for best appetizer J
Anyways, getting back to Yola ... On Saturdays, the university arranges for a bus to take faculty to the market. The
gas and electric technicians showed up at my door just before bus for the
market was too arrive (oh dear, I feel a brief digression coming on). Well, actually, I don't think they "arrived" just then. Rather, I opened in anticipation of the bus arriving at any minute to find the technicians had been waiting quietly outside all morning. A bit confused as to what to do since I was set to go the the market, I conceded "well, let's get this over with since they're here, even if I end up missing the ride to the market." First, the technician looks at the stove piping and repeats something I gathered from the housing coordinator earlier in the week. "The stove unit itself has problems, so you'll need to arrange for a new one to be supplied." Okay, that's straightforward enough. Are we done for now? Maybe I won't miss the bus after all. "Well, maybe I can make it work?" Whoa! Which is it? Either the stove is condemned or not? I like your first diagnosis. Let's just wait and get a new stove. The technician, who apparently brought no tools!, proceeds to borrow a butcher's knife from my kitchen to cut a few inches off the gas tube. Then he asks he asks one of his assistants to see if he can go and fetch or borrow a shifting spanner (an adjustable wrench, that is). Oh dear. Before they run off to bug the neighbors or drive home to get a wrench, I lend them the one I had just bought to put my bicycle together. He reconnects the tubing and tightens it firmly, then borrows my sponge and dish soap to coat the connection with soap suds to see if any gas is leaking. Checks out okay. No apparent leaks. Now, let's go ahead and test the burners. He turns on one burner and starts randomly flicking the lighter in a guessing game (for him) as to which burner goes he had just turned on. Um, excuse, I think it's this one, as indicated on the knob. (Granted, those stove-knob-to-burner indicators can be a bit confusing, but you'd think a gas technician would know a thing or two about testing gas stove burners!)
End of digression. The bus actually came closer to 10:30, so market trip was still on. And in spite of some lingering apprehension about whether or not I could truly count on a stove to cook with now, I could keep cooking items in mind while at the market. Inspired when I came across one of the many egusi
melon seed stands, I bought the ingredients to make a batch of egusi pudding:
freshly ground egusi melon seeds, some smoked fish, ginger root, maggi cube
seasoning. I already had onion, salt, and red pepper at home. I asked where to
find banana leaves – not an ingredient! ... but necessary for the preparation of
this dish – but I was told “only in the bush (out in the villages)”. So, I had
the ingredients, but I’ll still needed to find banana leaves or figure out how to
make do with something else. Later that day, while sweeping some leaves off my
back patio, the guard, Bappa, came around to tell me there was a
gardener/grounds keeper who’s job it was to do such work (as if it was a crime
or a burden for me to wave a broom for a few seconds). The conversation turned
to gardening and the things one might plant in the tiny plot of dirt next to
the patio, and Bappa then drew my attention to the obvious: I had two banana trees
growing next to the fence – one of which bore a regime of bananas that is
getting close to the right size for harvesting, by the way. No need to hunt for
banana leaves; I could make egusi pudding preparation part of my activities for
Sunday.
Hello,
ReplyDeleteI am sure u enjoyed ur meal. It looks good. But the method of cooking it was wrong. u had to steam not boil. by this i mean use water vapour not water itself. one missing ingredient is egg. All in all am impressed good luck as u enjoy the cameroonian meal.