Nigerian Beef-Spinach Stew

"From the American Heart Association cookbook. The book states that if you were a member of the Yoruba tribe in Nigeria, you would make this dish with melon seed and call it Efo Egusi. Efo means spinach and egusi means melon seed. In other parts of West Africa, it is known as Palaver sauce. Whatever its name, this classic African dish is usually a mixture of meat and fish. Here it has a modern addition to the sauce in the form of ginger ale. I haven't made this but I will probably make it on the stove in a Dutch oven or it seems adaptable to the crockpot."
 
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Ready In:
1hr 45mins
Ingredients:
10
Serves:
8
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ingredients

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directions

  • Brown beef cubes in oven. Add giner ale, red pepper. black pepper, and the chopped tomato.
  • Cover and simmer 1 1/2 hours or until meat is tender.
  • Meanwhile, wash the spinach, and remove any tough stems. Tear the leaves into small pieces. Slice the onions thinly and separate the slices into rings. Slice the whole tomatoes.
  • Mix the cornstarch with 1 tablespoons cold water. Stir into the stew and cook 1 minute until slightly thickened.
  • Add onion rings, tomato slices and spinach. Return to simmer. Cover and simmer until the vegetables are just tender-about 5 minutes.
  • Serve with rice.

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Reviews

  1. This recipe is totally not from Nigeria. The beef-spinach stew in the Nothern part of Nigeria; precooked mashed pumpkin is use as the thickening agent. In addition some spices (like ground fresh or dry pepper, ginger and cloves) and vegetable oil are added to the soup. This soup is served with mashed rice, Tuwo or pounded yam
     
  2. I just have to make some corrections to this dish and to the comments above: First, this is not Efo Riro because the cornstartch was meant to act like the egusi. Second, the ginger ale should never have been put into this stew. I don't know why it was suggested, but it is not needed. Also who uses soda in their stews? That is rather disgusting. Third, this recipe is not even close to the original because the texures and taste are too different. Also you are supposed to grind the tomatos and onions together into a somewhat puree. Fourth, this should just be called a beef-spinach stew(not Nigerian) because it is totally dissimilar to real Nigerian stews.
     
  3. This adaptation was a good idea but unfortunately, the results are a big let-down. This tastes nothing like the original Efo-Riro (Yoruba name for this recipe). Sometimes it's best to stay true to the original rather than try to remake it.
     
  4. I made this in a slow cooker and simmered it all day, then served it with couscous. Delicious-the kids loved it too!
     
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<p>I've collected recipes since I was a teen. After all these years I'm trying to get all my index cards and clippings, that still sound interesting to me, posted here so that I can find them and eventually make them! <br /> <br />I've posted some of my Mom's recipes. I regret not having paid more attention to my Grandmothers' cooking. They made some dishes that I miss and there were/are no recipes for them. <br /> <br />I have a wonderful DH and 2 wonderful sons. They are thrilled that I found this site since they directly benefit from it! Before finding 'Zaar, I was less of a cook and more of a recipe collector but now I try many more things and we're having more fun in the kitchen (at least I am)! <br /> <br />Thanks for all your ratings, comments and help in the forums AND for posting so many great recipes. You've enhanced my cooking skills and expanded my horizons! I've learned so much. <br /> <br />For fun, I also like to read fiction, travel, see movies and shows, shop (and I love to browse thrift shops and rummage/garage sales for cookbooks, etc.). <br /> <br />The discovery of a new dish does more for the happiness of mankind than the discovery of a new star Brillat-Savarin</p>
 
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