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Cooking around the world
Cooking around the world

All about Sorghum > Around the world

Ground into flour, sorghum is used to make flat cakes and puddings, but cannot be used in bread making.

The flat cakes are usually served with spicy sauces or milk and butter. 

When sorghum grains are fermented

Burkina Faso
Here sorghum is transformed into “dolo,” a local beer.

Sudan
Pombé, the local beer, is a mixture of sorghum and okra. All the production is carried on by women.

China
Caoliang is a sorghum alcohol flavored with rose petals.

The Worldwide Gourmet

Mali
Sorghum is made into a kind of couscous.

Tunisia
Sorghum pudding with ginger, called sohleb, is a traditional street food.

Burkina Faso
Sorghum in all its colors accounts for almost half of Burkina Faso’s agricultural production. Along with timothy or herd’s grass, it is the best-known local grain crop and a staple of the local diet, both in cities and rural areas, where it is eaten as “tô,” a dough made by combining sorghum flour with hot water and solidifying it. Tô is generally eaten twice a day, though less often in more well-to-do families, where it is alternated with rice, acha (fonio) or imported foods.

Faced with the increased price of certain luxury foods, people in Burkina Faso have even starting making a sorghum “popcorn.” Minoungou Sophie, a Ouagadougou housewife, had the idea of perfecting puffed sorghum, a major achievement when one learns that sorghum kernels are very hard and won’t pop, even at high temperature. Mrs. Sophie explains that she soaks them for 12 hours, then half dries them, then sautés them in a little oil before salting them.

In Burkina, nothing is wasted and the whole unpopped grains are caramelized and sold as “crunch,” a children’s candy.

 

 
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Photo : Mrs. Anna Ndlovu, a 42 year old mother of eight, is one of the participating farmers of a farming project in Zimbabwe

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