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Akara

Àkàrà (Yoruba) (English: bean cake; Hausa: kosai; Portuguese: acarajé (Portuguese pronunciation: [akaɾaˈʒɛ] ) is a type of fritter made from cowpeas or beans (black-eyed peas) from Yorubaland in Nigeria, Togo and Benin. It is found throughout West African, Caribbean, and Brazilian cuisines. The dish is traditionally encountered in Brazil's northeastern state of Bahia, especially in the city of Salvador. Acarajé serves as both a religious offering to the gods in the Candomblé religion and as street food.[1] The dish was brought by enslaved peoples from West Africa, and can still be found in various forms in Nigeria, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Mali, Gambia, Burkina Faso and Sierra Leone.[2]

Acarajé
Acarajé in Salvador, Brazil
Alternative namesAcara, Àkàrà, Kosai
CourseStreet food
Place of originYorubaland
Associated cuisineNigeria, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Mali, Gambia, Burkina Faso, Senegal, and Brazil
Serving temperatureHot
Main ingredientsBeans, deep-fried in epo (palm oil) or ororo (peanut oil)
  •   Media: Acarajé
Àkàrà/Kosai is a type of fritter made from beans.

Akara/kosai is made from peeled beans (black-eyed peas), washed and ground with pepper, and other preferred seasonings, then beaten to aerate them, and deep-fried in small balls.[3][4]

Brazilian acarajé is made from raw and milled cowpeas that are seasoned with salt and chopped onions molded into the shape of a large scone and deep-fried in dendê with a wok-like pan in front of the customers.[2] It is served split in half and stuffed with vatapá and caruru – spicy pastes made from shrimp, ground cashews, palm oil and other ingredients.[5] A vegetarian version is typically served with hot peppers and green tomatoes. Acarajé can also come in a second form called abará, where the ingredients are steamed instead of deep-fried.

Etymology edit

Àkàrà is a Yoruba word meaning "pastry", or the dish itself. The Brazilian term "acarajé" derives from either the Yoruba word combinations "àkàrà" (bread) and "onje" (food), or "àkará" (a round pastry) and "je" (to eat).[6][7] Márcio de Jagun states that the word is derived from the Yoruba àkàrà n'jẹ, or "come and eat àkàrà"; the phrase was used to call out to customers by women selling acarajé on the street.[8][9]

History edit

 
Acarajé

Akara plays a significant role in the Yoruba culture, as it is specially prepared when a person who has come of age (70 and above) dies. It is usually prepared in large quantities and distributed across every household close to the deceased. Akara also used to be prepared in large as a sign of victory, when warriors came back victorious from war. The women, especially the wives of the Warriors were to fry akara and distribute it to the villagers.

Akara (as it is known in southwest Nigeria) a recipe taken to Brazil by the enslaved peoples from the West African coast. It is called "akara" by the Yoruba people of south-western Nigeria and by the citizens of Sierra Leone, "kosai" by the Hausa people of Nigeria or "koose" in Ghana and is a popular breakfast dish, eaten with millet or corn pudding. In Nigeria, akara is commonly eaten with bread, akamu ogi (or eko), a type of cornmeal made with fine corn flour.

In Sierra Leone, akara is composed of rice flour, mashed banana, baking powder, and sugar. After mixed together, it is dropped in oil by hand, and fried, similar to Puff-puff. It is then formed into a ball. Akara is usually prepared for events like Pulnado (event held due to the birth of a child), a wedding, funeral, or party.

In Brazil edit

 
Baiana selling acarajé on the streets of Salvador, Brazil.

Acarajé sold on the street in Brazil are variously made with fried beef, mutton, dried shrimp, pigweed, fufu osun sauce, and coconut.[6] Today in Bahia, Brazil, most street vendors who serve acarajé are women, easily recognizable by their all-white cotton dresses and headscarves and caps. They first appeared in Bahia selling acarajé in the 19th century. Earnings from the sale of acarajé were used both to buy the freedom of enslaved family members until the abolition of slavery in Brazil in 1888; its sale additionally served as a source of family income.[9] The city now has more than 500 acarajé vendors. The image of these women, often simply called baianas, frequently appears in artwork from the region of Bahia.[1][2][10] Acarajé, however, is available outside of the state of Bahia as well, including the streets of its neighborboring state of Sergipe, and the markets of Rio de Janeiro.[11]

In Candomblé edit

Acarajé is an essential ritual food used in Afro-Brazilian religious traditions such as Candomblé. The first acarajé in a Candomblé ritual is offered to the orixá Exu. They vary in size based on their offering to a specific deity: large, round acarajé are offered to Xangô; ones smaller in form are offered to Iansã.[6] Small, fritter-size acarajé are offered to erês, or child spirits. Acarajé is used in Candomblé rituals in the states of Bahia, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Pernambuco, Alagoas, Sergipe, and Maranhão. It is closely related to acaçá, a similar ritual food made of steamed corn mush.[2][1][11]

Acarajé de azeite-doce edit

Acarajé de azeite-doce is a variety of acarajé fried in an oil other than palm oil; olive oil or other vegetable oils are generally used. Acarajé de azeite-doce is used in Candomblé offerings to orixás with a ritual prohibition of the use of palm oil. This variety is found in the states of Bahia and Rio de Janeiro.[11]

Acarajé de Xangô (Sango) edit

Acarajé de Xangô (Àkàrà tí Ṣangó) is a variety of acarajé offered to the orixá Xangô, known as the òriṣà Ṣangó in the Yoruba culture. It is made of the same ingredients as the common form but greatly elongated. This variety is found on the ritual platter of amalá offered to Xangô. This variety is found in the states of Bahia and states of Bahia and Rio de Janeiro.[11]

Protected status edit

Acarajé was listed as a national intangible historic heritage (patrimônio nacional imaterial), by the National Institute of Historic and Artistic Heritage in 2004; the role of baianas in the preparation and sale of acarajé was recognized in the same act.[9] In October 2023, Rio de Janeiro declared the fritter to be part of that city's cultural heritage.[12]

Nutrition edit

Akara is a good source of proteins, vitamins and minerals such as calcium, iron and zinc,[13][14] although its nutritional value is usually reduced by the presence of antinutritional factors such as phytates, fibers, lectins, polyphenols and tannins that affect minerals' bioavailability.[13]

In popular culture edit

Akara (acarajé) was featured on the Netflix TV series Street Food volume 2, which focused on Latin American street foods.[15]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Lum, Casey, ed. (2016). Urban Foodways and Communication: Ethnographic Studies in Intangible Cultural Food Heritages Around the World. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 125. ISBN 9781442266438.
  2. ^ a b c d (in Portuguese). Brasília, Brazil: Instituto do Patrimônio Histórico e Artístico Nacional (Iphan). 2014. Archived from the original on 2019-01-01. Retrieved 2016-10-01.
  3. ^ "How to make Akara/kosai - African Bean Fritters recipe". Chef Lola's Kitchen. 2021-04-06. Retrieved 2022-06-01.
  4. ^ "Pap & akara bean balls with sweet plantain (Breakfast) Recipe by Da-Princess Kitchen Culinary Concept(Chef DPK)". Cookpad. 20 October 2021. Retrieved 2022-06-01.
  5. ^ Blazes, Marian. . About.com. Archived from the original on 29 April 2013. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  6. ^ a b c Barbosa, Ademir (2015). Dicionário de umbanda. São Paulo: Anubis. p. 20. ISBN 9788567855264.
  7. ^ Ali, Mohammed. "Akara | Deep-fried bean-flour fritter known all over Northern-Niger..." Yerwa Express News. Retrieved 2022-06-01.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ Jagun, Márcio de (2015). Orí: a cabeça como divindade, história, cultura, filosofia e religiosidade africana. Rio de Janeiro: Litteris. p. 221. ISBN 9788537402573.
  9. ^ a b c Jagun, Marcio de (2017). Yorùbá: vocabulário temático do candomblé (in Portuguese). Rio de Janeiro, RJ: Litteris Editora UERJ, Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro. p. 64. ISBN 9788537403181.
  10. ^ Cardoso, Ryzia De Cássia Vieira; et al. (2014). Street Food: Culture, Economy, Health and Governance. London New York: Routledge, Earthscan from Routledge. ISBN 9781317689911.
  11. ^ a b c d Lody, Raul (2003). Dicionário de arte sacra & técnicas afro-brasileiras. Rio de Janeiro: Pallas. p. 37. ISBN 9788534701877.
  12. ^ "Acarajé se torna Patrimônio Histórico e Cultural do Rio e causa polêmica entre baianos".
  13. ^ a b Almeida, Deusdélia T.; Greiner, Ralf; Furtunado, Dalva M. N.; Trigueiro, Ivaldo N. S.; Araújo, Maria da Purificação N. (2008-01-24). "Content of some antinutritional factors in bean cultivars frequently consumed in Brazil: Antinutrients in beans". International Journal of Food Science & Technology. 43 (2): 243–249. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2621.2006.01426.x.
  14. ^ Carvalho, Ana Fontenele Urano; de Sousa, Nathanna Mateus; Farias, Davi Felipe; da Rocha-Bezerra, Lady Clarissa Brito; da Silva, Renata Maria Pereira; Viana, Martônio Ponte; Gouveia, Sandro Thomaz; Sampaio, Silvana Saker; de Sousa, Marcia Barbosa; de Lima, Glauber Pacelli Gomes; de Morais, Selene Maia (2012-05-01). "Nutritional ranking of 30 Brazilian genotypes of cowpeas including determination of antioxidant capacity and vitamins". Journal of Food Composition and Analysis. 26 (1): 81–88. doi:10.1016/j.jfca.2012.01.005. ISSN 0889-1575.
  15. ^ Anderson, John. "'Street Food: Latin America' Review: A Platter of Vicarious Delights". WSJ. Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Retrieved 9 September 2020.

External links edit

  • Recipe for Nigerian Chin Chin

akara, Àkàrà, yoruba, english, bean, cake, hausa, kosai, portuguese, acarajé, portuguese, pronunciation, akaɾaˈʒɛ, type, fritter, made, from, cowpeas, beans, black, eyed, peas, from, yorubaland, nigeria, togo, benin, found, throughout, west, african, caribbean. Akara Yoruba English bean cake Hausa kosai Portuguese acaraje Portuguese pronunciation akaɾaˈʒɛ is a type of fritter made from cowpeas or beans black eyed peas from Yorubaland in Nigeria Togo and Benin It is found throughout West African Caribbean and Brazilian cuisines The dish is traditionally encountered in Brazil s northeastern state of Bahia especially in the city of Salvador Acaraje serves as both a religious offering to the gods in the Candomble religion and as street food 1 The dish was brought by enslaved peoples from West Africa and can still be found in various forms in Nigeria Ghana Togo Benin Mali Gambia Burkina Faso and Sierra Leone 2 AcarajeAcaraje in Salvador BrazilAlternative namesAcara Akara KosaiCourseStreet foodPlace of originYorubalandAssociated cuisineNigeria Ghana Togo Benin Mali Gambia Burkina Faso Senegal and BrazilServing temperatureHotMain ingredientsBeans deep fried in epo palm oil or ororo peanut oil Media AcarajeAkara Kosai is a type of fritter made from beans Akara kosai is made from peeled beans black eyed peas washed and ground with pepper and other preferred seasonings then beaten to aerate them and deep fried in small balls 3 4 Brazilian acaraje is made from raw and milled cowpeas that are seasoned with salt and chopped onions molded into the shape of a large scone and deep fried in dende with a wok like pan in front of the customers 2 It is served split in half and stuffed with vatapa and caruru spicy pastes made from shrimp ground cashews palm oil and other ingredients 5 A vegetarian version is typically served with hot peppers and green tomatoes Acaraje can also come in a second form called abara where the ingredients are steamed instead of deep fried Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 In Brazil 3 In Candomble 3 1 Acaraje de azeite doce 3 2 Acaraje de Xango Sango 4 Protected status 5 Nutrition 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEtymology editAkara is a Yoruba word meaning pastry or the dish itself The Brazilian term acaraje derives from either the Yoruba word combinations akara bread and onje food or akara a round pastry and je to eat 6 7 Marcio de Jagun states that the word is derived from the Yoruba akara n jẹ or come and eat akara the phrase was used to call out to customers by women selling acaraje on the street 8 9 History edit nbsp AcarajeAkara plays a significant role in the Yoruba culture as it is specially prepared when a person who has come of age 70 and above dies It is usually prepared in large quantities and distributed across every household close to the deceased Akara also used to be prepared in large as a sign of victory when warriors came back victorious from war The women especially the wives of the Warriors were to fry akara and distribute it to the villagers Akara as it is known in southwest Nigeria a recipe taken to Brazil by the enslaved peoples from the West African coast It is called akara by the Yoruba people of south western Nigeria and by the citizens of Sierra Leone kosai by the Hausa people of Nigeria or koose in Ghana and is a popular breakfast dish eaten with millet or corn pudding In Nigeria akara is commonly eaten with bread akamu ogi or eko a type of cornmeal made with fine corn flour In Sierra Leone akara is composed of rice flour mashed banana baking powder and sugar After mixed together it is dropped in oil by hand and fried similar to Puff puff It is then formed into a ball Akara is usually prepared for events like Pulnado event held due to the birth of a child a wedding funeral or party In Brazil edit nbsp Baiana selling acaraje on the streets of Salvador Brazil Acaraje sold on the street in Brazil are variously made with fried beef mutton dried shrimp pigweed fufu osun sauce and coconut 6 Today in Bahia Brazil most street vendors who serve acaraje are women easily recognizable by their all white cotton dresses and headscarves and caps They first appeared in Bahia selling acaraje in the 19th century Earnings from the sale of acaraje were used both to buy the freedom of enslaved family members until the abolition of slavery in Brazil in 1888 its sale additionally served as a source of family income 9 The city now has more than 500 acaraje vendors The image of these women often simply called baianas frequently appears in artwork from the region of Bahia 1 2 10 Acaraje however is available outside of the state of Bahia as well including the streets of its neighborboring state of Sergipe and the markets of Rio de Janeiro 11 In Candomble editAcaraje is an essential ritual food used in Afro Brazilian religious traditions such as Candomble The first acaraje in a Candomble ritual is offered to the orixa Exu They vary in size based on their offering to a specific deity large round acaraje are offered to Xango ones smaller in form are offered to Iansa 6 Small fritter size acaraje are offered to eres or child spirits Acaraje is used in Candomble rituals in the states of Bahia Rio de Janeiro Sao Paulo Pernambuco Alagoas Sergipe and Maranhao It is closely related to acaca a similar ritual food made of steamed corn mush 2 1 11 Acaraje de azeite doce edit Acaraje de azeite doce is a variety of acaraje fried in an oil other than palm oil olive oil or other vegetable oils are generally used Acaraje de azeite doce is used in Candomble offerings to orixas with a ritual prohibition of the use of palm oil This variety is found in the states of Bahia and Rio de Janeiro 11 Acaraje de Xango Sango edit Acaraje de Xango Akara ti Ṣango is a variety of acaraje offered to the orixa Xango known as the oriṣa Ṣango in the Yoruba culture It is made of the same ingredients as the common form but greatly elongated This variety is found on the ritual platter of amala offered to Xango This variety is found in the states of Bahia and states of Bahia and Rio de Janeiro 11 Protected status editAcaraje was listed as a national intangible historic heritage patrimonio nacional imaterial by the National Institute of Historic and Artistic Heritage in 2004 the role of baianas in the preparation and sale of acaraje was recognized in the same act 9 In October 2023 Rio de Janeiro declared the fritter to be part of that city s cultural heritage 12 Nutrition editAkara is a good source of proteins vitamins and minerals such as calcium iron and zinc 13 14 although its nutritional value is usually reduced by the presence of antinutritional factors such as phytates fibers lectins polyphenols and tannins that affect minerals bioavailability 13 In popular culture editAkara acaraje was featured on the Netflix TV series Street Food volume 2 which focused on Latin American street foods 15 See also edit nbsp Food portalCuisine of Nigeria Culinary traditions of NigeriaPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Acaca Maize dish in Brazil Vada food Category of savoury fried snacks from India Falafel Middle Eastern fried bean dish List of African dishes Dishes found in African cuisine List of Brazilian dishes List of legume dishesReferences edit a b c Lum Casey ed 2016 Urban Foodways and Communication Ethnographic Studies in Intangible Cultural Food Heritages Around the World Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield p 125 ISBN 9781442266438 a b c d Significado do acaraje no candomble in Portuguese Brasilia Brazil Instituto do Patrimonio Historico e Artistico Nacional Iphan 2014 Archived from the original on 2019 01 01 Retrieved 2016 10 01 How to make Akara kosai African Bean Fritters recipe Chef Lola s Kitchen 2021 04 06 Retrieved 2022 06 01 Pap amp akara bean balls with sweet plantain Breakfast Recipe by Da Princess Kitchen Culinary Concept Chef DPK Cookpad 20 October 2021 Retrieved 2022 06 01 Blazes Marian Brazilian Black Eyed Pea and Shrimp Fritters Acaraje About com Archived from the original on 29 April 2013 Retrieved 17 May 2012 a b c Barbosa Ademir 2015 Dicionario de umbanda Sao Paulo Anubis p 20 ISBN 9788567855264 Ali Mohammed Akara Deep fried bean flour fritter known all over Northern Niger Yerwa Express News Retrieved 2022 06 01 permanent dead link Jagun Marcio de 2015 Ori a cabeca como divindade historia cultura filosofia e religiosidade africana Rio de Janeiro Litteris p 221 ISBN 9788537402573 a b c Jagun Marcio de 2017 Yoruba vocabulario tematico do candomble in Portuguese Rio de Janeiro RJ Litteris Editora UERJ Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro p 64 ISBN 9788537403181 Cardoso Ryzia De Cassia Vieira et al 2014 Street Food Culture Economy Health and Governance London New York Routledge Earthscan from Routledge ISBN 9781317689911 a b c d Lody Raul 2003 Dicionario de arte sacra amp tecnicas afro brasileiras Rio de Janeiro Pallas p 37 ISBN 9788534701877 Acaraje se torna Patrimonio Historico e Cultural do Rio e causa polemica entre baianos a b Almeida Deusdelia T Greiner Ralf Furtunado Dalva M N Trigueiro Ivaldo N S Araujo Maria da Purificacao N 2008 01 24 Content of some antinutritional factors in bean cultivars frequently consumed in Brazil Antinutrients in beans International Journal of Food Science amp Technology 43 2 243 249 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2621 2006 01426 x Carvalho Ana Fontenele Urano de Sousa Nathanna Mateus Farias Davi Felipe da Rocha Bezerra Lady Clarissa Brito da Silva Renata Maria Pereira Viana Martonio Ponte Gouveia Sandro Thomaz Sampaio Silvana Saker de Sousa Marcia Barbosa de Lima Glauber Pacelli Gomes de Morais Selene Maia 2012 05 01 Nutritional ranking of 30 Brazilian genotypes of cowpeas including determination of antioxidant capacity and vitamins Journal of Food Composition and Analysis 26 1 81 88 doi 10 1016 j jfca 2012 01 005 ISSN 0889 1575 Anderson John Street Food Latin America Review A Platter of Vicarious Delights WSJ Dow Jones amp Company Inc Retrieved 9 September 2020 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Akara Recipe for Nigerian Chin Chin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Akara amp oldid 1213215436, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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