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Injera

Injera (Amharic: እንጀራ, romanizedənǧära, [ɨndʒəra]; Oromo: Biddeena; Tigrinya: እንጀራ and ጣይታ, romanized: ənǧära and ṭayta) is a sour fermented pancake-like flatbread with a slightly spongy texture, traditionally made of teff flour. In Ethiopia, Eritrea, and some parts of Sudan and Kenya,[1][2] injera is a staple. Injera is central to the dining process, like bread or rice elsewhere and is usually stored in the mesob.[4][5][6]

Injera
Beyaynetu: Meal consisting of injera and several kinds of wat or tsebhi (stew) is typical of Ethiopian cuisine.
Alternative namesBiddeena/Tayta/Tajta
TypeFlatbread or pancake
Place of origin
Region or stateEast Africa
Main ingredientsTeff flour (or sometimes wheat, barley, millet, sorghum, corn, or rice flour)
Food energy
(per 100 g serving)
131 kcal (548 kJ)[3]
Nutritional value
(per 100 g serving)
  •   Media: Injera

Ingredients edit

Traditionally, injera is made with just two ingredients – teff flour and water. Teff flour is ground from the grains of Eragrostis tef, also known as teff, an ancient cereal crop from the Ethiopian Highlands.[7] Teff production is limited to certain middle elevations with adequate rainfall, and, as it is a low-yield crop,[8] it is relatively expensive for the average farming household. As many farmers in the Ethiopian highlands grow their own subsistence grains, wheat, barley, corn, or rice flour are sometimes used to replace some or all of the teff content. Teff seeds are graded according to color, used to make different kinds of injera: nech (white), key or quey (red), and sergegna (mixed).[8] When teff is not available, usually because of location or financial limitations, injera is made by fermenting a variety of different grains, including barley, millet, and sorghum.[9] Teff is, however, the preferred grain for making injera, primarily because of its sensory attributes (color, smell, taste).[8] Teff flour is gluten-free.

Preparation edit

 
Batter is poured rapidly in a spiral from the outside inwards. Debre Markos, Ethiopia.

To make injera, teff flour is mixed with water. The fermentation process is started by adding ersho, a clear, yellow liquid that accumulates on the surface of fermenting teff flour batter and is collected from previous fermentations. Ersho contains (aerobic) Bacillus species and several yeasts (in order of abundance): Candida milleri, Rhodotorula mucilaginosa, Kluyveromyces marxianus, Pichia naganishii and Debaromyces hansenii.[10][8] The mixture is then allowed to ferment for an average of two to three days, giving it a mildly sour taste.

Making edit

Baking method edit

The baking method for injera has changed little since its origin. Traditionally, the flour is mixed with water and fermented. It is baked by pouring the mixture onto a large circular griddle, known as a mitad.

 
Injera being cooked on a griddle.

The injera is baked into large, flat and round pieces. The dough's viscosity allows it to be poured onto the baking surface, rather than rolled out.

In terms of shape, injera compares to the French crêpe and the Indian dosa as a flatbread cooked in a circle and used as a base for other foods. In taste and texture, it is more similar to the South Indian appam. The bottom surface of the injera, which touches the heating surface, has a relatively smooth texture, while the top is porous. This porous texture makes injera good for scooping up sauces and dishes.

Baking surface edit

Baking is done on a circular griddle—either a large black clay plate over a fire or a specialized electric stove. The griddle is known as a mitad (ምጣድ) (in Amharic) or mogogo (ሞጎጎ) (in Tigrinya). Mitads have been found at archaeological sites dating back as far as 600 AD.[9] Nowadays, mitads are no longer always made out of clay, and can also be electric.

Traditional clay stoves can be inefficient in that they consume large amounts of firewood and produce a lot of smoke, creating household pollution and making them dangerous to use around children.[11] In 2003, an Eritrean research group designed a stove for cooking injera and other foods that uses more easily available fuel, such as twigs instead of large branches, crop residues and dung, locally called kubet.[12] Several parts of this new stove are made in the central cities of Ethiopia and Eritrea, while other parts are moulded from clay by women in local areas.[12]

 
Woman checking the baking of an injera in her house. Gheralta, Ethiopia.

Many women in urban areas—especially those living outside Ethiopia and Eritrea—now use electric injera stoves, which are topped with a large metal plate, or simply non-stick frying pans.

Consumption and contemporary use edit

 
Injera showing typical spongy texture

In Ethiopia and Eritrea, a variety of stews, salads (during Ethiopian Orthodox fasting, for which believers abstain from most animal products), and more injera (called injera firfir) are placed on the injera for serving. Using one's hand (traditionally only the right one),[13][14] small pieces of injera are torn and used to grasp the stews and salads for eating. The injera under these stews soaks up the juices and flavors of the foods, and after the stews and salads are gone, this bread is also consumed. Injera is thus simultaneously a food, eating utensil, and plate. When the entire "tablecloth" of injera is gone, the meal is over.

In Ethiopia and Eritrea, injera is eaten daily in virtually every household. Outside of Ethiopia and Eritrea, injera may be found in grocery stores and restaurants specializing in Ethiopian and Eritrean cooking.

 
 
Left: An injera stove. Right: Freshly-baked injera.

Injera is the most important component of food in Ethiopia and Eritrea. It is often both the serving platter and utensil for a meal. Hearty stews such as wat are placed on top of the bread and then the meal is eaten by tearing pieces of injera off and scooping up the stews.[9][15] While injera's literal use as the base and staple of any Ethiopian and Eritrean meal has not changed since its creation, its symbolic value has changed. Different varieties of injera can be found in the highlands vis-à-vis the lowlands of Ethiopia. In the lowlands, injera is often made with sorghum and in the highlands it is more commonly made with barley.[5] Either way, because it is made with something other than teff, its symbolic value has already decreased compared to the symbolic value of injera made with teff. There are symbolic value differences with types of teff as well. White-grained teff is more expensive to buy and thus symbolizes a higher status than its cheaper counterpart, red-grained teff.[5]

Outside Ethiopia and Eritrea edit

There are similar variants to injera in other African countries, namely Sudan and Chad. The variant eaten in South Sudan, Sudan and Chad is known as kisra.[16]

United States edit

 
A bag of retail teff flour

Injera became more common in the United States during a spike in Ethiopian immigration in the 1980s and 1990s,[17] largely because of the Refugee Act passed in 1980.[18] Teff flour is now being produced in the United States by the Teff Company in Idaho, making teff more accessible to expatriate Ethiopians.[19]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Clarkson, Janet (2013). Food History Almanac: Over 1,300 Years of World Culinary History, Culture, and Social Influence. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 1293. ISBN 978-1-4422-2715-6.
  2. ^ a b Cauvain, Stanley P.; Young, Linda S. (2009). The ICC Handbook of Cereals, Flour, Dough & Product Testing: Methods and Applications. DEStech Publications, Inc. p. 216. ISBN 9781932078992. Injera is the fermented pancake-like flatbread, which originated in Ethiopia.
  3. ^ "Calories in 100 g of Injera (American-Style Ethiopian Bread) and Nutrition Facts".
  4. ^ Shinn, David. Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia. Scarecrow Press. p. 198.
  5. ^ a b c Lyons, Diane; D' Andrea, A. Catherine (September 2003). "Griddles, Ovens, and Agricultural Origins: An Ethnoarchaeological Study of Bread Baking in Highland Ethiopia". American Anthropologist. 105 (3): 515–530. doi:10.1525/aa.2003.105.3.515. JSTOR 3566902.
  6. ^ Mekonnen, Yohannes (29 January 2013). Ethiopia: the Land, Its People, History and Culture. Yohannes Mekonnen. p. 362. ISBN 978-1-4823-1117-4.
  7. ^ Jones, Wilbert (2010). "A Taste of Ethiopian Cuisine". Computers & Applied Sciences Complete: 55–56.
  8. ^ a b c d Bart, Minten; Seyoum, Taffesse, Alemayehu; Petra, Brown (19 July 2018). The economics of teff: Exploring Ethiopia's biggest cash crop. Intl Food Policy Res Inst. ISBN 9780896292833.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ a b c Kloman, Harry (2010). Mesob Across America: Ethiopian Food in the U.S.A. New York: IUniverse.
  10. ^ Ashenafi, M. (1994). "Microbial flora and some chemical properties of ersho, a starter for teff (Eragrostis tef) fermentation". World Journal of Microbiology & Biotechnology. 10 (1): 69–73. doi:10.1007/BF00357567. PMID 24420890. S2CID 25062764.
  11. ^ Diehl, Jan Carel; Jones, Robin; Verwaal, Martin (4 May 2017). "The Development of an Energy Efficient Electric Mitad for Baking Injeras in Ethiopia". 2017 International Conference on the Domestic Use of Energy (DUE). pp. 75–82. doi:10.23919/DUE.2017.7931827. ISBN 978-0-9946759-2-7. S2CID 42098925.
  12. ^ a b "Ashden awards: REC (formerly ERTC), Eritrea – Local construction of efficient stoves". Ashden. 2003. Retrieved 17 October 2017.
  13. ^ Bhandari, Aparita (15 March 2017). "How to Eat: Ethiopian cuisine is hands-on". Toronto Star. Retrieved 29 March 2017.
  14. ^ McManus, Chris (2004). Right Hand, Left Hand: The Origins of Asymmetry in Brains, Bodies, Atoms and Cultures. Harvard University Press. p. 24. ISBN 9780674016132. Other Bantu languages mostly talked about the 'eating hand' and, [...]
  15. ^ Sokolov, Raymond (1993). "The Teff Also Rises". Natural History. 102 (3): 96.
  16. ^ Burdett, Avani (2012). Delicatessen Cookbook – Burdett's Delicatessen Recipes: How to make and sell Continental & World Cuisine foods. Springwood emedia. ISBN 9781476144627.
  17. ^ "Yearbook of Immigration Statistics 2008". Department of Homeland Security. 4 May 2016. ISSN 0743-538X. OCLC 7063193. Retrieved 11 August 2019.
  18. ^ Chacko, Elizabeth (2003). "Identity and Assimilation among Young Ethiopian Immigrants in Metropolitan Washington". Geographical Review. American Geographical Society. 93 (4): 491–506. doi:10.1111/j.1931-0846.2003.tb00044.x. JSTOR 30033939. S2CID 145226876.
  19. ^ Weil, Josh (1 August 2007). "To Ethiopians in America, Bread is a Taste of Home". The New York Times. Retrieved 8 May 2018.

Further reading edit

  • The Deep Dish on Chicago Ethiopian Companion website to Kloman's book Mesob Across America
  • Traditional Ethiopian Injera Recipe
  • Here, Eat This: A Beginner's Guide to Ethiopian Food A Houston Press article that outlines all the basics for Ethiopian cuisine
  • Crang, Philip; Cook, Ian (1996). "The World on a Plate: Culinary Culture, Displacement and Geographical Knowledges". Journal of Material Culture. 1 (2): 131–156. doi:10.1177/135918359600100201. S2CID 144183630.
  • de Solier, Isabelle. Food and the Self: Consumption, Production, and Material Culture. Bloomsbury Academic. 2013

External links edit

  •   Media related to Injera at Wikimedia Commons
  • Mesob Across America: Ethiopian Food in the U.S.A. A book about the history and culture of Ethiopian cuisine

injera, kenyan, rugby, player, collins, amharic, እንጀራ, romanized, ənǧära, ɨndʒəra, oromo, biddeena, tigrinya, እንጀራ, ጣይታ, romanized, ənǧära, ṭayta, sour, fermented, pancake, like, flatbread, with, slightly, spongy, texture, traditionally, made, teff, flour, eth. For the Kenyan rugby player see Collins Injera Injera Amharic እንጀራ romanized enǧara ɨndʒera Oromo Biddeena Tigrinya እንጀራ and ጣይታ romanized enǧara and ṭayta is a sour fermented pancake like flatbread with a slightly spongy texture traditionally made of teff flour In Ethiopia Eritrea and some parts of Sudan and Kenya 1 2 injera is a staple Injera is central to the dining process like bread or rice elsewhere and is usually stored in the mesob 4 5 6 InjeraBeyaynetu Meal consisting of injera and several kinds of wat or tsebhi stew is typical of Ethiopian cuisine Alternative namesBiddeena Tayta TajtaTypeFlatbread or pancakePlace of originEthiopia Eritrea 1 2 Region or stateEast AfricaMain ingredientsTeff flour or sometimes wheat barley millet sorghum corn or rice flour Food energy per 100 g serving 131 kcal 548 kJ 3 Nutritional value per 100 g serving Protein4 95 gFat1 26 gCarbohydrate25 g Media Injera Contents 1 Ingredients 2 Preparation 3 Making 3 1 Baking method 3 2 Baking surface 4 Consumption and contemporary use 5 Outside Ethiopia and Eritrea 5 1 United States 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksIngredients editFurther information Eragrostis tef Traditionally injera is made with just two ingredients teff flour and water Teff flour is ground from the grains of Eragrostis tef also known as teff an ancient cereal crop from the Ethiopian Highlands 7 Teff production is limited to certain middle elevations with adequate rainfall and as it is a low yield crop 8 it is relatively expensive for the average farming household As many farmers in the Ethiopian highlands grow their own subsistence grains wheat barley corn or rice flour are sometimes used to replace some or all of the teff content Teff seeds are graded according to color used to make different kinds of injera nech white key or quey red and sergegna mixed 8 When teff is not available usually because of location or financial limitations injera is made by fermenting a variety of different grains including barley millet and sorghum 9 Teff is however the preferred grain for making injera primarily because of its sensory attributes color smell taste 8 Teff flour is gluten free Preparation edit nbsp Batter is poured rapidly in a spiral from the outside inwards Debre Markos Ethiopia To make injera teff flour is mixed with water The fermentation process is started by adding ersho a clear yellow liquid that accumulates on the surface of fermenting teff flour batter and is collected from previous fermentations Ersho contains aerobic Bacillus species and several yeasts in order of abundance Candida milleri Rhodotorula mucilaginosa Kluyveromyces marxianus Pichia naganishii and Debaromyces hansenii 10 8 The mixture is then allowed to ferment for an average of two to three days giving it a mildly sour taste Making editBaking method edit The baking method for injera has changed little since its origin Traditionally the flour is mixed with water and fermented It is baked by pouring the mixture onto a large circular griddle known as a mitad nbsp Injera being cooked on a griddle The injera is baked into large flat and round pieces The dough s viscosity allows it to be poured onto the baking surface rather than rolled out In terms of shape injera compares to the French crepe and the Indian dosa as a flatbread cooked in a circle and used as a base for other foods In taste and texture it is more similar to the South Indian appam The bottom surface of the injera which touches the heating surface has a relatively smooth texture while the top is porous This porous texture makes injera good for scooping up sauces and dishes Baking surface edit Baking is done on a circular griddle either a large black clay plate over a fire or a specialized electric stove The griddle is known as a mitad ምጣድ in Amharic or mogogo ሞጎጎ in Tigrinya Mitads have been found at archaeological sites dating back as far as 600 AD 9 Nowadays mitads are no longer always made out of clay and can also be electric Traditional clay stoves can be inefficient in that they consume large amounts of firewood and produce a lot of smoke creating household pollution and making them dangerous to use around children 11 In 2003 an Eritrean research group designed a stove for cooking injera and other foods that uses more easily available fuel such as twigs instead of large branches crop residues and dung locally called kubet 12 Several parts of this new stove are made in the central cities of Ethiopia and Eritrea while other parts are moulded from clay by women in local areas 12 nbsp Woman checking the baking of an injera in her house Gheralta Ethiopia Many women in urban areas especially those living outside Ethiopia and Eritrea now use electric injera stoves which are topped with a large metal plate or simply non stick frying pans Consumption and contemporary use edit nbsp Injera showing typical spongy textureIn Ethiopia and Eritrea a variety of stews salads during Ethiopian Orthodox fasting for which believers abstain from most animal products and more injera called injera firfir are placed on the injera for serving Using one s hand traditionally only the right one 13 14 small pieces of injera are torn and used to grasp the stews and salads for eating The injera under these stews soaks up the juices and flavors of the foods and after the stews and salads are gone this bread is also consumed Injera is thus simultaneously a food eating utensil and plate When the entire tablecloth of injera is gone the meal is over In Ethiopia and Eritrea injera is eaten daily in virtually every household Outside of Ethiopia and Eritrea injera may be found in grocery stores and restaurants specializing in Ethiopian and Eritrean cooking nbsp nbsp Left An injera stove Right Freshly baked injera Injera is the most important component of food in Ethiopia and Eritrea It is often both the serving platter and utensil for a meal Hearty stews such as wat are placed on top of the bread and then the meal is eaten by tearing pieces of injera off and scooping up the stews 9 15 While injera s literal use as the base and staple of any Ethiopian and Eritrean meal has not changed since its creation its symbolic value has changed Different varieties of injera can be found in the highlands vis a vis the lowlands of Ethiopia In the lowlands injera is often made with sorghum and in the highlands it is more commonly made with barley 5 Either way because it is made with something other than teff its symbolic value has already decreased compared to the symbolic value of injera made with teff There are symbolic value differences with types of teff as well White grained teff is more expensive to buy and thus symbolizes a higher status than its cheaper counterpart red grained teff 5 Outside Ethiopia and Eritrea editThere are similar variants to injera in other African countries namely Sudan and Chad The variant eaten in South Sudan Sudan and Chad is known as kisra 16 United States edit nbsp A bag of retail teff flourInjera became more common in the United States during a spike in Ethiopian immigration in the 1980s and 1990s 17 largely because of the Refugee Act passed in 1980 18 Teff flour is now being produced in the United States by the Teff Company in Idaho making teff more accessible to expatriate Ethiopians 19 See also editBeyaynetu Crepe List of Ethiopian dishes and foods Eritrean cuisine Baghrir Dosa food Lahoh Sudanese cuisine Ethiopian cuisine List of African dishesReferences edit a b Clarkson Janet 2013 Food History Almanac Over 1 300 Years of World Culinary History Culture and Social Influence Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 1293 ISBN 978 1 4422 2715 6 a b Cauvain Stanley P Young Linda S 2009 The ICC Handbook of Cereals Flour Dough amp Product Testing Methods and Applications DEStech Publications Inc p 216 ISBN 9781932078992 Injera is the fermented pancake like flatbread which originated in Ethiopia Calories in 100 g of Injera American Style Ethiopian Bread and Nutrition Facts Shinn David Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia Scarecrow Press p 198 a b c Lyons Diane D Andrea A Catherine September 2003 Griddles Ovens and Agricultural Origins An Ethnoarchaeological Study of Bread Baking in Highland Ethiopia American Anthropologist 105 3 515 530 doi 10 1525 aa 2003 105 3 515 JSTOR 3566902 Mekonnen Yohannes 29 January 2013 Ethiopia the Land Its People History and Culture Yohannes Mekonnen p 362 ISBN 978 1 4823 1117 4 Jones Wilbert 2010 A Taste of Ethiopian Cuisine Computers amp Applied Sciences Complete 55 56 a b c d Bart Minten Seyoum Taffesse Alemayehu Petra Brown 19 July 2018 The economics of teff Exploring Ethiopia s biggest cash crop Intl Food Policy Res Inst ISBN 9780896292833 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c Kloman Harry 2010 Mesob Across America Ethiopian Food in the U S A New York IUniverse Ashenafi M 1994 Microbial flora and some chemical properties of ersho a starter for teff Eragrostis tef fermentation World Journal of Microbiology amp Biotechnology 10 1 69 73 doi 10 1007 BF00357567 PMID 24420890 S2CID 25062764 Diehl Jan Carel Jones Robin Verwaal Martin 4 May 2017 The Development of an Energy Efficient Electric Mitad for Baking Injeras in Ethiopia 2017 International Conference on the Domestic Use of Energy DUE pp 75 82 doi 10 23919 DUE 2017 7931827 ISBN 978 0 9946759 2 7 S2CID 42098925 a b Ashden awards REC formerly ERTC Eritrea Local construction of efficient stoves Ashden 2003 Retrieved 17 October 2017 Bhandari Aparita 15 March 2017 How to Eat Ethiopian cuisine is hands on Toronto Star Retrieved 29 March 2017 McManus Chris 2004 Right Hand Left Hand The Origins of Asymmetry in Brains Bodies Atoms and Cultures Harvard University Press p 24 ISBN 9780674016132 Other Bantu languages mostly talked about the eating hand and Sokolov Raymond 1993 The Teff Also Rises Natural History 102 3 96 Burdett Avani 2012 Delicatessen Cookbook Burdett s Delicatessen Recipes How to make and sell Continental amp World Cuisine foods Springwood emedia ISBN 9781476144627 Yearbook of Immigration Statistics 2008 Department of Homeland Security 4 May 2016 ISSN 0743 538X OCLC 7063193 Retrieved 11 August 2019 Chacko Elizabeth 2003 Identity and Assimilation among Young Ethiopian Immigrants in Metropolitan Washington Geographical Review American Geographical Society 93 4 491 506 doi 10 1111 j 1931 0846 2003 tb00044 x JSTOR 30033939 S2CID 145226876 Weil Josh 1 August 2007 To Ethiopians in America Bread is a Taste of Home The New York Times Retrieved 8 May 2018 Further reading editThe Deep Dish on Chicago Ethiopian Companion website to Kloman s book Mesob Across America Traditional Ethiopian Injera Recipe Here Eat This A Beginner s Guide to Ethiopian Food A Houston Press article that outlines all the basics for Ethiopian cuisine Crang Philip Cook Ian 1996 The World on a Plate Culinary Culture Displacement and Geographical Knowledges Journal of Material Culture 1 2 131 156 doi 10 1177 135918359600100201 S2CID 144183630 de Solier Isabelle Food and the Self Consumption Production and Material Culture Bloomsbury Academic 2013External links edit nbsp Media related to Injera at Wikimedia Commons Mesob Across America Ethiopian Food in the U S A A book about the history and culture of Ethiopian cuisine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Injera amp oldid 1191723949, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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