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8.8 A – Z SOUTH AFRICAN FOOD

Foodie travelers will have a field day – especially if they are into seafood and meats, while in South Africa. The country draws its cuisine from around the world, but there are some uniquely South African dishes. A few of the more common ones are listed below:  
Biltong
 is a national delicacy. Similar to American jerky, but totally different, it is made from spiced slices of meat that are hung up – out of the sun – to dry in the wind. The most common variety is beef, but game biltong is also available. Connoisseurs claim that ostrich and kudu biltong are the best.
Bobotie
is a traditional Cape Malay dish consisting of a fruity mince curry which is topped with egg custard and lemon or bay leaves, and baked.
Boerewors
is essential at a braai. It is a fatty, spicy beef sausage – there are loads of secret recipes all containing quite exotic spices such as coriander, cumin and others.
Boggems
are definitely an acquired taste. They are small, whole mullet (called harder in South Africa) that are salted and dried. They're a bit tough to just chew on but they can be reconstituted and cooked into something approaching a Portuguese bacalhau, which makes them far more palatable.
Braais
are part of South African life and they are so much more than a barbecue. As well as boerewors, sosaties, pap en sous and roosterbrood, there may be any other kind of meat and fish. Crayfish braais are very popular.
Bredie
is the Afrikaans term for a stew, usually mutton-based and served with rice. The most popular is tamatie bredie (tomato stew), and the most unusual is waterblommetjiebredie (see below).
Bunny chow
lunch is an essential part of a visit to Durban. Consisting of curry (either meat or veg) piled into a hollowed out half or quarter loaf of bread it is best eaten with the hands on the street. (Yes, it's a cultural experience).
Butternut
squashes are large, gourd-shaped vegetables which are very similar to pumpkins but with brighter orange, more solid flesh and a more intense taste. They are often cooked over the coals at braais or made into lightly curried soups.
Crayfish
are spiny lobsters. They're delicious.
Gatsby
is a form of street food found mainly in Cape Town. Cheap and filling it consists of a whole loaf of bread cut lengthwise and filled with chips (French fries), salad and either meat, curry or fish.
Imifino
is a wonderful dish of wild spinach-like greens fried up with onion, spices and perhaps a bit of chilli, and usually served with pap or putu (see below).
Koeksuster
is a sweet, syrupy, plaited confectionary not entirely unlike a doughnut but much richer. Great stuff if you have a very sweet tooth and fantastic with strong coffee. 
Konfyt
is the term given to any preserve. Two of the most popular are made from a type of otherwise unpalatable melon, and from green figs. With a bit of ginger and other spices, these are actually pretty tasty and not at all cloying although obviously sweet.
Line fish
is the term given to fish that has been caught locally that day on a line (as opposed to netted fish). In restaurants it will often be the 'fish of the day'.
Milktart
is a traditional baked custard tart, sprinkled with cinnamon.
Morogo
or meroho, is exactly the same as imifino (above).
Moskonfyt
is a delicious, sweet, tangy syrup made from must (which is the solid residue left over after pressing grapes for wine.)  A bit like a fruity version of maple syrup, it's really good on bread or pancakes and even, for those with a very sweet tooth, on ice cream. It is delicious stirred into plain yoghurt.
Pap
is a gritslike maize porridge. It can be made quite sloppy in which case it is eaten with a spoon as a breakfast cereal, or made really stiff in which case it is called stywepap and eaten with the hands with some kind of sauce or relish. Relish could be imifino (see above) or a rich meat stew. Pap en sous, in which the sauce (sous) will almost always be an onion and tomato based one, is a traditional accompaniment to a braai 
Peppadews
are designer vegetables developed and patented in South Africa. A cross between a sweet pepper and a chilli, they are slightly spicy, fruity and piquant, and are usually found pickled. Although they are patented, they are a hybrid and are not genetically modified. They're delicious in anything from salads and sandwiches to pizza and pasta.
Peri-peri, or piri-piri as it is sometimes called, hails from neighbouring Mozambique. It's a fiery concoction of mainly, chilies, garlic and tomato (and a few other secret ingredients). It's most commonly used as a basting for fish, chicken or prawns but can be used for anything. Beware; some varieties are very hot, while others are nicely tasty.
Perlemoen
is the local word for abalone. Many locals claim the best way to eat this is braaied (see above) on the beach in a piece of kelp (hollow seaweed), but it is easier to try it as a schnitzel in a restaurant, or cut into strips and stir-fried 
Potbrood
is bread made in a cast-iron pot on the top of a fire. (also see roosterbrood).
A potjie is a three-legged cast-iron pot (much like a witch's cauldron) and it is the basis of one of our best loved specialities – potjiekos. It's a stew made by putting in the onions first and then the items which need most cooking, eg meat, potatoes and/or hard vegetables. Softer vegetables are added in layers and the pot is never stirred. As it simmers for hours the flavour permeates the whole dish. Often served with putu (see below).
Putu
is the same as pap, except that it is always the stiff variety.
Roosterbrood
is bread made on the grill over an open fire. (Brood is the Afrikaans word for bread.)
Rotis are a traditional Indian flat bread which may be quite familiar. And…
Salomies
are rotis, filled with curry and rolled up, so they can be eaten with the hands.
Samosas
are an Indian delicacy that has become part of the South African culinary landscape. It's a triangular fried pasty filled with curry – either meat, fish or veg.
Samp
is whole maize which is cooked up rather like rice and most often served with beans which makes it a very nutritious, high protein food highly valued by traditional societies.
Skilpad
is the Afrikaans name for a tortoise, and you may well be offered this at a braai. Do not be alarmed. It is not a whole tortoise roasted in its shell. Far from it. There is a delicious vegetarian option – a whole cabbage, with slits half way through it and filled with butter, garlic and spices and cooked in foil over the fire. A richer, meatier version consists of liver or kidneys wrapped in caul fat and braaied – very rich and only for dedicated carnivores. Never eat real tortoises!
Smoorsnoek
is a kedgeree-like dish made of flaked smoked snoek (see below) cooked up with tomato, onion and spices.
Snoek
is a local game fish not unlike barracuda. It is delicious freshly braaied but it most often eaten smoked – possibly even more delicious.
Sosaties
are very similar to kebabs – chunks of meat impaled on a skewer. Traditional ones will be marinated in a lightly curried fruity sauce and then cooked over the fire but there are dozens of variations.
Waterblommetjiebredie
is a stew (see bredie above) featuring endemic waterflowers that grow wild in seasonal wetlands in winter in the Cape.

8.9 OFFICIAL WORLD CUP SONG

FIFA and Sony have chosen Waka Waka (This Time for Africa) as the official song of the 2010 FIFA World Cup™ in  South Africa. The song was written by Shakira, the world-famous singer from Latin America, who will perform with South African band Freshlyground.

You're a good soldier /  Choosing your battles / Pick yourself up  / And dust yourself off  /  And back in the saddle
You're on the frontline  /  Everyone's watching  /  You know it's serious  /  We're getting closer   /  This isnt over
The pressure is on   /  You feel it  /  But you've got it all  /  Believe it  /  When you fall get up
Oh oh...  /  And if you fall get up  /  Oh oh... /  Tsamina mina  /  Zangalewa  /  Cuz this is Africa
Tsamina mina eh eh  /  Waka Waka eh eh  /  Tsamina mina zangalewa  /  Anawa aa  /  This time for Africa
Listen to your god  /  This is our motto  /  Your time to shine  /  Dont wait in line  / Y vamos por Todo
People are raising  /  Their Expectations  /  Go on and feed them  /  This is your moment  /  No hesitations
Today's your day  /  I feel it  /  You paved the way  /  Believe it
If you get down  /  Get up Oh oh..  /  When you get down  /  Get up eh eh...
Tsamina mina zangalewa  /  Anawa aa  /  This time for Africa
 Tsamina mina eh eh  /  Waka Waka eh eh  /  Tsamina mina zangalewa  /  Anawa aa
Tsamina mina eh eh  /  Waka Waka eh eh  /  Tsamina mina zangalewa  /  This time for Africa

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