Ali Farka Touré’s menu
Snack/refreshment of fermented millet (served in a bowl, by the ladle)

Dèguè (Millet Pearls in Sweet Sour Milk)

Street foodDocumented🍯 🍋 🫙facile40 min

Small cooked millet pearls, mixed with a slightly acidic sweetened sour milk, sometimes flavored. Cool, sweet, and tangy: the Sahel's dessert-snack, eaten with a spoon or almost drunk.

Snack/refreshment of fermented millet (served in a bowl, by the ladle)

Small cooked millet pearls, mixed with a slightly acidic sweetened sour milk, sometimes flavored. Cool, sweet, and tangy: the Sahel's dessert-snack, eaten with a spoon or almost drunk.

When the Timbuktu sun beats down hard and your throat is dry, nothing beats a good cool dèguè. The little millet pearls, we roll them and steam them; the milk, we let it curdle on its own, and it bites the tongue a little—that's what wakes you up. A touch of sugar, and there's the treat for children and elders alike. On feast days, we prepare whole basins of it, and everyone dips their spoon in with a light heart.
Ali Farka Touré
Ingredients
  • Millet pearls (rolled millet couscous)a calabash (base)
  • Sour milkto taste (tangy binder)
  • Sugar or honeyto taste (sweetness)
  • Flower water (or nothing)a hint (flavor)
How it was made : Millet pearls were rolled by hand before steaming. The milk, from Sahel herds, curdled naturally in calabashes under the heat; dèguè was sold fresh in markets and shared abundantly during religious festivals.

See also