Dèguè (Millet Pearls in Sweet Sour Milk)
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.
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.
- •Millet pearls (rolled millet couscous) — a calabash (base)
- •Sour milk — to taste (tangy binder)
- •Sugar or honey — to taste (sweetness)
- •Flower water (or nothing) — a hint (flavor)
Dèguè (Millet Pearls in Sweet Sour Milk)
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.
Why this dish? Dèguè, cooked millet balls mixed with sour milk and sugar, is the refreshment sold in markets and shared during religious festivals in the Sahel. It is the sweetness of daily Malian life, the thirst-quencher under the heat of Timbuktu between journeys.
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.
Ingredients (period version)
- Millet pearls (rolled millet couscous) — a calabash (base)
- Sour milk — to taste (tangy binder)
- Sugar or honey — to taste (sweetness)
- Flower water (or nothing) — a hint (flavor)
Ingredients
- Millet couscous (millet pearls) or rolled millet — 250 g (base)
- Plain yogurt / fermented milk (lben) — 400 g (tangy binder)
- Sugar — 3 tbsp (sweetness)
- Milk — 100 ml (to thin)
- Orange blossom water (optional) — a few drops (flavor)
Method
- Steam the millet pearls (in a couscoussier) until tender, then let cool.
- Fluff the pearls with a fork so they remain separate.
- Mix the yogurt/fermented milk with the sugar and a little milk to obtain a smooth cream.
- Fold the warm or cold pearls into the sweetened milk, flavor with a drop of orange blossom water.
- Serve well chilled in a bowl, with a spoon.
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.
The contemporary twist : Served in a verrine with a drizzle of honey and a few popped millet grains for crunch—a revisited Sahelian lassi.
Ali Farka Touré · Charactorium
