Thiakry (Millet Couscous with Sour Milk)
Small pearls of steamed millet semolina mixed with lightly sweetened sour milk and perfumed. Cool, tangy, sweet: the sweet comfort between meals.
Small pearls of steamed millet semolina mixed with lightly sweetened sour milk and perfumed. Cool, tangy, sweet: the sweet comfort between meals.
Here is a sweetness from our home, simple and good. We roll the millet semolina between our palms, steam it until the grains are tender, then drown them in sweetened sour milk. Millet, you see, is the grain of our fathers, that of the Serer and Wolof land long before rice came from elsewhere. Eat it cool, with a spoon, in the afternoon when the heat subsides: it quenches as much as it satisfies.
- •Millet semolina (thiéré) — a bowl (base)
- •Sour milk — enough to cover (cool, tangy binder)
- •Sugar — to taste (sweetness)
- •Orange blossom water or baobab powder (optional) — a dash (flavor)
Thiakry (Millet Couscous with Sour Milk)
Small pearls of steamed millet semolina mixed with lightly sweetened sour milk and perfumed. Cool, tangy, sweet: the sweet comfort between meals.
Why this dish? Diop's profile mentions millet at the heart of his diet. Thiakry—rolled millet semolina drowned in sweetened sour milk—is the popular sweetness sold on the street and prepared at home, the refreshment of the son of Thieytou raised in a region where millet was the ancestral grain, predating imported rice.
Here is a sweetness from our home, simple and good. We roll the millet semolina between our palms, steam it until the grains are tender, then drown them in sweetened sour milk. Millet, you see, is the grain of our fathers, that of the Serer and Wolof land long before rice came from elsewhere. Eat it cool, with a spoon, in the afternoon when the heat subsides: it quenches as much as it satisfies.
Ingredients (period version)
- Millet semolina (thiéré) — a bowl (base)
- Sour milk — enough to cover (cool, tangy binder)
- Sugar — to taste (sweetness)
- Orange blossom water or baobab powder (optional) — a dash (flavor)
Ingredients
- Millet couscous (thiéré, African grocery stores) — 250 g (base)
- Sour milk or plain stirred yogurt — 50 cl (cool binder)
- Sugar — 3 to 4 tbsp (sweetness)
- Orange blossom water — 1 tsp (flavor)
- Raisins (optional) — a handful (garnish)
Method
- Moisten the millet couscous and steam for 15 to 20 minutes (in two batches, fluffing with a fork in between).
- Let it cool slightly and break up any clumps.
- Mix the sour milk (or yogurt), sugar, and orange blossom water.
- Fold the semolina into the milk mixture, add raisins if desired.
- Chill for 1 hour and serve well chilled, with a spoon.
How it was made : Millet (sorghum, pearl millet) is the historic grain of the West African Sahel, cultivated long before the arrival of rice. Rolled by hand into fine semolina and steamed in the traditional couscoussier, it came in both savory and sweet versions. Sour milk came from Fulani herds.
The contemporary twist : Serve in verrines with a touch of grated citrus zest—a 'Sahelian panna cotta' that surprises children.
Sources : Pierre Thiam, Senegal: Modern Senegalese Recipes (2015)
Cheikh Anta Diop · Charactorium