Francisca Nneka Okeke’s menu
Nni Igbo — dried cassava preparation, pantry staple and shared dish

Abacha (fermented cassava salad)

PreservingDocumented🫙 🍋 🧂moyen50 min

Shreds of rehydrated dried cassava coated in a palm oil sauce emulsified with potash, spiced with ugba (fermented oil bean seeds), dried shrimp, chili and ukazi leaves, topped with African eggplant and fish.

Nni Igbo — dried cassava preparation, pantry staple and shared dish

Shreds of rehydrated dried cassava coated in a palm oil sauce emulsified with potash, spiced with ugba (fermented oil bean seeds), dried shrimp, chili and ukazi leaves, topped with African eggplant and fish.

Abacha, you see, is proof that our ancestors were scholars in their own way: they learned to dry cassava into thin strips so it would keep for months, without any refrigerator. You rehydrate it, you mount the palm oil with a little potash until it yellows and thickens like magic — I study transformations of matter, and this reaction has always fascinated me. You add fermented ugba, chili, a bit of fish, and you share the large dish with several hands. It is convivial, it is ingenious, it is Igbo.
Francisca Nneka Okeke
Ingredients
  • Dried cassava strips (abacha)a good portion (base)
  • Red palm oilgenerous (sauce)
  • Akanwụ (potash)a pinch dissolved (oil emulsifier)
  • Ugba (fermented oil bean seeds)a handful (fermented umami)
  • Dried shrimp and smoked fishto taste (umami)
  • Ukazi leaves, African eggplant, chilito taste (greens, crunch, heat)
How it was made : Cassava was grated, cooked, thinly sliced and sun-dried to become abacha, a long-lasting pantry item. Vegetable potash (akanwu), derived from ashes, served as a natural emulsifier to 'mount' palm oil into a creamy sauce — a kitchen chemistry mastered long before laboratories.