Francisca Nneka Okeke’s menu
Mmiri ọkụ — refreshing red drink of hospitality

Zobo (hibiscus iced tea)

DrinkDocumented🍋 🍯facile40 min

An iced infusion of dried hibiscus flowers (sorrel), tangy and fruity, perfumed with ginger and spices, sweetened to taste and often enhanced with pineapple or citrus.

Mmiri ọkụ — refreshing red drink of hospitality

An iced infusion of dried hibiscus flowers (sorrel), tangy and fruity, perfumed with ginger and spices, sweetened to taste and often enhanced with pineapple or citrus.

When a guest knocks on my door under the Enugu sun, I never let them leave without a tall glass of cold zobo. Those dried hibiscus flowers, you steep them until the water turns deep red like a sunset over the savannah. I like to grate a lot of ginger into it — it awakens the palate and, they say among us, warms the blood. You sweeten to your hand, you chill, and you serve. It is simple, it is generous, it is the drink of friendship.
Francisca Nneka Okeke
Ingredients
  • Dried hibiscus / sorrel flowerstwo handfuls (tangy base)
  • Fresh gingerone large piece (warm spice)
  • Clovesa few (flavor)
  • Waterone large pot (infusion)
  • Cane sugar or honeyto taste (sweetness)
How it was made : Sorrel (Hibiscus sabdariffa) is an ancient African plant whose dried calyces were infused into a refreshing drink and a folk remedy against heat. It was once sweetened with honey or cane juice for lack of refined sugar.

See also