Umqombothi — maize and sorghum beer (inspired by)
A creamy, slightly fizzy and tangy fermented drink made from maize and sorghum malt. Low in alcohol and very nourishing, it is drunk warm and cloudy, shared from a single calabash — a symbol of community.
A creamy, slightly fizzy and tangy fermented drink made from maize and sorghum malt. Low in alcohol and very nourishing, it is drunk warm and cloudy, shared from a single calabash — a symbol of community.
Here is a drink that is not meant to be drunk alone. You mix maize meal with sorghum malt, let the paste sour for a day or two, then ferment it further, and the calabash begins to breathe softly. Among us, when we honor those who have gone before us, it is she who passes from hand to hand, the elder first. She is thick, a little sour, alive — and the real secret is not in the recipe but in the circle of those who share her.
- •Maize meal — several cups (fermentable base)
- •Sorghum malt — a good portion (ferment, sugars)
- •Water — plenty (medium)
Umqombothi — maize and sorghum beer (inspired by)
A creamy, slightly fizzy and tangy fermented drink made from maize and sorghum malt. Low in alcohol and very nourishing, it is drunk warm and cloudy, shared from a single calabash — a symbol of community.
Why this dish? Umqombothi, a thick, slightly sour beer made from maize and sorghum, accompanies large Xhosa gatherings and ancestral tributes. Born into a great Thembu family in the Transkei, Mandela grew up with these ceremonies where the calabash is passed from hand to hand.
Here is a drink that is not meant to be drunk alone. You mix maize meal with sorghum malt, let the paste sour for a day or two, then ferment it further, and the calabash begins to breathe softly. Among us, when we honor those who have gone before us, it is she who passes from hand to hand, the elder first. She is thick, a little sour, alive — and the real secret is not in the recipe but in the circle of those who share her.
Ingredients (period version)
- Maize meal — several cups (fermentable base)
- Sorghum malt — a good portion (ferment, sugars)
- Water — plenty (medium)
Ingredients
- Maize meal — 500 g (fermentable base)
- Sorghum malt (available at African grocery stores) — 250 g (ferment, sugars)
- Water — 3 to 4 L (medium)
Method
- Mix the maize meal with some of the warm water and let sour, covered, for 1-2 days in a warm place.
- Heat this mixture into a thick porridge, then let cool.
- Stir in the sorghum malt and the remaining water, mix well.
- Cover with a cloth and let ferment for 1-2 days: the surface should foam and smell sweet-sour.
- Strain coarsely and serve the cloudy, warm beverage in a shared container. (Family version: shorten fermentation for a nearly non-alcoholic drink, like "mageu.")
How it was made : Umqombothi was brewed by women in large clay pots, with fermentation relying on natural yeasts from the malt and air. Its long, collective preparation marked the calendar of gatherings. We draw inspiration from the technique here, without reproducing its sacred ritual function.
The contemporary twist : For family tables and school, opt for the short, non-alcoholic version (close to mageu, a sweet-sour maize drink) served cold in small bowls — the spirit of sharing without the alcohol.
Sources : Anna Trapido, Hunger for Freedom (2008) · References on traditional South African brewing (umqombothi / sorghum beer)
Nelson Mandela · Charactorium