Thursday, January 4, 2024

Sopa de Amendoim

We kicked off 2024 with our first dish for Angola! I had initially planned to post the entire AtWCC "alphabetical walk around the world" in order, but it's Veganuary, and the source of this recipe was the cookbook, Vegan Africa by Marie Kacouchia, which I'm hoping to make more recipes from and post about. It seemed to make more sense to post this now to keep all the cookbook recipes in order, with the added bonus of being more timely than if I waited months.


I was a little nervous about starting our Angola unit. We were completely unfamiliar with the cuisine (although that's kind of the point of the AtWCC). We'd never been to Angola, or to a restaurant featuring Angolan food, and our knowledge of the cuisine was fairly limited. We knew they were a Portuguese colony until the 1970s, but that was about it. The Southern African nations (outside of South Africa) are probably the cuisines we know the least about generally, so definitely outside our comfort zone but kind of exciting from an exploration standpoint.


I had bookmarked a few African cookbooks in anticipation of this unit, so I decided the best starting point was figuring out if there was anything I could make in there. I didn't find much for Angola. There were also a lot of recipes inspired by specific dishes or ingredients, or recipes that covered general regions of the continent. That made sense, since a lot of regions share common dishes and ingredients even if they are different countries, but it does complicate the AtWCC, which we were trying to do by country. I did, however, find a recipe in Vegan Africa specifically for an Angolan peanut soup (sopa de amendoim in Portuguese, the official language of Angola), so that seemed like the perfect place to start.

One thing I really liked about this recipe (and cookbook) was that the ingredients were very accessible without needing to search out an African grocery store. We have those in NYC somewhere, but during the holidays and while sick, it was nice to not have to worry about finding more specialized ingredients.


The recipe itself was very simple, just took some time to prep. It consisted of chopped up onions, green peppers, and jalapeƱo peppers in a broth that combined vegetable stock and peanut butter. That was it, although the recipe notes did say you could add other vegetables like carrots or celery, which I did since we had both and I wanted to give it more bulk as a main dish instead of a starter (the section of the book it was in). The total cost for the soup was about $5.40 ($7.40 when you include the crescent rolls we ate on the side), one of the most affordable meals we've made in a long time, and we had a little bit left over for lunch.


The soup was amazing. So simple - just the vegetables, vegetable stock, peanut butter, salt, and pepper - but so much flavor. B didn't really try any of it, but that wasn't surprising since he was sick and also still not a fan of soup. Like every recipe and dish we're going to try for this unit, we have no idea if the end result was the same as what you would get if you had peanut soup in Angola, but we liked it a lot and would definitely make it again. It was a lovely start to the Angola challenge.

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