Cassava Leaves, Please

space
During my first few weeks in the Peace Corps, I was sent to a village for an introduction to the country.  I mainly remember my introduction to cassava.  My hosts probably remember how I didn't eat much of anything.  They worried that I didn't eat enough.   

In case you don't know about cassava, it is a skinny little plant with a huge root that is kind of used like a potato.  It can be baked, broiled, boiled, fried, pounded into Play-Doh, grated, sliced, roasted, toasted and even eaten raw.  Every single way is horrible, at least in my very biased opinion.  In those early days,  I vowed that cassava roots would not pass my doorstep the entire time I lived in Liberia.  I never changed my mind.

However, cassava leaves were my favorite Liberian dish.  The crushed leaves are boiled in red palm oil with a whole lot of pepper and your meat of choice.  It's served over a small mountain of rice.  I could eat it every day.  Whenever any Liberian friend asks me what they can prepare, yes, please, it's always cassava leaves.

Cooking preparations in Liberia are not the same as back home.  I can buy cassava leaves in several Asian and African markets where I live.  And, when I purchase those leaves, I toss them in my handy-dandy food processor.  That little luxury, as well as electricity, was a rarity in West Africa.

Seriously, a food processor was not an option.  Everyone I knew used a mortar and pestle.  They weren't the cute little ones that some people have in their kitchens to grind pepper.  They were nothing like what you might see as a decoration in a pharmacy.  The pestle, that is used to pound the leaves in the mortar, is usually five or six feet tall.  If it is that big, you know the mortar must also be a couple of feet tall.  Liberians use their mortar and pestles for serious kitchen work.  Not only are cassava leaves crushed this way, but these tools are also used to prepare rice, which is a part of almost every Liberian meal.

This young girl, on my trip to Tugbaken, was hard at work when I passed through her corner of the village.  Just like everyone else in the community, she had to stop to watch the visiting "nyepluh".  But, the white man was also watching her.  I thought her raised arm was so graceful.  I was so very pleased that she allowed me to take her photograph.
Back to blog

2019

October

Jerk Chicken
Island Time
I Am No Boys Scout

September

August

July

June

Kicking and Screaming

May

A Mazed Artist

April

Easter

March

Shine

January

2018

December

An Early Christmas

November

Snakes and Bugs
A God Thing

October

MISSING

September

Enough Already!

August

July

June

Raging Bull

May

Memorial Day
Ndayishimiye
Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah!

April

Three's a Charm
Not April Fools

March

Late Bloomer
This Is Me

February

Still My Turn to Cry
Frozen in Tugbanken

January

Oui Oui
T.L.C.

2017

December

The Greatest Loser
One Pair of Shoes
Tie a Yellow Ribbon
Relatively Adorable

November

Brazilian Heart
Oh, Give Thanks

October

Drinking Lemonade
I am Beasty

September

Mint Tea
« Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next »
 Back to blog