Angolan cuisine


Angolan cuisine is the cuisine of Angola, a country in south central Africa. Because Angola was a Portuguese colony for centuries, Portuguese cuisine has significantly influenced Angolan cuisine, with many foods being imported from Portugal.

Ingredients

ingredients include beans and rice, pork and chicken, various sauces, and vegetables such as tomatoes, onions. Spices such as garlic are also frequently seen.

Dishes

Funge and pirão are very common dishes, and in poorer households often consumed at every meal. The dish is often eaten with fish, pork, chicken, or beans. Funge de bombo, more common in northern Angola, is a paste or porridge of cassava, made from cassava flour. It is gelatinous in consistency and gray in color. Pirão, yellow in color and similar to polenta, is made from cornflour and is more common in the south. Fuba is the term for the flour that is used to make either funge and pirão, also used to make angu, the Brazilian polenta. Both foods are described as bland but filling and are often eaten with sauces and juices or with gindungo, a spicy condiment.
Muamba de galinha is chicken with palm paste, okra, garlic and palm oil hash or red palm oil sauce, often served with rice and funge. Both funge and moamba de galinha have been considered the national dish. A variant dish of moamba de galinha, muamba de ginguba, uses ginguba instead of palm paste.

List of dishes

Other dishes common in Angolan cuisine include:
A number of beverages, alcoholic and non-alcoholic, are typical to Angola.
Various homemade spirits are made, including capatica, caporoto ; cazi or caxipembe ; kimbombo, maluva or ocisangua, ngonguenha, and ualende. Other beverages are Kapuka, ovingundu, and Whiskey Kota.
Popular non-alcoholic drinks including Kissangua, a Southern Angola specialty, a traditional non-alcoholic drink made of cornflour, have been used in indigenous healing rituals. Soft drinks such as Coca-Cola, Pepsi, Mirinda, Sprite, and Fanta are also popular. While some soft-drinks are imported from South Africa, Namibia, Brazil, and Portugal, the Angolan soft-drink industry has grown, with Coca-Cola plants in Bom Jesus, Bengo, and Lubango opening since 2000.
Mongozo is a traditional homemade beer made from palm nuts, a specialty of the Lundas. Mongozo was brewed by the Chokwe people before the arrival of Europeans, and mongozo is now commercially produced for export, including to Belgium, where it is produced by Van Steenberge.
Various commercial beers are brewed in Angola, the oldest of which is Cuca, brewed in Luanda. Others include Eka, N'gola, and Nocal.