In Bibi’s Kitchen: Somali Chef Hawa Hassan’s new cook book

From Grandma to You: A Comforting Chicken-Coconut and Potato Stew
In Bibi’s Kitchen features dishes from women around Africa, including this standout Somali recipe for digaag qumbe.

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Hassan, who is based in Brooklyn, N.Y., is the owner of Basbaas Foods, which specializes in condiments from her native Somalia. At the age of four, Hassan and her mother were relocated to a refugee camp in Nairobi; she then went alone to Seattle and was separated from her mother for 15 years. She wrote the cookbook as a way to reconnect to her family and identity.


“When I was doing research for the cookbook, I realized that food from Africa was pretty much a blank slate,” says Hassan via phone. “I saw it as an opportunity to talk about the different foods on the continent, which people aren’t aware of.”

Bibi means grandmother in Swahili. Among the 75 recipes in Hassan’s book are 24 from grandmothers, including Ma Jeanne’s braised oxtails from Madagascar and Ma Josefina’s plantains with coconut and shrimp from Mozambique. Each chapter delivers information about the eight African regions, from economy to resources, as well as conversations with the esteemed recipe providers.

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A remarkable digaag qumbe, or chicken stew with yogurt and coconut, is based on a recipe from Hassan’s family. “All the women in my family make it,” she says. Her mother and siblings are in Oslo, and “sometimes they make it when we’re FaceTiming,” she says. Although everyone applies some personal preferences, Hassan’s mother now uses Hawa’s recipe.

The straightforward-sounding dish offers an incredible depth of flavor, given how easy it is to make. Her hack is to make a puree of tomatoes, yogurt, and fragrant spices that in the pot at the beginning, rather than the end, to make a sauce into which chunks of chicken and potato and carrot are then added to simmer. Warm, generous flavors of ginger and chile, along with creamy coconut milk, suffuse the meat and vegetables. The dish is far more than the sum of its parts.

Hassan serves it with bananas alongside, “for the most authentic Somali experience.” In the book, she writes: “the combination is not well known in the United States, but you can help it become known—it’s great.”

Another, all-important reason to make Hassan’s dish is to get to know a cuisine you almost certainly aren’t familiar with. “It’s warming and earthy and introduces people to new flavor combinations they don’t quite know.” Hassan adds. “This is an easy way to expand pantries—and minds.”

Later this year, Hassan plans to expand Basbaas to include snack foods that highlight African grains. She’s already started to work on her next book, loosely based on civil war, displacement, and cooking. “It’s the time when people are all ears, and one of the good ways to tell your story is through food.”

The following recipe is adapted from In Bibi’s Kitchen, by Hawa Hassan. In the book’s recipe, Hassan uses a “Xawaash Spice Mix” made with freshly toasted and ground spices; this version substitutes store-bought spices.

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The cookbook author instructs readers to serve her remarkable stew with whole bananas, not slice them.
Photographer: Kate Krader/Bloomberg



Serves 4

2 medium vine-ripened tomatoes, coarsely chopped
1 jalapeño, stemmed and coarsely chopped
1 red bell pepper, stemmed, seeded, and coarsely chopped
1 tbsp. tomato paste
½ cup plain yogurt
1/2 tbsp. curry powder
1/2 tbsp. ground cumin
1/2 tsp. ground turmeric
Large pinch of ground cardamom
Pinch of ground cinnamon
2 tsp. kosher salt, plus more as needed
¼ cup extra-virgin olive oil or canola oil
1 large red onion, finely chopped
2 large garlic cloves, minced
1 tbsp. minced ginger
1 baking potato, cut into 1/2-inch pieces
2 carrots, cut into thin coins
1 lb. boneless, skinless chicken thighs, cut into bite-sized pieces
1 cup full-fat unsweetened coconut milk
Large handful of cilantro leaves, finely chopped
Cooked rice and bananas, for serving

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In the jar of a blender, combine the tomatoes, jalapeño, bell pepper, tomato paste, yogurt, curry powder, cumin, turmeric, cardamom, cinnamon, and salt, and puree until smooth.

Warm the oil in a large Dutch oven or other heavy pot set over medium heat. Add the onion, garlic, and ginger, and cook, stirring occasionally, until just beginning to soften, about 5 minutes. Stir in the blended tomato mixture, bring the mixture to a boil, then immediately lower the heat, cover, and cook until very fragrant, about 10 minutes. This initial cooking forms the base of the sauce.


Stir in the potato, carrots, chicken, and coconut milk. Cover the pot and cook, uncovering to stir occasionally, until the vegetables are tender and the chicken is cooked through, about 30 minutes.

Season the stew to taste with salt. Serve hot, sprinkled with the cilantro, over cooked rice, and with bananas alongside. (Don’t slice the bananas; just serve them whole and take bites as you devour the stew).

 

Villainess

smooth talk on a rainy summer evening
Congrats to the sister. Im still on the front that we should gatekeep somali foods because i’m tired of somali dispora teaching our language to gaals. The least we can do is keep our food. Food ties a culture together. If we loose our food we will loose ourselves. :(
 

Gibiin-Udug

Crowned Queen of Puntland. Supporter of PuntExit
I've enjoyed watching hawa's recipes, I will definitely purchase this and support her.
 
Nah I disagree most sound like her but not all
I sound like her, those mataano girls from NYC sound like her. Basically most Somali millennial girls sound like her, it’s your generation Z that’s different, they sound little ditsy and pretentious compare to the older gen.
 
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Boogie

Islam wins doesnt take Ls Long Live Somalia 🇸🇴
I sound like her, those mataano girls from NYC sound like girl. Basically most Somali millennial girls sound like her, it’s your generation Z that’s different, they sound little ditsy and pretentious compare to the older gen.
Gen Z has high and fast voices
 
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