Bugger all to do with Ivy League, I'm just curious. Watching that movie 'Zulu' I found myself listening less to John Barry and more to the Zulu singing. Same when listening to 'Graceland' (not often recently). Then, reading Kelley's biography of Monk, African music comes into it pretty often. So - a compilation - playing now: 'Music Of The African Heartland'. Pretty bloody good.
Bugger all to do with Ivy League or African music but I can heartily recommend Nigerian food at this time of year: chicken on the bone, fried plantain and that delicious rice.
Restaurants/take aways with African food in any form are quite rare in the UK. In my 3 years in Colombia I ate plantain most days and it certainly didn't do me any harm. Now I can't be bothered to cook it but I do cook rice most days.
Patacones are a delicious plantain dish.
African music is a massive field. In the disco era they came up with some killers. Soul Makossa for example. I'll remember some more examples.
Last edited by Yuca (2022-01-14 05:29:00)
Some of this seems to be tilting slightly in the direction of Zydeco - which I also enjoy.
We briefly had an African restaurant/takeaway in our town.
Every time we walked past it my wife would screw up her face and say she'd never eaten African food, had no idea what it was, and would never go in there.
Unfortunately the good people of the town agreed. It's now a sudo sushi packed with art students eating smoked salmon and prawn sandwiches.
I'm being drawn more and more towards African music. I don't think it'll ever feature large in my collection, but like Gospel, I can see me throwing it on on a sunny Sunday morning. There's a time and a place. Think I'll Youtube some later.
The CD was an impulse buy on Amazon. Very good it is, too.
African food - what I've had of it - is variable. So: I had a neighbour from Soweto when at University (now a Professor Of Education back in SA). She cooked chicken livers. I struggled. I'm fairly sure her son (who was about twelve at the time) preferred the roast I prepared in return. Oddly, my putative son-in-law, who is of Nigerian descent (his paternal grandfather) seems indifferent - his father (German-Nigerian) even more so. But, like Jamaican, it's great comfort food. Back in 1982, whilst living in Salford, there was a Mongolian and Satay place I wish I'd tried. Never seen once since.
I love the African music from Nigeria or South Africa that I am aware of. hi
African food, meh. I don't eat meat so that probably rules out a lot of it for me.
Yeah we had a Mongolian not far from us. Bang in the middle of a roundabout. Every time I went passed I wondered if I should go in. It's a golfing shop now I think.
I suppose it's easy to be indifferent to your own national food? I was never really a huge fan of anything that could be labelled 'English'. My In Laws get positively twitchy if there's a chance they wont have a roast on a Sunday. Cornflakes in the week. Porridge on a weekend. Slice of cake with a cuppa as a treat. Drives me mad.
Stick around Robbie. It's only a matter of time before plant based African bush food is the new thing!
Tea with my late mother-in-law: a retro delight. Bread and marg, limp lettuce, corned beef, tinned fruit and 'Tip-Top'. I used to get her round here and tell her we were having Jewish food for lunch. You should have seen her little face crumple. I could have simply said 'pot roast'. Then there was my framed Ellsworth Kelly for her to dislike. I digress. English food? The English excel in one thing and one thing only: fucking it up. Even a bag of chips can't be relied on. In fact, I don't dislike roast beef and Yorkshire pudding (when not dieting), but I'd rather prepare it myself. I discovered the delights of Turkish food in 2005 and have never looked back. Some great places in and around Nottingham. The one in Beeston is particularly good. Their grocery stores are also a joy. The only thing to steer clear of is that salty drink of theirs, which can be mistaken for the delicious kefir.