In West Africa, garri (also known as gari, galli, or gali) is the flour of the fresh starchy cassava root.
In the Hausa language, garri can also refer to the flour of Sorghum bicolor, maize, rice, yam, plantain and millet. For example, garin dawa is processed from guinea corn, garin masara and garin alkama originate from maize and wheat respectively, while garin magani is a powdery medicine.
Starchy flours mixed with cold or boiled water form a major part of the diet in Nigeria, Benin, Togo, Ghana, Guinea, Cameroon and Liberia.
Cassava, the root from which garri is produced, is rich in fiber, copper and magnesium.
Garri is similar to farinha de mandioca of Brazil, used in many food preparations and recipes, including farofa, particularly in the Nordeste.
Kokoro is a Nigerian snack food common in southern and southeast Nigeria, especially Abia state, Rivers state, Anambra state, Enugu state and Imo state. It is made from a paste of maize flour, mixed with garri and sugar and deep-fried.
As a snack, cereal, or light meal, garri can be soaked in cold water (in which case it settles to the bottom), mixed with sugar or honey, and sometimes roasted and/or evaporated milk, also known as Soaking Garri. The amount of water needed for soaked garri is 3:1. Garri can also be eaten dry with sugar and roasted peanut. Other ingredients include coconut chunks, tiger nut milk, and cashews.
In Liberia, garri is used to make a dessert called kanyan which is combined with peanuts and honey.
In its dry form, garri is used as an accompaniment for soft cooked beans and palm oil. This food mix is called yoo ke garri, or garri-fɔtɔ/ galli-fɔtɔ (crushed garri) in the Ga language of Ghana and the Gen dialect of southern Togo and Benin. This type of garri is a mixture of moistened garri kneaded with a thickened tomato paste, oil, salt, seasonings. Yoo ke garri is garri with beans, which is typically eaten as lunch. It is also eaten with bean cake (Akara) in Nigeria.
Smooth garri (known as lebu to the Yoruba people) can be mixed with pepper and other spicy ingredients. A small amount of warm water and palm oil is added and softened by hand. This type of garri is served with fried fish. It is served with frejon on Good Friday.
In Nigeria, the Efik people use dry garri to thicken light soups like egg soup and white soup (also known as up and down soup)
Variations of yellow and white garri are common across Nigeria and Cameroon. One variation of white garri is popularly known as garri-Ijebu. This is produced mainly by the Yoruba people of Ijebu Kingdom in Nigeria.
In Ghana, garri is classified by taste and grain size. The sweeter types with finer grains are more valued over sourer, large grain varieties. Commercial food vendors prefer coarser grains with high starch content, as this produces a greater yield when soaked in water.
Buyers often look out for crisper grains when trying to determine freshness.
Variations
See also
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