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In Cape Town, a local chef gives cookery lessons in a cuisine that combines African, Malaysian and Indonesian flavours to delicious effect
Faldela Tolker is waiting to greet us on the doorstep of her neat, lilac-coloured house. She ushers us into the kitchen, where a large metal pot simmering on the hotplate emits a spicy aroma.
Chef Faldela gives cookery lessons to tourists at her home in Bo-Kaap, Cape Town. The food cooked in this predominantly Muslim neighbourhood is as piquant as the hot pink and burnt orange painted houses that rise gently up the lower slopes of Signal Hill, part of Table Mountain.
Unique to the Western Cape of South Africa, Cape Malay cuisine mixes African traditions with those of the Malaysian and Indonesian slaves brought over by the Dutch in the 17th and 18th centuries. A blend of spices – ginger, fennel, star anise, tamarind and, most important, turmeric – gives the food its distinctive aromatic quality. Stews, roasts and sauce-heavy curries are popular, as are meat patties and milk and bread puddings.
Before we start wrapping pastry squares around a chicken and potato mix to make samosas, Faldela, whose own background is Malaysian Indian, offers us each a little tulip glass filled with a baby-pink liquid. Called falooda, it’s a refreshing mix of rose syrup, tapioca seeds and cow’s milk. Afterwards, around the kitchen table, we use fluffy rotis (pronounced “rootis”) to mop up our lamb and coconut stew.
Koeksisters, sweet sticky doughnuts sprinkled with desiccated coconut, are washed down with redbush tea for afters. Later, a gentle stroll around Bo-Kaap walks at least some of it off.
Source: theguardian.com