Malawian Chicken Curry With Nsima Recipe on Food52 (2024)

Braise

by: Nyanyika Banda

April16,2020

4.3

7 Ratings

  • Prep time 20 minutes
  • Cook time 1 hour
  • Serves 4-6

Jump to Recipe

Author Notes

Growing up, my father's curried chicken stew and nsima always meant that we would be eating dinner together as a family. Even more exciting to my sister and I, it meant we would be eating with our hands.

My ada, or “da” as we call him for short, grew up in a village in Malawi, moving to the United States when he was fifteen. His dinner repertoire was limited to just two dishes, but I can recall being in grade school and arriving home to the aroma of chicken that had been braising in curry all afternoon. This was a sign that an evening of quality family time around the table was in store.

The curry was usually served alongside nsima, a white cornmeal patty that doubled up as an eating utensil. My sister and I would each be served a patty smothered in a curried tomato sauce that contained chicken bones and meat that had separated from each other during their slow braising. We’d rip pieces of nsima and dip it in the sauce, searching for chunks of meat to pair with it before shoving it into our mouths.

All these years later, I do exactly the same thing, except now I've learned to cook it, too. And each time I do, I recall the stories of my da's childhood in Chituka, Malawi.

For more stories, memories, and extended histories behind your most-loved, treasured family recipes from the column, check out our new podcast My Family Recipe.Nyanyika Banda

Test Kitchen Notes

Featured in: The Chicken Curry That Put My Broken Family Back Together Again. —The Editors

  • Test Kitchen-Approved

What You'll Need

Ingredients
  • Chicken curry
  • 3 tablespoonsvegetable oil, divided
  • 2 medium white onions, sliced into 1/4-inch half-moons
  • 3 celery stalks, sliced 1/4-inch thick
  • 4 garlic cloves, minced
  • Kosher salt, to taste
  • Freshly ground black pepper, to taste
  • 4 large carrots, sliced in 1/4-inch rounds
  • 1 (12-ounce) can tomato paste
  • 1 (28-ounce) can whole peeled tomatoes
  • 1/2 cupwhite distilled vinegar
  • 1 lemon, juiced
  • 1/4 cupyellow curry powder
  • 5 poundsbone-in, skin-on chicken pieces
  • 1 pinchgranulated sugar (optional)
  • Nsima
  • 2 cupsufa (fine-ground white cornmeal)
  • 5 1/2 cupswater
  • 2 tablespoonsunsalted butter or margarine (optional)
Directions
  1. Chicken curry
  2. In a very large soup pot or Dutch oven, heat 2 tablespoons of the oil over medium heat. Add onions, celery, and garlic and season with a pinch each of salt and pepper. Cook for 4 minutes, or until vegetables are translucent, stirring occasionally with a wooden spoon.
  3. Add the 1 remaining tablespoon of oil and the carrots and tomato paste. Fry about 1 to 2 minutes, then add the whole peeled tomatoes, using a wooden spoon to break them up in the pot to 1/2-inch pieces. Add vinegar, lemon juice, and curry powder and mix together.
  4. Add the chicken pieces and season generously with salt and pepper; stir together with the tomatoey vegetables. Pour enough water in the pot to cover the chicken (you may need to add more as the stew reduces). Bring to a simmer, reduce heat to a low, and cover. It takes at least 1 to 1 1/2 hours for the chicken to become fully tender, but it can also stay on the stove all day. The longer it simmers, the stronger the flavors and the more tender the chicken will be.
  5. Taste and season with more salt and pepper as needed, and a pinch of sugar. Serve over nsima or cooked rice.
  1. Nsima
  2. In a saucepan, heat the water until lukewarm. Slowly mix in the cornmeal while stirring, avoiding lumps. Bring to a boil while stirring continuously. Lower heat and let the porridge gently ripple for 2 minutes; the mixture should look like thin transparent porridge. Continue stirring until the mixture is smooth and cooked through.
  3. If desired, the butter or margarine can be added at this point. Nsima can be served in a dish or scooped onto a plate as patties. Accompany with meat, fish, or vegetables.

Tags:

  • Stew
  • African
  • Chicken
  • Celery
  • Onion
  • Chicken Thigh
  • Rice
  • Chicken Breast
  • Curry
  • Cornmeal
  • Tomato
  • Carrot

See what other Food52ers are saying.

  • Hannah

  • Mike Sidman

  • chiccosinalo

Popular on Food52

4 Reviews

chiccosinalo September 1, 2021

Thats nsima looks amazing loving to see my national dish here.

Hannah December 27, 2020

I would like to make this, but I’d like to know what the green side dish is. Is it Swiss chard and tomatoes?

chiccosinalo September 1, 2021

You can make the vegetables from pretty much everything. Kale, chard, cabbage... name it.

Mike S. June 9, 2020

This was delicious and surprisingly simple! Definitely going to become a dish I make often. Thank you for sharing!

Malawian Chicken Curry With Nsima Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

What is Nsima food in Malawi? ›

Nsima is the staple food in Malawi. It's a thick porridge made out of maize flour and water. Typically, nsima is eaten with vegetables and a protein—like fish, beans, or meat. It can be torn apart by hand and used to dip into side dishes or relishes.

What is the national dish of Malawi? ›

Nsima, the Culinary Tradition of Malawi, is a compound name for the culinary and dietary tradition of Malawians as well as the name of a single component of this tradition, a form of thick porridge prepared with maize flour.

What is Malawi most famous food? ›

After harvest, maize is typically ground up into flour, which is then used to make Malawi's most popular dish, nsima, a thickly-mashed maize porridge dish so relied upon by Malawians that it is not uncommon to see people eating variations of it for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

Is nsima and fufu the same? ›

In the French-speaking regions of Cameroon, it is called "couscous" (not to be confused with the North African dish couscous). Although people from the Eastern Africa and Southern Africa seem to confuse fufu (or fufuo) with their type of corn or maize dough dish called ugali or nshima, it is not the same.

What two foods do Malawians eat daily? ›

Nsima is a staple food made from ground corn and served with side dishes of meat, beans and vegetables. It can be eaten for lunch and dinner. Additional Malawi cuisine includes: Kachumbari, a type of tomato and onion salad, known locally in Malawi as a sumu or shum or simply 'tomato and onion salad'.

What do Malawians eat for breakfast? ›

Most Malawians skip breakfast or have a very light, simple breakfast. Mgaiwa Phala is a breakfast porridge cooked using maize flour in milk with a little sugar sometimes served with a sprinkle of cinnamon. The same dish made with rice is known as Rice Phala, cooked using rice flour instead.

What is the traditional drink of Malawi? ›

Thobwa is a traditional Malawian drink.

It's made from fermented cornflour, sorghum, and water. It can be served hot or cold.

What is nshima made of? ›

Nshima is the staple food of Zambia. It is basically a very thick porridge made from finely ground corn meal, called mealie meal. It is served in lumps and eaten with the hands.

What is nsima in Africa? ›

Nsima is a dish made from maize flour (white cornmeal) and water and is a staple food in Zambia (nsima/ubwali) and Malawi (nsima). The maize flour is first boiled with water into a porridge. and, in Zambia, left to simmer for a few minutes before it is 'paddled', to create a thick paste with the addition of more flour.

Which food is nshima? ›

One of the dishes she often makes for her family in Zambia is nshima, a cornmeal porridge with Play-Doh-like consistency. Nshima is eaten with your hands and often dipped in relishes of meat, beans, and vegetables. Bring a taste of traditional Zambian cooking into your kitchen with the following recipes.

Why is nsima so important? ›

Nsima isn't just an important part of our diet—our bodies depend on it the same way fish need water. If a foreigner invites a Malawian to supper and serves him plates of steak and pasta and chocolate cake for dessert, but no nsima, he'll go home and tell his brothers and sisters, “there was no food there…”

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Arielle Torp

Last Updated:

Views: 5540

Rating: 4 / 5 (61 voted)

Reviews: 84% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Arielle Torp

Birthday: 1997-09-20

Address: 87313 Erdman Vista, North Dustinborough, WA 37563

Phone: +97216742823598

Job: Central Technology Officer

Hobby: Taekwondo, Macrame, Foreign language learning, Kite flying, Cooking, Skiing, Computer programming

Introduction: My name is Arielle Torp, I am a comfortable, kind, zealous, lovely, jolly, colorful, adventurous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.