This would be a badjak best qualified perhaps to answer. badjak???What is being done to the corn in the buckets here in the photo, do you know? Wondering if it's nixtamalised i.e. processed with an alkali, like hominy
Samp - Wikipedia
This would be a badjak best qualified perhaps to answer. badjak???What is being done to the corn in the buckets here in the photo, do you know? Wondering if it's nixtamalised i.e. processed with an alkali, like hominy
Samp - Wikipedia
You don’t even need a lot of room to grow corn. You just have to give corn fertilizer otherwise they are tall grass.One day! My plantable dirt plot somehow is always smaller than my seed stores. I've got some Silver Queen corn when I get that far.![]()
Need to plant several rows for it to work, one day.You don’t even need a lot of room to grow corn. You just have to give corn fertilizer otherwise they are tall grass.
Here is my photo for an urban lot. Okra in front, corn in the back, turmeric on the right side, pole beans in the way way back. I think I harvested quite a few from this tiny area, even for my husband and I, we couldn’t eat the corn fast enough. 2 a day. We finally got sick of corn.Need to plant several rows for it to work, one day.![]()
As far as I know nothing is done with it, except for a corse crush.What is being done to the corn in the buckets here in the photo, do you know? Wondering if it's nixtamalised i.e. processed with an alkali, like hominy
Samp - Wikipedia
Update:I'll check with my staff, but as far as I know nixtamalzation is unknown here
Yes, thanks for that and that's what I had thought, so that photo is misleading for whatever reason.I'll check with my staff, but as far as I know nixtamalzation is unknown here
Where were you?I recall when we lived in Zim for a while back when,
Just the capitalWhere were you?
As I lived there a number of years.
Ok that would explain itYeah I don't understand that picture either, unless they had a huge gathering organised and were soaking the samp
I lived in Harare from 1999 to 2007.Just the capital
Ok that would explain it![]()
Back in the day here they'd keep the fireplace ashes to make soap.Yes, thanks for that and that's what I had thought, so that photo is misleading for whatever reason.
I recall when we lived in Zim for a while back when, pairs of women pounding corn in tall wooden mortars with long pestles and guess they were making samp rather than cornmeal.
In these parts, the lye or alkaline solution for boiling and processing the dried corn for hominy is made by first burning the shelled corn cobs or saltbrush (local shrub, but any edible/non toxic dried plant material works) and then adding the ash and corn kernels to boiling water and simmering until the hulls slough off. At that point the corn kernels which are now hominy (i.e. nixtamalized) are rinsed off and either dried for storage, or added to the stewpot with meat to make the stew.
A relatively simple process that changes and increases the corn nutrient quality compared to untreated corn. Have wondered why it's never been adopted in Africa where corn is such an important staple.
Before that. Couple of years growing up - father's job.I lived in Harare from 1999 to 2007
Same thing - soda ash ?Back in the day here they'd keep the fireplace ashes to make soap.