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Popular Stews

Ayamase – Ofada Stew

Looking back, this was one of the first recipes that I posted. In fact, it was the second recipe on my Bella Naija BN Cuisine feature. When I look back at the pictures from that post, I can’t help but cringe for a few seconds and that feeling is replaced by pride and gratitude for how far I have come in this food blogosphere. This past weekend, I decided on a do over on one of my favourite stews till date. The Ijebu’s are known for very many wonderful things, of which Aya Mase is one of them. It should be our official tribe stew because of its fame and popularity.

I taught my flatmate to make this stew weeks ago, and while teaching him, I picked up a few new things myself and that pot was the best I have ever made. I made a mental note of all the new things I picked up and I wanted to prove to myself that it wasn’t just a fluke, so I recreated it on Saturday to take to a friend’s house for her daughter’s birthday party and BOOM!!!!, same result, just as good as that last pot. If you have tried my aya mase recipe in the past (recipe HERE) and loved it, this is even better. I think what clinched it for me was the duration of bleaching the palm oil. It was quite a coincidence that I came across this realisation. While he was prepping for the stew, I forgot to tell him to bleach the palm oil. I remembered at the last-minute, and I kept saying cripes, he should have been bleaching the palm oil while he chopped the meats, so cooking can start immediately. Nevertheless, he put the palm oil on the heat, and I could see that he was already tired from all the prepping. This is someone who barely cooks. He complained the entire time and said, he now understands why ofada sauce is expensive in restaurants, and he won’t begrudge them the price again. Hehehehehe.

I could sense that he had already had enough of the process, so roughly 10 minutes or even less, I told him to take it off the heat, with a caveat that the next time he makes it, he should let it bleach for much longer. I realised this was probably not correct, when the stew was done. Let me tell you why. Although we were not bleaching that much palm oil, but prior to that day, I would have bleached for at least 20 minutes. Now I know better, it is not necessary. Longer than 10 minutes, and that distinct villagey/local aya mase flavour is lost amongst the powering smokey flavour that you get from bleaching for a long time. I wrote villagey because once the stew was done, it tasted and smelled EXACTLY like the old woman who sold obe ata dudu (the local name for aya mase) in Iperu my mother’s village. As in, EXACTLY and it was down mostly to the Palm oil. From memory, I could now perceive that local aroma, and it was different from the other aya mase’s I have made, and I am really good at this stew. I also picked up two new key tips. Trust me, try this for Christmas and your guests will abandon whatever else you serve and descend on this. Here is how to:

You will need

1 cup of palm oil – roughly
6 -7 pieces of green bell pepper – basically green tatashe
3 pieces of ata rodo – scotch bonnet/habanero pepper
2 wraps of Iru – fermented locust beans
3 – 4 cups or more of chopped assorted meats
Beef Stock
Seasoning Cube
Salt
1 large onion
1 cooking spoon of ground crayfish

How To

1. Blend the Green Pepper with the ata rodo and boil till it reduces and becomes thick. Dooney’s Kitchen Tip: if you have been blending green pepper with onions and chilli, stop it now. Lol. You only need two ingredients for the pepper to get that local flavour

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2. While the pepper is boiling, cover the pot and bleach the palm oil. This is roughly one cup. Be a little obsessive about this. Set the timer if possible. As soon as you start to approach the 8 – 10 minute mark, turn off the heat. Dooney’s Kitchen Tip: if you have an electric cooker, just leave it there to absorb latent heat. If you have a gas cooker, as naked flame burns hotter than electric cookers, just turn off the heat and leave it undisturbed to cool. DO NOT OPEN THE POT, until the body feels totally warm.

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see the colour of the palm oil? It has blackened like expected BUT it is not entirely charcoal black. Tilting the pot, you can see that it has a golden honey like colour. This is exactly what you want. The days of black like charcoal palm oil for ofada sauce is not necessary. You miss out on an aromatic essence when you over bleach

A little Dooney’s Kitchen science behind it is this. You only need to bleach for a few minutes at first because remember, the palm oil will still continue bleaching along the entire cooking process. So, you only need to kick-start it for a couple of minutes at the beginning to darken it. No point burning the hell out of it (pardon my French) at the start, when it will still continue bleaching while you cook. I hope that explains it.

3. Once the pot has cooled, put it back on the heat and add chopped onions.

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let it fry till it softens, and then add the iru and let both fry. The aroma wafting from the oil will let you know that you have got a winner right there

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a new tip i picked up: let the onions and iru fry until bubbles of palm oil float to the top i.e. the onions and iru have absorbed some of the oil at the beginning. They release this oil once they have fried sufficiently, and it floats to the top. Make sure this happens before you add the meats. See below

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4. Add the meats, stir and let it fry. At the beginning, the meats take over the pot, with time, as it fries, it will release the oil which will float to the top

IMG_3155

see? after a few minutes, the oil is coming back up

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when you get to this point where the oil is seeping through amongst the meats and also floating to the top, then you know your meats are ready for the pepper. Dooney’s Kitchen Tip: doing it this way is key.

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5. Add the boiled pepper and stir. Like above, let it fry until oil floats to the top

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then you add stock, roughly 1 cup, stir and let it fry until you start to see patches of oil on top. If you have got very rich stock, you may not need to re-season with salt and seasoning cubes. If you need to, simply do.

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see the patches of oil in the picture below? Oil floating to the top signals the end of a stage and the beginning of the next.

6. Add ground crayfish

IMG_3168

another tip I want to share. Dooney’s Kitchen Tip: the addition of crayfish is more like an accent to this stew. Remember that in times past, seasoning cubes were not used, so crayfish is meant to replace that. What I am trying to say is, now we now use seasoning cubes, the flavour of crayfish in this stew should be mild i.e. it should not hit you the minute you smell or taste this stew like it would in our Nigerian soups. The flavour of crayfish is intense, so for this stew, you want it to play a minor role i.e. it should just be there in the background. Something your taste buds will pick up at the end. If you go overboard with crayfish you will miss that local flavour you have tried so hard to achieve in the previous steps.

7. Stir and let the crayfish cook and combine with the stew. Lower the heat, and let the stew gently fry till it releases the oil back up again. At this point, you can add boiled eggs, while you are letting it fry. Once the oil starts to float back up, taste again for salt and seasoning, and re-adjust accordingly.

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Serve with ofada rice (unpolished rice), regular long grain rice or even perfumed rice like Basmati or Jasmine rice. I always enjoy it with fried plantain too (dodo).

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298 Comments

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FILED UNDER: Popular, Stews
TAGGED WITH: Aya mase, ayamase, ofada sauce, ofada stew
Dooney

About Dooney

Dooney is the blogger, recipe developer and photographer for Dooney's Kitchen. I spend my days trying to figure out creative ways to redefine Nigerian food, either by creating a new dish itself using ingredients in ways that have never been used before, or changing the approach to Nigerian cooking using kitchen gadgets.

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Alapa – my Grandmother’s Palm Oil Stew »

Comments

  1. AvatarIrene says

    August 24, 2015 at 2:53 pm

    i learnt how to make this delicacy right thanks to u, Am excited about this improved version, will try it when my hubby comes home in a week. so if am going to bleach the small eva bottle of palm oil do i still stick to the 10mins. because i like to bleach and stock up so i dont have to do it often.

    Reply
    • dooneyrooneydooneyrooney says

      August 27, 2015 at 11:58 am

      add extra 5 minutes.

      Reply
      • AvatarIrene says

        August 27, 2015 at 2:17 pm

        Thanks a bunch!

        Reply
  2. Avatarbolu says

    September 1, 2015 at 9:08 am

    pease are we to use red ata rodo or green too?That is not clear for me.

    Reply
    • dooneyrooneydooneyrooney says

      September 2, 2015 at 6:08 am

      Any is fine

      Reply
  3. Avatarbukola says

    September 6, 2015 at 3:21 pm

    Ha dunni you are a live saver, I made the ofada stew for the first time and it was fantastic as in , I was just grinning wide … was scared at forst . My fiance just woke up one day and said babe can you make ofada stew, I feel like eating ofada this weekend, I said yes, dunno why.. I thought to myself if I check dunni’s blog and I don’t find the recipe there, I would just form sick, but I found it and I made my very first delicious ofada sauce, after my fiance saw it, he offered to fry plantain sharp sharp. Lol thanks babe. Would tag you on instagram so you can see…. hope you get this…

    Reply
  4. AvatarDee says

    September 25, 2015 at 8:32 am

    Hi Dunni, i recently tried your ayamase recipe. Very wonderful i must say. Tried it with green atarodo (thinking it would be greener but it wasn’t as green as I wanted still) and some red ones. Anyway my question is I’m sort of a slow eater i found out the sauce congealed/coagulated as a result of cooling while eating. Is there anything I’m doing wrong while cooking or that’s just natural to palm oil Stew/sauce?
    Please reply.
    Thank you

    Reply
    • dooneyrooneydooneyrooney says

      September 25, 2015 at 2:43 pm

      hi, there’s nothing you did wrong. the sauce is made with a lot of palm oil, so it will congeal when the sauce gets cold.

      Reply
      • AvatarDee says

        September 29, 2015 at 6:04 pm

        Thanks a lot

        Reply
  5. AvatarDee says

    September 25, 2015 at 8:47 am

    Hi Dooney,
    Lovely recipe it turned out great. Wanted to know how to get the color greener also the sauce thickens after a while (cooling process) is there something I’m doing wrong during cooking or is that just a natural palm oil sauce/Stew process? Can it be fixed?

    Reply
    • dooneyrooneydooneyrooney says

      September 25, 2015 at 2:44 pm

      the sauce should be brown at the end not green, so i’m really not sure why you want it to be greener. the sauce should thicken after a while. add a little water, if you think it is too thick

      Reply
  6. AvatarK says

    September 29, 2015 at 4:57 pm

    Hi, I made this stew for the first time this weekend and it has made my stomach run. I remember that the only other time I ever had Ofada stew at one of the restaurants in Nigeria, that it made my stomach run as well. I really love the stew and can’t imagine discarding it.

    Reply
  7. AvatarGenevieve says

    November 5, 2015 at 4:00 pm

    Hi Dooney,

    I was thinking of making this for my husband. Please forgive my ignorance but what is bleaching? Can you break it down. Also how would you suggest making a ‘healthier’ version of the stew. Many thank you.

    Reply
    • DooneyDooney says

      November 8, 2015 at 1:21 am

      Bleaching is heating up the palm oil till it changes colour. to make it healthier, use less palm oil

      Reply
  8. AvatarItohan_lastborn says

    November 8, 2015 at 12:33 pm

    Hi dooney,I made this today and it turned outo very great,I followed your cooking method to the last point.just wanted to say please keep doing what you are doing,you inspire lots of us to cook better.thank you

    Reply
  9. AvatarEjiro says

    November 10, 2015 at 6:57 am

    Dear Dunni,

    God bless you for me. I made this stew over the weekend for the very first time. Come and see plate licking en! I be like champion…kept getting stares of wonder.

    Thanks darling, I will continue to use this recipe to wow everyone. Your description made it so easy to do.. no hassle at all.

    Grateful…

    Reply
  10. AvatarMrs Tee says

    December 29, 2015 at 11:37 am

    Dooney you are a life saver and I am ever thankful I came across your blog. I have used your recipes to make edikainkong, afang, chicken curry and so much. I tried your ayamase recipe this Christmas and I had the whole family almost licking their plates. My sister called me a day after to tell me she’s still dreaming if the stew. Dooney I just want to say thank you. I wish there was some way I could reward you for all the good you have done for me. You have turned me into such a superb cook that my husband’s friends who eat at our place keep testifying, some even call back days after just to say the meal was delicious and they are still thinking about it. My husband is akwaibom while I am Yoruba, hence they wonder how I can cook all their local soups even better than their wives and mothers. I appreciate you Dunni, I really do. God bless you.

    Reply
    • AvatarHoney says

      January 6, 2016 at 4:53 pm

      I agree with you Mrs Tee, Dunni is truly God’s sent, I have been following her blog for years even before she joined IG, she has made me a cooking star and I can tell you I only knew how to boil rice when I started following this Blog. I love you so very much Dooney and the next I am waiting for is Dooney Kitchen app **wink*hugs*kisses***

      Reply
  11. AvatarSonari says

    January 27, 2016 at 9:33 am

    Hi Duni , many thanks for this lovely recipe. I plan to try it out n give my husband a treat this weekend ill like to know if the green tatashe is d same as the “green pepper” used for fried rice.

    Reply
    • DooneyDooney says

      January 29, 2016 at 1:24 pm

      Hi, yes it is the same thing

      Reply
  12. AvatarTosin says

    March 12, 2016 at 10:35 am

    Hi Dunni,

    I’m not able to print this recipe, do you have a printable version?

    Reply
    • DooneyDooney says

      April 1, 2016 at 10:24 am

      Hi Tosin, at the moment no, but an app version is coming soon

      Reply
  13. AvatarJENNIFER says

    March 30, 2016 at 2:30 pm

    Hello Dunni,
    I made this sauce but it was bitter at first. My dad thinks i added too much green pepper (the type we use in Nigeria for fried rice ) , although it was the same green colour as the one above and same great smell. It was just very peppery and bitter at first…i left in the freezer for like 2weeks untouched and it became sweet.
    please i just want to be clear, what is the correct pepper to use and can i add tomatoes ?

    Reply
    • DooneyDooney says

      March 31, 2016 at 9:47 pm

      Hi Jennifer, sorry to hear about your experience. it is the same green pepper, but some species turn out bitter than others. next time, blend a lot of onions and add to it gradually, it will sweeten it up

      Reply
  14. AvatarAdeola says

    April 1, 2016 at 1:46 pm

    Hi Dunni,

    great job you are doing here.

    I plan on trying this over the weekend

    Just a clarification, is it okay to use the red bell pepper instead of the green?
    also i noticed certain people remove the seed of the bell pepper before blending on the notion that it makes the stew tastier.

    how can i get your yajichurri?

    awaiting your respos ne

    Reply
    • DooneyDooney says

      April 1, 2016 at 4:04 pm

      Hi Deola, please send me an email: [email protected] for yajichurri. as for ayamase, for the authentic taste, please use green bell pepper. the seeds are sometimes bitter, which is why they are taken out

      Reply
  15. AvatarIyaosagie! says

    April 11, 2016 at 12:57 pm

    Thank you so much dooney!. I made the ayamase over the weekend and my hubby wont stop raving about it. I myself could not believe i could come up with something so tasty with an original flavour.

    Reply
  16. AvatarBolanle says

    May 19, 2016 at 12:37 pm

    Hello Dunni,
    How do I prevent the choking fumes when bleaching the oil?

    Reply
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