• New Reader
  • About
    • Introducing Dooney
    • Meet the team
    • Press and Media
    • Work with Us
  • Contact
  • The Tribe
    • Email
    • Facebook
    • Google+
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter

Dooney's Kitchen

Promoting and Redefining New Nigerian Food

  • Home
  • Features
    • Announcements
    • Corporate Collaborations
    • Product Reviews
    • Food Blogger Events
    • Business Spotlight
    • Hotel & Restaurant Reviews
    • Fitness and Nutrition
    • Market Reporting
    • Comment’s Policy
    • Copyright & Privacy Policy
  • Tricks & Cheats
    • Kitchen Gadget Tricks
    • How To’s
    • Food Plating Techniques
    • Cooking Video Hacks
  • Meal Planner
    • Meal Planner Archives
    • Hosting Menus
    • Festive Meal Planner
  • Food Diary
    • Dooney’s Food Travels
    • dooney’s shopping list
  • Recipeadia
    • Recipes by Culture
    • Recipe Collections
  • Ingredientspaedia

Traditional Nigerian Soups

Egusi with Crab and Smoked Seafood

The well cooked, well loved, lots of individual recipes, Egusi soup. The Yoruba’s will tell you they have their method, which involves frying with blended pepper. The Ibo’s will say, no no, you fry with Palm oil, and if I’m correct, people from Calabar also subscribe to this method. You can cook it plain without adding chopped vegetables, though some will argue that a handful of vegetables is needed, others drench Egusi with chopped vegetables. Whichever method you adhere to, no one can doubt the love that Nigerians have for Egusi Soup.

More commonly, Egusi soup is cooked with meat, and the assorted varieties from goat meat, to offals, saki (stomach), cow leg, pomo (skin) chicken, turkey, you name it. Likewise, it is also accompanied by condiments such as crayfish, smoked prawns, dried fish, stockfish, iru (fermented melon seeds) etc. Well, I decided to stray a little and cook mine with crab, stockfish and smoked seafood. No meat in sight. Why? I wanted to switch things up. Egusi soup though delicious, can be monotonous, so I wanted to surprise my taste buds, and what better way to do it than with crab. Crab, oh crab. I can extol its virtues for days, such delicious succulent meat. In western dishes, crab is usually cooked with just its meat, but the shell has its own rich flavour. Thank goodness Nigerian food is rustic and we eat with our hands, so we are not missing out on the whole crab experience. Lol

SAM_3099

Prep time: 20 – 25mins. Cooking time: 20mins

So, what do you need?

2 pounds of Whole Crab including its legs

1 1/2 cups of whole Egusi

1 medium sized piece of stockfish

1 red onion

Tatashe (red bell pepper) – 2

Rodo (scotch bonnet/habanero pepper) – 4

1 cup of smoked prawns

1/2 a cup of crayfish

1/2 cup of Iru (fermented melon seeds)

1 handful of chopped vegetables (Ugwu preferred)

1 tablespoon of dried bitter leaf (optional)

Salt

Seasoning cube (Knorr chicken preferred)

So, here we go

1. Detach the legs, clean the crab thoroughly and set aside. Rinse your egusi and crayfish thoroughly. In a blender add the egusi seeds, chopped onion, crayfish and water just enough to cover the egusi. Blend this for a few minutes till you get a smooth (non grainy) paste. Decant into a bowl

2. Blend the Tatashe and rodo till you get a shaggy partially smooth consistency.

3. Heat up 1 – 1 1/2 cooking spoons of palm oil till its smokey.  Add the pepper, and let it fry for a few minutes on high heat. When you can see bubbled dots in the pepper, add the Egusi paste, shredded stockfish, and smoked prawns. Stir and fry for 7 – 10 minutes. Keep stirring regularly

4. To cook egusi properly, you have to let it fry. This is also to kill off any germs that can lead to food poisoning. You’ll know you are there, when the paste looks and tastes grainy. Add salt and 2 seasoning cubes, plus a little water to dilute. Let this boil for a few minutes.

5. Taste the egusi for salt and seasoning, amend if necessary. At this point, add the iru, and crab, legs and all. Stir till the egusi evenly covers the crab. You will soon see why I advised at the beginning, to use a large pot. Cover the pot and let it cook for 10minutes, stirring and topping up regularly with a little water. Unlike meat, you can’t tell when crab is well done. All you need is time and your taste buds. Dooney’s Kitchen Tip #: One of my hints is to notice when palm oil floats to the top. Also, when you can notice a watery streak leaching out from the crab, and you can taste crab in the Egusi. You should taste a certain distinct richness (undeniably crab) in the soup.

6. Add the chopped Ugwu and bitter leaf. Stir again, and turn down the heat to low. Let this simmer for another 2 – 3 mins, and that’s it. Remember to taste for salt and seasoning at the end. Serve with Pounded yam, Eba or Semovita

Image 1

Ready to be served!!!

SAM_3107

Pounded Yam and Egusi

Dooney’s Kitchen  Extra Tips

# In my recipes, you’ll notice that I add salt after an extended cooking process. This is to allow the ingredients cook in their natural flavours (untarnished by salt), which enriches the dish. Also with cooking, salt and seasoning becomes more concentrated, and this can result in a salty dish.

# If you are wondering why I did not use tomatoes, I leave it out when making Nigerian soups, due to its sweetness.

# With soups, when blending pepper, it is not necessary to achieve a smooth paste, unlike stew.

# It is in your best interest to use whole egusi and whole crayfish. The pre-blended option you get from the market isn’t always sanitary.

# If you have the bottled palm oil sold in stores, shake the bottle and use 2 cooking spoons

# The consistency of your soup shouldn’t be thick. Remember, this is usually only permissible when you are cooking with a significant portion of chopped vegetables

ENJOY!!!!

Image

As you can see, I couldn’t wait to get to the table. I started eating from the kitchen. A certain genius of our time must be rolling in his grave right now. Lol

To my new readers, a very big welcome!!!


15 Comments

Subscribe

Get all the latest recipes straight to your inbox

FILED UNDER: Traditional Nigerian Soups
TAGGED WITH: Egusi, melon seeds
Avatar

About Website Ninja

It is a long established fact that a reader will be distracted by the readable content of a page when looking at its layout. The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters, as opposed to using 'Content here, content here',

Related

If this is your first time commenting on Dooney's Kitchen, please take a moment to read our comment policy.

« Plannning your Food Shopping
King Prawn Fried Beans – Asia meets 9ja »

Comments

  1. AvatarRemi says

    July 22, 2013 at 10:45 am

    looks good!

    Reply
    • AvatarDunni says

      July 22, 2013 at 10:04 pm

      Thanks

      Reply
  2. AvatarNnenna Esther Uma says

    July 25, 2013 at 5:03 pm

    You are to much.;)

    Reply
    • AvatarDunni says

      July 25, 2013 at 7:02 pm

      Aaaaw, thanks

      Reply
  3. AvatarBola says

    July 30, 2013 at 11:47 pm

    I tried it and it’s awesome. I made some slight changes though. I boiled the crab and also added basil along with the bitter leaf. Amazing!!!

    Reply
    • dooneyrooneydooneyrooney says

      July 30, 2013 at 11:49 pm

      Wow, amazing tip. Glad you enjoyed it

      Reply
  4. AvatarTessy says

    August 6, 2013 at 10:57 pm

    Next time blend onions with just a little water and use to mix the egusi powder,it will come out nicer

    Reply
    • dooneyrooneydooneyrooney says

      August 6, 2013 at 11:00 pm

      Thanks. It is already in the recipe ” In a blender add the egusi seeds, chopped onion, crayfish and water just enough to cover the egusi.”

      Reply
  5. AvatarEunice says

    August 13, 2013 at 10:37 pm

    Looks good…when I am cooking with iru I usually fry it in d oil first before adding any other ingredient like pepper mix e.t.c…it gives d soup a very distinct taste.

    Please try it and let me know what you think…

    And btw I LOOOOOVE ur blog!!! Very inspiring…

    Reply
    • dooneyrooneydooneyrooney says

      August 14, 2013 at 1:18 am

      Thanks Eunice, I do that for Aya Mase, I will definitely try that with soup

      Reply
  6. AvatarAde says

    October 24, 2013 at 11:41 am

    I have decided to cook all d meals. Getting ready to dazzle the hubby.. Thank you so much Dunni.

    Reply
    • dooneyrooneydooneyrooney says

      October 24, 2013 at 1:03 pm

      Go you. That’s the spirit. Dazzle away. Please remember to leave feedback. I always love hearing how the results turn out.

      Reply
  7. AvatarErica says

    April 3, 2014 at 1:11 am

    Hi Dunni! I am making Egusi soup for the first time for my boyfriend (he is Nigerian)… And I am choosing your Egusi recipe! My question is I would like to add tomatoes… At what point would I add them? Also, do you have any tips for first timers? I am using ground crawfish and stock fish… The stock fish is dried… And I will also add crab.

    Reply
  8. AvatarErica says

    April 3, 2014 at 1:21 am

    Hi Dunni! I am making Egusi soup for the first time for my boyfriend… (he is Nigerian) … And I am using your Egusi recipe! I like it because it’s seems like a nice twist on some of the others I have seen… Also, I love crab too! My question is I would like to add tomatoes… At what point do I add them? Also, do you have any other advice for a first timer to Egusi? I am using ground crawfish, dry stock fish, King Crab and spinach for my vegetable.

    Reply
    • dooneyrooneydooneyrooney says

      April 3, 2014 at 10:45 am

      Your boyfriend is Nigerian, he may not like the taste of tomatoes in Egusi. I would recommend you use just red bell peppers and scotch bonnet/habanero pepper. You can use half of 1 habanero if you don’t like spicy food. I have a more updated recipe for Egusi soup. It will provide all the answers you need. Click here: http://www.dooneyskitchen.com/2013/06/21/my-two-vegetables-egusi-soup/

      Please let me know how it turns out

      Reply

Leave a Reply to Eunice Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ATTENTION: Please do not include links in your comments. Any comment that has a link in it will be destroyed on sight.

Oh Hi There

Hi, my name is Dunni Obata, and I am what you would call the poster child for redefining Nigerian food. Welcome to Dooney's Kitchen, the home of Nigerian centric food, detailed recipes and sharing personal stories. Read more...

Stay updated!

Get all the latest tasty goodness straight to your inbox!

Dooney's Kitchen
Dooney's Kitchen

Recent Comments

  • Margery on Alapa – my Grandmother’s Palm Oil Stew
  • Sean on The famous Ewa Aganyin – my journey to getting it right
  • Dooney on Puff Puff and Cocktails – a new era for our national favourite chops
  • Dooney on Edikaikong – A traditional Calabar recipe
  • Dooney on The Orange Eba

Must Reads

Introducing Our Thoughts and You

Meal Drop Off and Pick Up service

Sponsor

Popular Categories

  • Rice Dishes
  • Traditional Nigerian Soups
  • Stews
  • Yam, Plantain and Pottage Dishes
  • Snacks
  • Healthy Nigerian

Most Popular Recipes

Etinkeni Mmong Ikong

Ayamase – Ofada Stew

Party Jollof rice

Ogbono soup redefined!!!!

Buka Stew

Latest Recipes

The Battle of the Saucepans Begins on Knorr Taste Quest 4

Tomatoeless Stew

Yajichurri Meatballs Sauce and Linguine

Schwartz Uk Ebook – Jollof rice and Chicken Ayilata made the cut

STAY CONNECTED


@Dooneyskitchen

@DOONEYSKITCHENTRIBE

The Official Instagram page of the online community, Dooney's Kitchen Tribe. To showcase a collection of the best and yummiest pictures of our Tribers

FEATURED

myTaste.com myTaste.ng alldishes.co.uk Tasty Query - recipes search engine
Foodies100 Index of UK Food Blogs
Foodies100

Konga Verified Blogger

Get all the latest recipes straight to your inbox

Dooney’s Favourites

Asun (spicy smoked goat meat)

Vanilla Honeybean Milk

The Dooney’s Kitchen guide to amazing Puff Puff

Ugu Smoothie

Surf and Turf Otong Soup

Nigerian food, is bold, multi faceted, rich, colourful, spicy and with varied nuances, as you move from tribe to tribe. To describe Nigerian cooking, one would say it is fiercely traditional and somewhat dogmatic, but Dooney’s Kitchen proposes to simplify methods and steps that have been passed from generation to generation whilst also challenging some of these methods using Technology. The New Nigerian Cookery isn’t just about creating a New Nigerian Kitchen, or should we say a more technology aware Nigerian cooking experience, but it encompasses redefining recipes too. Come along on the journey, and welcome to one of the best online resources for Nigerian food.

Copyright © 2021· UNAUTHORISED USE OF ANY IMAGES OR CONTENT IS NOT ALLOWED. LEGAL REDRESS WILL BE SOUGHT AND I ALWAYS WIN

Copyright © 2021 · Divine Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in