Recipe: at dinner Mokimo

Share on Tumblr
Share on Pinterest
Share on WhatsApp
Recipe: at dinner Mokimo
Page content

Recipe: at dinner Mokimo Delicious, fresh and tasty.

Mokimo. Mukimo Recipe: Mukimo is a meal whose origin is Central Kenya (Agikuyu community) but it's being served in hotels across the country keeping in mind of the diversity of Kenyan people. So if you have been wondering on how to prepare these meal at home,here is a simple recipe to guide you through. Tuko.co.ke News ☛ ★MUKIMO RECIPE★ Want to enjoy the delicious mukimo and beef stew with friends and family?

Mukimo is the staple food for the Kikuyu people in Central Kenya.

It is cooked all year round and in important functions like the traditional weddings, circumcision ceremonies, and dowry negotiations and so on.

Mukimo (Irio) is a Kenyan meal (predominantly from communities living around Mount Kenya) prepared by mashing potatoes and green vegetables.

You can cook Mokimo using 6 ingredients and 4 steps. Here is how you cook it.

Ingredients of Mokimo

  1. You need 12 of big potatoes.

  2. It’s 1 of large red onion.

  3. You need leaves of Enough pumkin.

  4. Prepare 1 cup of fresh green maize.

  5. You need 1 cup of peas.

  6. Prepare of Little oil.

It may also include maize and beans.

Mukimo is mostly served as an accompaniment for meat-based stew and nyama choma.

Though originally from the central part of Kenya, Mukimo is now consumed amongst various communities in Kenya.

See recipes for Plain Mukimo, Mukimo puree, Mukimo, Mukimo ya njahi too.

Mokimo instructions

  1. Boil the maize, peas, potatoes and pumkin leaves separately.

  2. Fry tge onions to translucent.

  3. In a different pan, mix the maize, pease, onions and pumpkin leaves, add the boiled potatoes and mash them to a very fine paste…

  4. Serve with your prefered stew.. Enjoy.

Mukimo is a kenyan dish which mainly originates from the kikuyu community.

It comprises of maize, potatoes, peas and salt.

Peas are sometimes normally expensive and can be substituted with kahurura (pumpkin leaves) as is regularly done in Kenyan households.

Kenyan dishes are very diverse and they vary depending with the different communities.

They have evolved and been adapted to suit the regions and cultures.