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Sufuria information


Various sizes of sufuria (center) displayed along with jiko braziers (foreground) at a metalworker's shop in Malindi, Kenya
Burundian soldiers cooking in sufuria over an open fire

A sufuria (Swahili sufuria; English plural sufurias[1]) is a Swahili language word, adopted in the local African Great Lakes regional variety of English,[2] for a flat-based, deep-sided, lipped and handleless cooking pot or container. It is ubiquitous in Kenya, Tanzania and other Great Lakes nations.[3] A replacement for more traditional crockery containers (ek fara), it is used in many Kenyan households for cooking, serving and storing food.[4] Most sufuria are today made of aluminum, and produced and purchased locally in the informal sector.[5] Sufuria were traditionally used to cook over open fire, a charcoal brazier (a jiko), or coals, and are purchased in a variety of sizes, with and without lids.[6]

  1. ^ Kenya "SchoolSpeak". Old Cambrian Society, The Prince of Wales School / Nairobi School, Nairobi, Kenya. September 2004.
  2. ^ Ailie Cleghorn, Marilyn Merritt and Jared O. Abagi. Language Policy and Science Instruction in Kenyan Primary Schools. Comparative Education Review, Vol. 33, No. 1, Special Issue on Africa (Feb., 1989), pp. 22
  3. ^ Richard W. Bailey, Manfred Görlach. English as a world language. University of Michigan Press, 1982 ISBN 978-0-472-10016-3 p.317
  4. ^ Transformation of the Kisi pottery enterprise. in Patrick O. Alila, Poul O. Pedersen; Negotiating social space: East African microenterprises. Africa World Press, 2001 ISBN 978-0-86543-964-1 p.273, 275
  5. ^ Krista M. Donaldson. Product design in less industrialized economies: constraints and opportunities in Kenya. Research in Engineering Design. Volume 17, Number 3 / December, 2006.
  6. ^ Ann Gardner. Karibu: welcome to the cooking of Kenya. Kenway Publications Imprint Series/East African Publishers, 1993 ISBN 978-9966-46-987-8 pp. 170, 178, 179

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Sufuria

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Burundian cuisine

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Bjumbura Burundi soldiers cooking in a sufuria over a fire...

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the plant's leaves (or plastic bags), and set in a cooking pot (Swahili: sufuria) atop the banana stalks. The pot is then placed on a charcoal or wood fire...

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(primarily beans) mixed and boiled together. The maize and beans are mixed in a sufuria, a type of pot. Water is then added, and the mixture is boiled until the...

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are peeled, wrapped in the plant's leaves and set in a cooking pot (a sufuria) on the stalks that have been removed from the leaves. The pot is then...

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generic name for one of the most common types of cooking pot used worldwide Sufuria – a flat based, deep sided, lipped and handleless cooking pot or container...

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George Saitoti

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given back Prof Saitoti the seat of Vice-President, hopefully now your sufurias (pots) will be full of food." Months before the general elections of 2002...

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