Injera (Amharic: ?n?ära ???? [?nd??ra]; sometimes transliterated as enjera; or "taita" Tigrinya: ???) is a sourdough-risen flatbread with a unique, slightly spongy texture. Traditionally made out of teff flour, it is a national dish in Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Somalia.
Video Injera
Preparation
Injera is usually made from the tiny, iron-rich teff. However, teff production is limited to certain middle elevations and regions with adequate rainfall, so it is relatively expensive for the average household. As many farmers in the Ethiopian highlands grow their own subsistence grains, wheat, barley, corn, and/or rice flour are sometimes used to replace some or all of the teff content. Teff flour is gluten free, therefore injera that is made only with teff flour has higher demand. There are also different varieties of injera in Ethiopia, such as tekore (black), nech (white), and sergegna (mixed).
In making injera, teff flour is mixed with water and allowed to ferment for several days, as with sourdough starter. As a result of this process, injera has a mildly sour taste. The injera is then ready to be baked into large, flat pancakes. Unusual for a yeast or sourdough bread, the dough's viscosity allows it to be poured onto the baking surface, rather than rolled out.
In terms of shape, injera compares to the French crêpe and the Indian dosa as a flatbread cooked in a circle and used as a base for other foods. The taste and texture, however, are unlike the crêpe and dosa, and more similar to the South Indian appam. The bottom surface of the injera, which touches the heating surface, will have a relatively smooth texture, while the top will become porous. This porous structure allows the injera to be a good bread to scoop up sauces and dishes.
Baking surface
Baking is done either on a specialized electric stove, or more commonly, on a large, black clay plate over a fire. This set-up is a stove called a mitad (???) (in Amharic) or mogogo (???) (in Tigrinya).
The clay plate can be difficult to use, produces large amounts of smoke, and can be dangerous to children. Because of this inefficient cooking method, much of the area's limited fuel resources are wasted. However, in 2003, an Eritrean research group designed a stove, which uses available fuel sources (including dung, locally called kubet) for cooking injera and other foods efficiently, saving the heat from the fuel. This cooking method was intended for designing a new type of stove. Several parts are made in the central cities of Ethiopia and Eritrea while other parts are molded from clay by women in local areas.
However, many women in urban areas now use electric injera stoves, which are topped with a large metal plate. In the United States, injera
is most often made on an electric Bethany lefse grill, now marketed as "Heritage grill".
Maps Injera
Consumption and contemporary use
In Ethiopia and Eritrea, a variety of stews, or sometimes salads (during Ethiopian Orthodox fasting, for which believers abstain from most animal products) and simply more injera (called injera firfir), are placed upon the injera for serving. Using one's hand (traditionally only the right one), small pieces of injera are torn and used to grasp the stews and salads for eating. The injera under these stews soaks up the juices and flavours of the foods, and after the stews and salads are gone, this bread is also consumed. Injera is thus simultaneously food, eating utensil, and plate. When the entire "tablecloth" of injera is gone, the meal is over.
In Ethiopia and Eritrea, injera is eaten daily in virtually every household. Outside of the Horn of Africa, injera may be found in grocery stores and restaurants specializing in Ethiopian and Eritrean cooking.
Variations
There are similar variants to injera in other East African countries like Djibouti, Somalia, South Sudan and Sudan. The variant eaten in Somalia and Djibouti (where it is called canjeero or lahooh), South Sudan and Sudan (where it is known as kisra). In Somalia, at lunch (referred to as qaddo), the main meal of the day, injera (known as canjeero) might also be eaten with a stew (maraq) or soup. Canjeero, the Somali and the Djiboutian version of injera, is a staple of Somali and Djiboutian cuisine.
See also
References
External links
- Mesob Across America: Ethiopian Food in the U.S.A. A book about the history and culture of Ethiopian cuisine
- Ethiopian Food: Mesob Across America A blog about Ethiopian food
- Ethiopian Restaurant Guide Includes video visits to some restaurants
- Ashden awards: Local construction of efficient stoves
Source of the article : Wikipedia