A man in our ward is from Nigeria, and his family hosted us over for some culture. :) We made our own Nigerian flags and brought them with us. We also learned the children's names in Nigerian. When I round up that information, I will post it as well. :)
First, we saw the wooden bowls used to make their food (no food processors there). CS added Plantains and Yams and then some Palm Oil. Everyone tood turns mashing the food.
This was a very tasty dish - I am anxious to try it here at home. The wife of the family (JS) told us that when her parents were serving their mission in Nigeria, her mom would wake up at 4:00am to hear the women of the village pounding their food in their wooden bowls. They did this early on "Temple days" because the distance to travel to the temple was pretty great, so they made enough food to last them the whole day.
We ate the plantain/yam dish, coconut rice (YUM!), and catfish stew (YUMMMM!). We had tons of fruit as Nigerians eat that a lot. They don't typically have desserts, so we brought some ginger cookies (and fried chicken!). :)
This family even let Calvin try on some traditional clothing. CS put on his wardrobe as well. Doesn't Calvin look cute?
We leared about the soap they used (the big yellow block Calvin is holding is soap)
What wonderful people. We had a great time - we even got to see CS do a traditional Nigerian dance. I tried . . . tried being the word of the day. I don't think my hips are made for that kind of dance. :)
2 comments:
Loved your family Christmas letter.
Enjoy homeschooling, it is the best thing I ever did (and your children will learn more than they ever would in government school).
Thank you for sharing you Nigeria experience.
We love the photo's.
It was a good way to end our Nigeria studies this year.
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