Culinary practices: preparation techniques and consumption of Basotho cereal breads in Lesotho

Abstract Lesotho is a small country (30,350 sq.km with about 2.233 million population), completely surrounded by the Republic of South Africa. The people of the Kingdom of Lesotho are referred to as Basotho. This study aimed to investigate the culinary practices with regard to traditional Basotho br...

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Main Authors: Pulane Nkhabutlane, Henriëtte L. de Kock, Gerrie E. du Rand
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-10-01
Series:Journal of Ethnic Foods
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s42779-019-0012-8
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spelling doaj-4c2b202bb82942aea6b47efe5eb780852020-11-25T03:05:39ZengBMCJournal of Ethnic Foods2352-61812019-10-016111110.1186/s42779-019-0012-8Culinary practices: preparation techniques and consumption of Basotho cereal breads in LesothoPulane Nkhabutlane0Henriëtte L. de Kock1Gerrie E. du Rand2Department of Consumer and Food Sciences, Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Sciences, University of PretoriaDepartment of Consumer and Food Sciences, Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Sciences, University of PretoriaDepartment of Consumer and Food Sciences, Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Sciences, University of PretoriaAbstract Lesotho is a small country (30,350 sq.km with about 2.233 million population), completely surrounded by the Republic of South Africa. The people of the Kingdom of Lesotho are referred to as Basotho. This study aimed to investigate the culinary practices with regard to traditional Basotho bread, thus serving as a basis for documenting an aspect of Basotho traditional food knowledge. The study was conducted in five districts of Lesotho using focus groups, each consisting of ten housewives in each district, and face-to-face interviews with 253 women respondents who completed a questionnaire related to their knowledge, preparation and consumption of traditional Basotho bread. Recipes for ten traditional Basotho breads were obtained during five focus group sessions. The survey revealed that most of the respondents (99%) prepare bread at a household level using wheat flour. A few (15%) use maize flour and sorghum flour is used by only (5%). The main preparation steps were identified as sorting, cleaning of grains, dry milling and/or wet milling, mixing ingredients, fermentation and cooking. Bread is used for household consumption and social functions, such as weddings and funerals. This paper documents the culinary practices for ten Basotho breads from maize, wheat and sorghum. Research geared to the improvement of the quality characteristics of maize and sorghum breads should be given the highest priority to encourage the use of local ingredients.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s42779-019-0012-8Culinary practicesTraditional Basotho bread
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pulane Nkhabutlane
Henriëtte L. de Kock
Gerrie E. du Rand
spellingShingle Pulane Nkhabutlane
Henriëtte L. de Kock
Gerrie E. du Rand
Culinary practices: preparation techniques and consumption of Basotho cereal breads in Lesotho
Journal of Ethnic Foods
Culinary practices
Traditional Basotho bread
author_facet Pulane Nkhabutlane
Henriëtte L. de Kock
Gerrie E. du Rand
author_sort Pulane Nkhabutlane
title Culinary practices: preparation techniques and consumption of Basotho cereal breads in Lesotho
title_short Culinary practices: preparation techniques and consumption of Basotho cereal breads in Lesotho
title_full Culinary practices: preparation techniques and consumption of Basotho cereal breads in Lesotho
title_fullStr Culinary practices: preparation techniques and consumption of Basotho cereal breads in Lesotho
title_full_unstemmed Culinary practices: preparation techniques and consumption of Basotho cereal breads in Lesotho
title_sort culinary practices: preparation techniques and consumption of basotho cereal breads in lesotho
publisher BMC
series Journal of Ethnic Foods
issn 2352-6181
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Abstract Lesotho is a small country (30,350 sq.km with about 2.233 million population), completely surrounded by the Republic of South Africa. The people of the Kingdom of Lesotho are referred to as Basotho. This study aimed to investigate the culinary practices with regard to traditional Basotho bread, thus serving as a basis for documenting an aspect of Basotho traditional food knowledge. The study was conducted in five districts of Lesotho using focus groups, each consisting of ten housewives in each district, and face-to-face interviews with 253 women respondents who completed a questionnaire related to their knowledge, preparation and consumption of traditional Basotho bread. Recipes for ten traditional Basotho breads were obtained during five focus group sessions. The survey revealed that most of the respondents (99%) prepare bread at a household level using wheat flour. A few (15%) use maize flour and sorghum flour is used by only (5%). The main preparation steps were identified as sorting, cleaning of grains, dry milling and/or wet milling, mixing ingredients, fermentation and cooking. Bread is used for household consumption and social functions, such as weddings and funerals. This paper documents the culinary practices for ten Basotho breads from maize, wheat and sorghum. Research geared to the improvement of the quality characteristics of maize and sorghum breads should be given the highest priority to encourage the use of local ingredients.
topic Culinary practices
Traditional Basotho bread
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s42779-019-0012-8
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