Taste GH
The Dawn Call of the Koko Seller: Why Hausa Koko and Koose Should Be on Your Bucket List
There is a sound that cuts through the Accra morning haze better than any alarm clock. It is not loud, but it travels. The gentle clink of a metal ladle against an enamel bowl, the low murmur of early customers, and the warm, earthy cloud of steam rising into the tropical air. If you haven’t followed that sound to its source, have you truly woken up in Ghana?
We are talking, of course, about Hausa Koko and Koose. For the uninitiated, this isn’t just breakfast. It is a ritual.
The porridge—a silky, spicy, fermented millet base—carries the punch of fresh ginger and the aromatic warmth of cloves.
It is a flavor that confuses your expectations in the best way possible. It is savory, yet often sweetened with a dash of sugar or condensed milk.
It is spicy, yet soothing. It sits in the bowl looking humble, but drinking it is a full-sensory experience that warms you from the chest outward.
But Hausa Koko never travels alone. Its partner in crime is Koose (or akara if you cross the border into Nigeria).
These are deep-fried cakes made from peeled black-eyed peas, blended with onion and chili, then whisked until airy before hitting the oil. The result is a fritter that is impossibly crispy on the outside and almost fluffy on the inside.
@chefabbys Everybody in Ghana loves Hausa kooko! I mean, who doesn't 😁❤️. It's our savior! But have you ever wondered how it is made by our lovely kooko vendors every single day ? I made one at home today, and paired with the best Koose 😍❤️! You should try it. Do you drink Hausa kooko in your country? 🇬🇭 #FoodTiktok #fyp #viral #foryou ♬ With You (feat. Omah Lay) – Davido
Why must you, whether a tourist chasing authenticity or a local who has strayed towards cornflakes, partake in this?
Because it is edible history.
This dish traveled. The bean cake you hold in your hand has roots that trace the painful journey of the transatlantic slave trade. In Brazil, it transformed into Acarajé, where it is used in Candomblé religious rituals as an offering to the gods. When you eat Koose here, you are tasting a story of survival and adaptation that connects Accra to Bahia.
Because it is the secret weapon of high performance.
Don’t let the street food label fool you. This is the fuel that kick-started the Accra Hearts of Oak football club during training sessions, credited for their stamina and physique. It is a powerhouse of protein (from the beans) and iron (from the millet), delivered in a package that costs less than an imported energy bar.
Because it is a communal experience.
During the holy month of Ramadan, Hausa Koko becomes essential, providing warmth and sustenance to those breaking their fast. But on a regular Tuesday morning, standing on the curb with a plastic bag of koko in one hand and a koose in the other, you are participating in a leveling tradition. Bankers, taxi drivers, and students all stand shoulder to shoulder, dunking their fritters and slurping in sync.
It is messy. It is cheap. It is absolutely perfect.
So, step away from the hotel buffet. Find the woman with the huge aluminum pot and the longest line of customers. Order your “koko with koose” and perhaps a sprinkle of groundnuts. Dip, sip, and welcome to Ghana.
Taste GH
Kpokpoi: The Sacred Ga Dish at the Heart of Homowo
The scent arrives before the bowl does smoky fish, rich palm nut soup, and the warm, slightly sour aroma of fermented corn slowly filling the air as families gather during Homowo season in Ga communities across Ghana.
At the centre of the celebration is Kpokpoi, a beloved maize meal dish deeply woven into the identity of the Ga people.
Soft, hearty, and unmistakably earthy in flavour, Kpokpoi is far more than festival food. It is memory, ritual, and community served on a plate.
Prepared from steamed and fermented corn meal, the dish carries a gentle tang that balances beautifully with the deep, nutty richness of palm soup.
Smoked fish adds another layer — salty, savoury, and intensely aromatic. The result is comforting and bold at once, the kind of meal that lingers long after the final bite.
For many Gas, Kpokpoi is inseparable from Homowo, the annual festival that commemorates triumph over famine and hardship.
During the celebration, families prepare large portions not only to feed relatives and visitors but also to honour ancestors.
The sharing of the meal is believed to strengthen communion between the living, the dead, and ancestral spirits, making food itself part of a sacred cultural exchange.
That spiritual connection gives Kpokpoi a significance beyond taste. In many homes, recipes are passed down through generations, with elders teaching younger family members how to achieve the right texture, fermentation, and balance of flavours.
There is also a quiet nutritional appeal to the dish. Fermented corn is known for aiding digestion, while smoked fish provides protein, and palm nut soup contributes healthy fats and depth of flavour.
For visitors discovering Ghanaian cuisine for the first time, Kpokpoi offers something rare: a dish that tells a story with every spoonful.
It speaks of resilience, heritage, celebration, and the enduring power of gathering around food.
Taste GH
How Chef Abby Took Ghanaian Food Culture Across London
When Chef Abby announced that she was finally back in Ghana after an emotional and exhausting UK tour, her excitement was impossible to miss.
Beneath the tired voice was the joy of a Ghanaian creative who had just spent days carrying the flavours of home across some of London’s biggest cultural spaces.
A Ghanaian Culinary Journey Across London
The celebrated Ghanaian food content creator described the tour as one of the biggest moments of her career so far.
From official meetings with Ghanaian diplomats to cooking inside global tech offices, Chef Abby’s trip became more than a food tour — it was a cultural showcase.
One of the standout moments was her meeting with Ghana’s High Commissioner to the UK, Her Excellency Zita Okaikoi, whom Chef Abby described as an inspiring woman.
She was also invited to Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, where she watched a live match and explored the stadium’s food culture before teaming up with football star Kevin Danso to prepare a Ghanaian dish.
Bringing Ghanaian Food to Global Platforms
The tour opened doors into spaces rarely associated with Ghanaian cuisine. Chef Abby revealed that she visited the London headquarters of TikTok, met UK and Ghanaian officials, and even taught children in a London school about Ghanaian food traditions.
She also introduced popular creators Josh Pieters and Oli White — widely known as Josh and Oli — to Ghanaian flavours during the tour.
Among the most touching moments for the chef was leading a menu takeover at Snap Inc., where she prepared Ghanaian dishes for staff members before joining a panel discussion afterwards.
More Than Food
Chef Abby’s UK experience also included visits to YouTube and Google offices, collaborations with chefs, documentary screenings, and her first international brunch featuring Ghanaian-Caribbean fusion dishes.
By the end of the tour, it became clear that Chef Abby was not simply serving meals. She was serving stories, identity, and a modern Ghanaian food culture, increasingly finding its place on the global stage.
Taste GH
Ghana’s High Commissioner to the UK Cooks Homemade Ga Okro Stew for Chef Abby
The aroma of simmering okro, smoked fish, and rich palm oil travelled far beyond the kitchen when Ghana’s High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, Her Excellency Sabah Zita Benson, welcomed popular culinary creator Chef Abby with a deeply personal meal — a homemade Ga-style okro stew.
Chef Abby shared the memorable moment with followers on Instagram, writing: “What an honor to be hosted by Her Excellency Sabah Zita Benson! She did not just host me, she made her special best Ga version Okro Stew for me! This is what Ghana is about.”
The gesture quickly resonated online, not simply because of who was cooking, but because of what was served.
In Ghanaian homes, okro stew is more than food. It is comfort, heritage and hospitality gathered into one steaming bowl.
The Ga-style version is especially beloved along Ghana’s coast, known for its deep savory flavor and silky texture created by fresh okro simmered with tomatoes, onions, pepper and palm oil.
Many recipes include crab, smoked fish, wele, or tender cuts of meat, producing a rich aroma that fills an entire home before the first spoonful is served.
For many Ghanaians living abroad, dishes like okro stew carry emotional weight. One taste can bring back memories of family kitchens, loud conversations around shared bowls and weekend meals that stretched for hours. It is food designed for gathering.
The meal also highlighted the growing cultural influence of food diplomacy, where traditional dishes become a bridge between generations, professions and communities.
By cooking personally for Chef Abby rather than arranging a formal dinner, the High Commissioner offered something unmistakably Ghanaian — warmth expressed through food.
Nutritious, hearty and packed with fiber from fresh okro, the stew remains a favorite not only for its flavor but also for its health appeal. Yet its true power lies in something less measurable: the feeling of home it creates with every bite.
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