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Botswanan Cuisine
Diamond of the Kalahari
Africa
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Southern Africa
8
Dishes
5
Categories
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Botswanan cuisine is straightforward and satisfying, with seswaa (shredded beef) and bogobe (sorghum porridge) anchoring a meat-loving culinary culture shaped by cattle herding.
A Culinary Portrait
The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Botswanan cuisine
Botswanan cuisine is the food of the Kalahari and the cattle post, shaped by the Tswana people's pastoral traditions and the arid landscape of southern Africa. Cattle are central to Tswana culture, serving as wealth, status, bride price, and the source of the nation's most important dishes. The Kalahari Desert's San (Bushman) peoples practiced hunting and gathering for tens of thousands of years, developing deep knowledge of wild foods, tubers, and game. Tswana agro-pastoralists cultivated sorghum, millet, and cowpeas alongside their herds.
South African influence is strong, sharing many dishes and ingredients. British colonial rule as Bechuanaland introduced wheat flour, tea, and certain institutional food practices. Post-independence development brought international food to urban centers like Gaborone, but traditional cooking remains dominant in rural areas and at cultural events.
Botswana's relative prosperity from diamond wealth has not displaced traditional food culture but has added variety. Maize meal (for bogobe porridge), sorghum, beef (the national protein), dried beans (including cowpeas and Jugo beans), and morogo (wild greens).
South African influence is strong, sharing many dishes and ingredients. British colonial rule as Bechuanaland introduced wheat flour, tea, and certain institutional food practices. Post-independence development brought international food to urban centers like Gaborone, but traditional cooking remains dominant in rural areas and at cultural events.
Botswana's relative prosperity from diamond wealth has not displaced traditional food culture but has added variety. Maize meal (for bogobe porridge), sorghum, beef (the national protein), dried beans (including cowpeas and Jugo beans), and morogo (wild greens).
Bogobe
Chakalaka
Lerotse
Key Flavors
staple
breakfast
relish
spicy
melon
Kalahari
dumplings
steamed
seeds
traditional
greens
vegan
Masters of the Kitchen
The chefs who shaped Botswanan cuisine
Thata Mokgadi
Botswanan chef and culinary advocate who promotes traditional Tswana cooking anβ¦
Click to read moreEssential Reading
The cookbooks that define Botswanan cuisine
Cooking the Southern African Way
Cooking the Southern African Way
Features recipes from Botswana and southern Africa including traditional dishes like seswaa and bogobe.
Explore All Dishes
8 authentic recipes from Botswanan cuisine
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Showing 8 of 8 dishes
Easy
📜 Story
Bogobe
Sorghum Porridge
Breakfast, daily staple
Easy
📜 Story
Chakalaka
Spicy Vegetable Relish
Accompaniment to braai, pap, or bread
Easy
📜 Story
Lerotse
Wild Melon
Side dish or dessert
Easy
📜 Story
Matemekwane
Steamed Bread Dumplings
Served with stew for lunch or dinner
Medium
📜 Story
Matlebekwane
Melon Seed Paste
Accompaniment to morogo or pap
Easy
📜 Story
Morogo
Wild Spinach
Daily side dish with any meal
Easy
📜 Story
Mosutlhane
Bean Leaves
Daily vegetable side dish
Easy
📜 Story
Pap
Maize Porridge
Accompaniment to any main meal