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Liberian Cuisine
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Liberian cuisine blends indigenous African cooking with African-American influences brought by freed settlers. Dumboy, palm butter soup, and jollof rice are essential.
A Culinary Portrait
The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Liberian cuisine
Liberian cuisine is shaped by the unique convergence of indigenous West African cooking traditions and the culinary heritage of freed African American and Caribbean settlers who founded the nation in 1847. The sixteen indigenous ethnic groups, including the Kpelle, Bassa, Grebo, Gio, and Mano, developed cooking traditions rooted in the tropical forest, rivers, and coastal waters of West Africa. Rice is the absolute staple, so central to Liberian identity that a meal without rice is not considered a meal. Cassava, palm oil, tropical fruits, and the abundant produce of the equatorial forest round out the indigenous diet.
The Americo-Liberian settlers, freed slaves from the American South and Caribbean, brought American Southern and Creole cooking traditions: baking, cakes, corn-based dishes, and a taste for elaborate holiday meals. This fusion of indigenous West African and African American culinary traditions creates a cuisine unlike any other in Africa. Lebanese and Indian immigrant communities contribute their own food traditions to the urban landscape of Monrovia.
Despite devastating civil wars (1989-2003) that disrupted food systems and displaced millions, Liberian culinary traditions survived through the resilience of home cooks and community food networks. Palm oil (the essential cooking fat, providing rich red color and flavor), cassava (both leaf and tuber preparations), rice (the mandatory staple at every meal), hot peppers (habanero and bird's eye), and dried fish (smoked and used as seasoning).
The Americo-Liberian settlers, freed slaves from the American South and Caribbean, brought American Southern and Creole cooking traditions: baking, cakes, corn-based dishes, and a taste for elaborate holiday meals. This fusion of indigenous West African and African American culinary traditions creates a cuisine unlike any other in Africa. Lebanese and Indian immigrant communities contribute their own food traditions to the urban landscape of Monrovia.
Despite devastating civil wars (1989-2003) that disrupted food systems and displaced millions, Liberian culinary traditions survived through the resilience of home cooks and community food networks. Palm oil (the essential cooking fat, providing rich red color and flavor), cassava (both leaf and tuber preparations), rice (the mandatory staple at every meal), hot peppers (habanero and bird's eye), and dried fish (smoked and used as seasoning).
Liberian Ginger Beer
Palm Wine
Key Flavors
drink
ginger
drink
fermented
Masters of the Kitchen
The chefs who shaped Liberian cuisine
Chef Rob
Liberian chef and culinary educator who has promoted traditional Liberian cuisi…
Click to read moreEssential Reading
The cookbooks that define Liberian cuisine
The Africa Cookbook: Tastes of a Contin…
The Africa Cookbook: Tastes of a Continent
A landmark cookbook covering West African cuisines including Liberian culinary traditions.
Explore All Dishes
2 authentic recipes from Liberian cuisine
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