Senegalese Cuisine
Teranga on Every Table
Senegalese cuisine embodies 'teranga' — the Wolof word for hospitality. Rich seafood dishes, fragrant rice, and bold peanut sauces reflect a coastal West African kitchen shaped by French, Arab, and indigenous traditions.
A Culinary Portrait
The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Senegalese cuisine
French colonization (1659-1960) introduced baguettes, pâtisserie, and cafe culture, which Senegal absorbed and made its own. Despite these layers, the cuisine remains deeply West African in its soul, built on slow-cooked stews, fermented condiments like netetou (fermented locust beans), and communal eating traditions. Peanuts (the base of mafe and a ubiquitous ingredient in sauces and snacks), dried fish (guedj and yeet, fermented and dried seafood that adds umami depth), tomato paste (the backbone of thieboudienne and many stews), dijon mustard (a French legacy used in yassa marinades), and palm oil (used in Casamance cooking for richness and color).
Attaya
Bassi Salte
Bissap
Key Flavors
Masters of the Kitchen
The chefs who shaped Senegalese cuisine
Pierre Thiam
Senegalese chef, author, and social activist based in New York, best known for …
Click to read moreEssential Reading
The cookbooks that define Senegalese cuisine
Senegal: Modern Senegalese Recipes from the Source to the Bowl
A finalist for the James Beard Award and Julia Child Cookbook Award, featuring modern interpretations of Senegalese cui…
Yolele! Recipes from the Heart of Senegal
The first Senegalese cookbook published in English, a finalist for the Gourmand Award in Paris.
Explore All Dishes
24 authentic recipes from Senegalese cuisine
Medium
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Attaya
Senegalese Mint Tea
Afternoon social ritual, after meals, anytime
Medium
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Bassi Salte
Millet Couscous with Vegetables
Lunch, particularly in the north
Easy
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Bissap
Hibiscus Drink
Any time, celebrations, with meals
Easy
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Bouye
Baobab Fruit Drink
Any time, Ramadan, celebrationsCaldou
Lime Fish Broth
Lunch, light dinner
Medium
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Ceebu Jen Blanc
White Rice with Fish
Lunch
Easy
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Chéré
Sweet Millet Couscous
Afternoon snack, Ramadan iftar
Medium
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Dibi
Grilled Lamb
Evening meal, late-night street food
Medium
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Domoda
Groundnut Stew
Lunch, family gatherings
Medium
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Fataya
Fataya
Snack or appetizer
Easy
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Firiré
Fish Fritters
Snack, appetizer, Ramadan iftar
Easy
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Lakh
Millet Porridge with Yogurt
Breakfast, evening meal during Ramadan
Medium
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Mafé
Mafe
Lunch
Easy
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Ndambé
Spiced Black-Eyed Bean Stew
Breakfast, street food, any time
Medium
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Ngalakh
Sweet Peanut Millet Porridge
Easter, Good Friday, celebrations
Medium
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Pastels
Fried Fish Turnovers
Afternoon snack, street food
Medium
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Poulet Yassa
Yassa (Chicken)
Lunch or dinner
Medium
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Soupe Kandia
Okra Palm Oil Soup
Lunch or dinner
Hard
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Soupou Kandjé
Okra and Seafood Soup
Lunch, special occasions
Easy
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Thiakry
Sweet Couscous Pudding
Dessert, celebrations, Ramadan iftar
Hard
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Thiéboudienne
Thieboudienne
Lunch (especially Sunday)
Medium
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Thiebou Yapp
Rice with Meat
Lunch, weekday meals
Medium
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Thiou
Tomato and Vegetable Stew
Lunch, everyday family meal
Medium
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Yassa Poisson
Fish in Onion-Lemon Sauce
Lunch, special occasions