Congo's farmland is the source of a wide variety of crops. These include maize, rice, cassava (manioc), sweet potatoes, yam, taro, plantain, tomatoes, pumpkin and varieties of peas and nuts. These foods are eaten throughout the country, but there are also regional dishes.
Typical Congolese meals consist of a starchy food with sauce or stew. Cassava is the principal starch, particularly in rural areas. It may be replaced by rice or corn if they are available. These basic foods are served mostly as a thick stew or porridge, flavoured with a spicy sauce. If they can afford it, people may add fish or meat to the stew.
Cassava is a large, tuberous root vegetable, high in carbohydrates but low in protein. A diet that contains too much cassava can result in malnutrition. Little skill is needed to raise cassava; it can tolerate poor soil and withstand drought, and it can be left in the ground for up to four years before being harvested. However, cassava deteriorates rapidly after harvesting, and it cannot be stored for more than a few days. For this reason it has no value as an export crop.
Wealthier Congolese may eat three times a day, but most households prepare one daily meal. Those who eat breakfast usually have cafe au lait and a slice of French baguette. The main meal, traditionally eaten at midday, is now more commonly eaten in the evening. Congolese cooks like to prepare the entire meal in one pot, to save on fuel. At meals, a bowl of cassava or rice and a bowl of stew are placed on the ground or a table, and the family gathers around. Each person takes a handful of the rice or other staple and mixes it with some sauce to form a ball.
Although food is often left unseasoned, many Congolese cooks spice their stews with pepper. The basic stew is called mwamba and is made with chicken, beef, fish or lamb, browned in oil before stewing. It is eaten with rice, fufu (corn flour dough) or chikwange (cassava prepared in banana leaves).
Other common dishes include pili pili chicken, maboke (Freshwater Fish cooked in leaves), saka saka (ground cassava leaves cooked with palm oil and peanut paste) and fumbwa (vegetable stew). Bush-meat specialties include smoked monkey, smoked antelope and grilled crocodile. Other traditional foods include pounded sesame or squash seeds, shish kebabs and plantain dough. Caterpillars, grubs, termites and roasted crickets are considered delicacies in some areas.
Congolese enjoy beers such as Skol and Primus as well as homemade brews. People also drink palm wine, which is made from the juice of the palm oil tree. It contains yeast and can be fermented overnight. Other drinks include ginger beer, banana beer, sugar-cane wine, homemade gin and passion-fruit juice. It is customary to pour a small amount of liquid on the ground before drinking, as a libation for thirsty ancestors.
They eat lots of rice and banans..and adults drink coffee.
mostly sweet, for as all i know
chicken pork beef dolphin
Kinshasa was created in 1881.
University of Kinshasa was created in 1954.
Kinshasa Airways was created in 2002.
Kinshasa palace was created in 2007.
Kinshasa Symphony was created in 2010.
The area of Kinshasa is 9,965 km2 (3,847.5 mi2).
The duration of Kinshasa Symphony is 1.58 hours.
Kinshasa is the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, which is in the center of Africa.
Kinshasa is the capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It is located in Africa.
American School of Kinshasa was created in 1961.
Kinshasa Septembre noir was created in 1992.
Kinshasa is the capital of the "Democratic Republic of the Congo."To its west, Brazzaville is the capital of Congo (the Republic of the Congo).Kinshasa