How to make kunu drink with guinea corn. Stop here please, to see how to make kunu drink with guinea corn.Kunu drinks are non-alcoholic beverages made from grains with spices and herbs like ginger, cloves, and sometimes chillies and African negro pepper added for nutrition and flavour.
Sweet potatoes are also a main ingredient in kunu, while malted rice can also be added for that malted feel and taste. They are very satisfying and great to take on a hot afternoon. Kunu drinks originated from Northern Nigeria.
There are about five types of kunu drinks in Nigeria, namely (How many times did I mention the term kunu drinks sef): The weather is beginning to get really hot, there’s need for some homemade beverage drinks in the fridge for the kids. There is a kunun aya recipe on the blog already.
DIFFERENT TYPES OF KUNU DRINKS IN NIGERIA
Kunun zaki
Kunu akamu from maize
Kunun tsamiya
Kunun baule Kunun jiko Amshau
Kunun zaki is the one drink that’s most commonly consumed from The North right to The South, East and Western Nigeria.
KUNU MAKING PROCEDURE:
I like to use either of the 2 methods BELOW when making kunu:
METHOD ONE:
1. Pick dirt, Soak the grains overnight. Just before milling, you add all the ingredients and grind together just like you want to make Nigerian pap
2. Take out a small quantity and set aside before pouring hot boiling water in the large quantity to make it like pap.
3. Wait a bit, maybe one hour before mixing the raw one you set aside with the hot one and stirring.
4. Leave overnight to reduce pap thickness and bring out the real kunu taste.
4. Filter with cheesecloth and serve.
METHOD TWO IS A BIT NOT EASY Oh because the ingredients are blended separately…
- Rinse, pick out dirt and soak guinea corn in water overnight. The following day, before taking the almost fermented guinea corn to the mill. soak the ginger and sweet potatoes with cloves in a different bowl (Container)
- 2. Rinse and mill the corn separately from the ingredients.
- Back home, boil enough water and while waiting for the water to boil, scoop some of the ingredients into the milled corn bucket and stir, then scoop some of the milled corn into the bowl with ingredients. Do not scoop too much, I scooped about 3 ups of the milled corn into the ingredients and just about 2 cups of the milled ingredients into the bucket of milled corn, stirred and waited for the water to boil.
- When water begins to boil, pour it in the milled corn, the way we make pap for breakfast. The hot water will immediately cook and make it look like thick pap. If your water doesn’t thicken and cook it, that means the corn is still raw, so you place the pot on the burner and stir till it cooks and thickens.
- Leave to rest for about an hour or two depending on the quantity. I let this rest for about 2 to 3 hours before gradually stirring in the milled ingredients.
- Leave it to cool and while it cools, it will gradually begin to turn watery as the sweet potato reacts with the corn. Let is sit overnight if possible so all the ingredients have enough time to infuse and bring out the natural kunu flavour. I let this sit till the following day before filtering out the chaff and refrigerating the kunu beverage.
- Serve chill and enjoy with friends and family. Kunu drink has come to stay.