Ethiopian
Injera
Traditional injera takes a week to make, since you need four days to make the sponge, plus another three to prepare the batter.
By Yohanis Gebreyesus
The Path to Niter Kibbeh Starts With Herbs and Spices
It's the backbone of Ethiopian cooking, and you can make it a thousand different ways. But for the truest, best niter kibbeh, you need to order a few signature ingredients (or get them from a saint of a chef).
By Cheryl Slocum
Sheet-Pan Collard Greens and Crispy Tofu With Niter Kibbeh
This easy dinner is inspired by gomen, an Ethiopian dish in which greens are flavored with an aromatic spiced butter. Breaded tofu is a delightful counterpoint.
By Cheryl Slocum
Niter Kibbeh
A cornerstone of Ethiopian cooking, this clarified butter is infused with spices and herbs native the region, giving it unique flavor and aroma.
By Cheryl Slocum
Shimbra Wat
This Ethiopian dish of chickpeas in a berbere-spiced, flaxseed-thickened sauce makes for a quick, filling, and wonderfully flavorful meal.
By Yohanis Gebreyesus
Awaze Dipping Sauce
This spicy Ethiopian dipping sauce is made from whisking berbere spice blend honey wine, beer, arak, or even just a mixture of water and honey.
By Yohanis Gebreyesus
Honey Bread
In the land of milk and honey, injera may be the staple, but it is not the only kind of bread. In the morning, it's dabo—honey bread—that graces the Ethiopian breakfast table. Unlike the pancakelike injera, dabo is a European-style loaf that is typically slathered with shiro, a chickpea spread. It highlights one of the distinctive characteristics of Ethiopian cooking: sweeteners are very rarely used, but an element of sweetness is introduced through other means, such as sugary coffees and teas; tej, a syrupy honey wine; or this dense breakfast bread, which lends a gentle sweetness to the start of the day.
By Marcus Samuelsson
Berbere
In Ethiopia, the preparation of berbere takes days—chilies are dried in the sun for three days, then ground in a mortar and pestle, mixed with ground spices, and set in the sun to dry again—and it is usually made in huge amounts.
Each Ethiopian family has its own recipe for this universal seasoning, with varying degrees of heat and spiciness. Traditionally, berbere is used to flavor Ethiopian stews, but I also like to use it as a rub for beef and lamb.
By Marcus Samuelsson
Spiced Butter
The mixture known as nit'ir qibe, which begins with clarified butter, is kept handy in most Ethiopian kitchens to add flavor to meat and vegetable stews. In fact, virtually no meal in Ethiopia is made without nit'ir qibe, which gives the cooking its beautifully layered signature flavors. It also has a much longer shelf life than regular butter—an important consideration in poor man's cooking, where waste is not an option. The butter will solidify when chilled, but it will become liquid again when left at room temperature.
By Marcus Samuelsson
Doro Wat
When I take people out for Ethiopian food for the first time, this chicken stew, called doro wett (also spelled doro we't, doro wat, and doro wet), is a great introduction. It's the first Ethiopian dish I ever had, and I immediately liked the tender meat, the spicy eggs, and the flavorful sauce laced with berbere and ginger. It's a great dish to make for people who haven't eaten African food before, because it's easy to understand and like.
Don't be alarmed when the sauce doesn't bind together and thicken like a traditional European-style sauce—it should in fact be liquidy and broken to soak into the injera it is served on.
By Marcus Samuelsson
Ethiopian Spice Tea
This is more of an infusion than a true tea, since it isn't made with tea leaves. You will have leftover spice tea to store.
Ethiopian Spice Mix (Berbere)
Berbere is a chile and spice blend used to season many Ethiopian dishes. Because authentic berbere can be hard to find, we developed our own recipe.
Active time: 15 min Start to finish: 15 min
Ye'abesha Gomen (Collard Greens)
The abundant use of leafy greens is one of the hallmarks of the food of the African continent in general. Here, the familiar collard green, which has become emblematic of African-American cooking, is given an Ethiopian twist in a dish that can be served either warm or at room temperature.
By Jessica B. Harris
Berbere-Spiced Roast Chicken and Vegetables
Hot and complex Ethiopian berbere adds a spicy kick to your average roast chicken; roasting root vegetables under the chicken turns this into a one-pan meal.
By Chris Williams
Alicha Denich
This hearty vegetarian Ethopian dish from chef Fanta Prada gets its gingery, garlicky kick from awaze, a versatile hot pepper seasoning with a myriad of variations.
By Fanta Prada
Roasted Carrots With Ayib and Awaze Vinaigrette
Roasted carrots bathed in a buttery, lemony vinaigrette with awaze, a spicy Ethiopian condiment.
By Marcus Samuelsson