AKARA(Bean cake/balls)
Ingredients
1 cup of Beans (black-eyed
or brown beans)
2 habanero chilli peppers(atarodo)
1 medium Onion
Crayfish (optional)
Salt to taste
Vegetable Oil for frying
NOTE: Before you fry Akara
Remove the beans coat. It is important that you do not let salt
come in contact with the beans you will use in making Akara till you are ready
to fry it. Salt is believed to destroy the leavening property of beans. This is
what prevents spattering of the beans batter during frying.
Then soak the beans in water for 2 hours to make it soft enough
for your blender.
Cut the pepper and onions into desirable sizes.
Making Akara
Grind the beans with your blender making sure you add as little
water as possible. The water should be just enough to move the blades of your
blender.
The less water you add at the grinding stage, the more the beans batter will stay together during frying thereby reducing spatter. Also, do not add any other ingredient when grinding the beans for Akara. It is believed that other ingredients, if added too early, reduce the ability of the ground beans particles to stick together.
The less water you add at the grinding stage, the more the beans batter will stay together during frying thereby reducing spatter. Also, do not add any other ingredient when grinding the beans for Akara. It is believed that other ingredients, if added too early, reduce the ability of the ground beans particles to stick together.
Set some vegetable oil on the cooker to heat up. The oil should be
at least 3 inches deep.
Put some of the ground beans into a mortar. This should be the
quantity you can fry in one go.
Stir the beans puree with the pestle in a continuous circular
motion. You need to apply some pressure so that you can energize the particles
of the beans puree.
This stirring technique releases the gas that will act like a leavening agent to the beans particles, making them rise and somehow stick together. This will be like the yeast making the dough rise in Puff Puff or what folding does to cake batter.
This stirring technique releases the gas that will act like a leavening agent to the beans particles, making them rise and somehow stick together. This will be like the yeast making the dough rise in Puff Puff or what folding does to cake batter.
Keep stirring till the ground beans appears whiter and you can
perceive its peculiar aroma.
Add some water
Check to make sure the oil is hot. The oil should be hot enough to
sizzle but not too hot. If too hot, the Akara will spatter as soon as the beans
batter hits the oil.
Once the oil is hot, add the onions,crayfish and pepper to the
beans puree in the mortar. Stir well.
Add salt to your taste and stir again. Salt should always be added
just before scooping the beans mixture into the oil. If salt stays in the
mixture for extended periods of time, it will destroy the leavening property of
the beans. This property is what makes the Akara float in the oil and prevent
spatter during frying.
To fry the Akara, scoop the mixture with a table spoon and slowly
pour this into the oil. Dipping the spoon a little bit into the oil helps
reduce spatter.
Fry the underside till brown and flip to fry the top side too.
When the Akara balls are brown all over, remove and place in a
sieve lined with paper towels.
Serve Akara with Custard/Ogi/Akamu, Agidi or Bread.etc…
The best bread to eat Akara
with is oven-fresh, hot and stretchy bread like Agege Bread . lol!
Making Akara may seem like rocket science but with practice, you
will perfect this recipe. If you do not get it right the first time, try again.
Everybody has the same first time experience with making Akara.
Use freshly skinned beans.
Use a very small quantity of water when grinding.
Smoothen the mix with mortar and pestle before frying.
Add salt just before frying.
ENJOY.......................
ENJOY.......................

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