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You Won’t Believe What Was Invented in a Kitchen on This Day!

It was October 23rd, a seemingly ordinary day. But in the kitchens and food labs of history, something quietly remarkable was happening. Close your eyes for a moment and imagine a bustling workshop in early 19th-century France. Candles flicker, wooden barrels line the walls, and a determined inventor kneels over a strange bowl, sealing jars of food in glass containers. That inventor: Nicolas Appert, the pioneer of food canning. Born in 1749–1752, Appert would eventually publish his findings after 14 years of trial, error and persistence and play a crucial role in how we preserve food today.  Meanwhile, across the ocean and closer to what we might call comfort dessert territory, another food story was unfolding. Because yes, on this...

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30 Kitchen Secrets from the Old Guard

How my grandmother’s cupboard taught me to cook smarter, not harder — and how you can too. There are two kinds of kitchens: the experimental, recipe-card kind, where everything looks neat and measured, and the lived-in, memory-laced kitchens where hacks and instincts run the show. I grew up in the second kind. My grandmother didn’t measure so much as “feel,” and when things went sideways, she had a dozen ways to rescue a dish. Over the years, I've collated a long list of those little shortcuts: 37 practical kitchen tips that have saved dinners, preserved staples, and kept families fed. I’ve grouped them here the way my grandmother used to: preservation, prep, rescue, frying & oil, beans & grains, and...

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Lost in the Kitchen? Here Are Cooking Terms You Should Know

I still remember the first time I cooked with my aunt in Lagos. She told me to blanch the spinach. I froze. Blanch? Was that a spice? A pan? A dance move? She chuckled at my confusion, then showed me how to dip the leaves quickly in boiling water before plunging them into cold water. “That’s blanching,” she said, with the patience of a saint. That day taught me something important: recipes speak their own language. If you don’t understand the terms, the dish might slip right through your fingers. So, let’s break down some essential cooking terms you should know — the kind that pop up often, especially when you’re experimenting in your kitchen with African flavors and beyond....

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National Hot Cross Buns Day: A Taste of History, Tradition, and Spice

Every bite of a hot cross bun is more than just warm bread and sweet raisins. It’s a story baked into dough, a symbol of tradition, and a reminder of how food connects us across generations and cultures. The History Behind Hot Cross Buns Hot cross buns go back hundreds of years. Originating in England, these sweet, spiced buns marked with a cross were first baked to honor Good Friday in the Christian calendar. The cross represented the crucifixion, while the spices symbolized the spices used to embalm Jesus. In the 16th century, Queen Elizabeth I even tried to ban them — except on Good Friday, Christmas, and for burials because they were considered too “special” for ordinary days. But the...

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Spices Every Kitchen Needs (And Why Yours Might Be Missing Some)

I remember stepping into my grandmother’s kitchen as a child — the smell would hit you before the door even opened fully. There was always something sizzling, steaming, or bubbling away. But it wasn’t just about the food. It was about the spices. The little jars and bowls on her wooden shelf weren’t just condiments; they were characters in every meal’s story.  If you’ve ever stared at your pantry wondering why your meals feel... flat, this might be the missing link. So let’s talk: what spices should actually be in your kitchen and why. 1. Curry Powder  Whether you’re making jollof rice, yam porridge, or a quick sauce, curry powder adds depth and aroma. It brings warmth without heat, and...

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