Botswana Traditional Sorghum Porridge

Botswana Traditional Sorghum Porridge

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Bogobe is Botswana's everyday sorghum porridge, a smooth and creamy staple often enjoyed at breakfast with milk or paired with savory sides like morogo and beans. The slow cooking draws out sorghum's earthy, nutty sweetness and produces a thick, satisfying bowl. This recipe uses a blend of sorghum and maize meal for the most balanced texture.

Prep Time10 mins
Cook Time45 mins
Total Time55 mins
Servings4
Yield4 servings

Nutrition Facts

Per serving (estimated)

  • 385 kcalCalories
  • 7 gFat
  • 3 gSaturated Fat
  • 74 gCarbs
  • 7 gFiber
  • 6 gSugar
  • 10 gProtein
  • 520 mgSodium
  • 320 mgPotassium
  • 120 mgCalcium
  • 3.8 mgIron
  • 0 mgVitamin C
  • 45 mcgVitamin A

Ingredients

For the porridge

  • 2 cups sorghum meal (mabele)
  • 1/2 cup fine maize meal
  • 7 cups cold water, divided
  • 1 teaspoon fine sea salt
  • 1 tablespoon unsalted butter

For serving

  • 1 1/2 cups warm whole milk or soured milk (madila)
  • 2 tablespoons brown sugar or honey, optional
  • Melted butter for drizzling, optional

Directions

  1. Pour 6 cups of cold water into a heavy-bottomed pot, add the salt, and bring to a steady boil over medium-high heat.
  2. In a separate bowl, whisk the sorghum meal and maize meal together, then stir in the remaining 1 cup of cold water to make a loose, lump-free slurry.
  3. Once the pot of water reaches a full rolling boil, reduce the heat to medium-low and slowly pour in the slurry in a thin, steady stream, whisking constantly to prevent clumping.
  4. Switch to a wooden spoon and stir the porridge in slow, sweeping circles for 20 minutes, scraping the bottom often; the mixture will thicken noticeably and start to pull away from the sides.
  5. Reduce the heat to the lowest setting, cover the pot, and let the porridge steam-cook gently for another 20 minutes, stirring every 5 minutes to keep it creamy and prevent a skin from forming.
  6. Stir in the butter until fully melted and the bogobe looks glossy and smooth with a thick, spoonable consistency that drops slowly from the spoon.
  7. Ladle the hot porridge into individual bowls, make a small well in the center, and pour in the warm milk or soured milk around the edges.
  8. Sprinkle with brown sugar or drizzle with honey if you prefer a sweet breakfast bowl, or serve alongside cooked greens and beans for a savory meal.

Cook’s Notes

  • Stirring the slurry into boiling water instead of cold water first prevents the sorghum from forming tough lumps that are hard to break down later.
  • If you only have whole sorghum berries, soak them overnight in water, blend to a coarse meal, and increase cook time by about 15 minutes for a heartier, rustic bogobe.
  • For a thinner, drinkable version known as ting ya mabele, simply double the water and shorten the cooking time to 15 minutes after the slurry is added.
  • Leftover bogobe can be cooled, cut into firm squares, and pan-fried in a little oil for a crispy breakfast the next morning, similar to a polenta cake.
  • Stir in a handful of roasted groundnuts or a spoonful of peanut butter just before serving for extra protein and a toasted, nutty depth.
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