• There’s a 70% chance a Nigerian woman will order alfredo pasta at a restaurant (source: trust me, I know). Does alfredo give us some extraordinary superpower, or the plenty money they say we have in our Piggyvest? I don’t know. Either way, in honour of World Pasta Day, I recommend these other pasta meals for Nigerian women to look out for in restaurant menus or try at home. 

    Seafood mac and cheese

    Image source: Stay snatched 

    If you’re craving cheesy seafood pasta, leave the alfredo and eat seafood mac and cheese. Mac and cheese is the ultimate comfort food to be eaten at home while watching horrible sitcoms. It’s ten times better if there are a lot of shrimps and other seafood mede made.

    Fettuccine alla carbonara

    Image source: Guides-Brit+Co

    Thin pasta with a creamy sauce consisting of egg, bacon & cheese. All these ingredients combine to make this pasta the mouth-dripping meal it is. I’d gladly sell my firstborn for it. I’m joking (I’m not joking). The bacon is the star of the show here. 

    Seafood spaghetti marinara 

    Image source: Tesco Real Food

    Seafood spaghetti marinara is all your favourite seafood mixed in a sauce made from tomatoes, onions, garlic, oregano, basil, etc. Some restaurants put calamari prawns, mussels and co. inside. Eat it, and you may have an orgasm. 

    ALSO READ: Make Bougie Creamy Pasta With Less Than ₦10k

    Spaghetti and meatballs

    Image source: Delish

    I don’t see many people eat spaghetti and meatball often, and I don’t know why. You can have this meal with the meatball sauce separate from the pasta or mixed together with the pasta. Either way, still delicious. 

    Pasta pomodoro

    Image source: Simply Home Cooked

    If you want a taste of Italy, you should try this dish. It looks like pasta made from tomato sauce. But with pomodoro, the sauce is made from finely diced or crushed tomatoes to give it a very thick texture. What makes it special is the butter, olive oil and parmesan cheese. 

     ALSO READ: 9 Cooking Hacks You Need to Know Before 30

    Green pasta

    Image source: Legally Healthy Blonde 

    Green is my favourite colour, so I’m biased towards this meal. If you want to deceive yourself about healthy eating, this pasta is a good way to eat your vegetables. The sauce is made from spinach, but it can be very creamy and cheesy if you want. Try it first before you judge. 

    Asun pasta 

    Image source: The Yellow Plate

    I would like to sell my father’s land and give all the money to the person who thought of mixing asun and pasta together. There’s a way the pepper sauce from the asun mixes with the other typical pasta ingredients. Such a spicy and delicious blessing. If you want to go the extra mile, try asun alfredo. 

    Coconut pasta 

    Image source: Vegan Cocotte

    If you’re a fan of coconut rice, you’ll love coconut pasta. There’s the tomato coconut pasta and the plain one with coconut milk. They’re both creamy and incredibly delicious. 

    Tuna pasta 

    Image source: The Dinner Bite

    I understand tuna is expensive in this economy. That doesn’t mean you should deprive yourself of the enjoyment that is tuna pasta. And just like every other pasta, there’s the tomato and creamy options. You can even bake it. Tuna tastes great, so it’ll go amazingly well mixed with any pasta sauce. 


    ALSO READ: Nigerian Women Need to Leave Pasta Alone and Try Out These 8 Other Meals

  • Happy World Pasta Day! Take this quiz to find out if you’re a loyal friend like jollof spaghetti or have plenty of haters like creamy pasta.

  • Moderator: We often hear endless arguments about which is better between Port Harcourt (PH) bole and Lagos bole (boli). Today, we have invited both plantains to Zikoko HQ to debate for the bragging rights of “Best Roasted Plantain”.

    There are two rounds. In the first round, both parties will each get to present their arguments to the judges. They have two minutes each to make their arguments, so they need to be as brief as possible. In the second round, they’ll go toe-to-toe. May the best roasted plantain win.

    PH Bole, you’re up first.

    (PH Bole walks to the stand) 

    PH Bole: Good morning my able panel of judges, accurate timekeeper and moderator. My name is roasted plantain, popularly known as “bole”, and I’m here to defend the motion that PH bole is the best roasted plantain to ever exist. 

    Image credit: NITDA

    Boli (interjects): That’s not the motion! We’re here to argue which roasted plantain is the best.

    PH bole: That’s basically what I said.

    (Boli rolls their eyes)

    PH bole: As I was saying before I was rudely interrupted, I’d like to state that, first of all, the correct way to spell and pronounce it is B-O-L-E and not B-O-L-I. Lagos tried to be different by spelling their own with an “I”, but clearly, the “I” stands for “inferior”. 

    I believe I’m the best roasted plantain because everyone likes me. If you check the comments of all the Instagram and Twitter posts I appear in, you’ll see people talking about how much they want and crave me. They love me, not just because of my soft, well-roasted exterior, but also because of the people I surround myself with — people such as roasted fish, pepper sauce, snail, vegetables etc.

    Dear judges, some people love me so much, they’re willing to spend ridiculous amounts of money to get me. See exhibit A below. You see, I’m a hot cake. Can Lagos say the same? 

    Exhibit A

    (PH walks back to their seat as Lagos walks to the stage) 

    Lagos Bole : Good morning, my able panel of judges, accurate timekeeper, and moderator. My name is Boli, and I’m here to defend the motion that Lagos’ roasted plantain is the best. 

    Image credit: NITDA

    (Bole rolls his eyes)

    My opponent came on stage and bragged about how everybody likes them and how they’re a “hot cake”. But not once did they mention their usefulness to the people who love him. See, I bring people together: co-workers who go out to buy me and bond away from work, parents who make their children happy by giving me as a snack to their kids, etc. 

    PH Bole: I do all of that too!

    Lagos Boli: Excuse me, I’m speaking.

    PH Bole: 

    Lagos Boli: Also, people love me for me. I don’t need extras around to make people want me. I’m a hot cake on my own. Although sometimes I have my friend, groundnuts, with me. Plus, I’m very friendly and not proud; that’s why anyone can make me at home and can afford me outside. Can’t say the same for my Port Harcourt brother who needs fish and snail and other senrenren to be great. 

    Thank you. 

    (Boli walks back to his seat, and the moderator comes back to the stage) 

    Moderator: Well done on the first round. Now it’s time to face each other. You have five minutes.

    Image credit: rehosmartbee

    Bole: I’m not arrogant. The reason why only certain people can make me is that I’m special. I don’t just let anybody touch me, unlike you that agrees to be eaten by everyone. SMH, no class.

    Boli: Not you trying to slut-shame me in this big 2022. Don’t hate just because you’re expensive and people don’t like buying you. At least people can afford me even when they’re broke.

    Bole: Who says I’m expensive? I cost a bit more than you because I come with extra pizzazz. At the end of the day, people eat me with my pepper sauce and roasted fish and are full and satisfied. I’m a full meal. Who wants to eat plantain and groundnut after a long stressful day at work?

    Boli: I’m a snack. That’s why I only come with groundnut. People need me to hold their hunger. And also to help control their diets in a healthy way.

    Bole: So you’re fat shaming now?

    Boli: What? That’s not what I’m doing. 

    Bole: Mhm. If someone puts me with my roasted fish, side by side with you and your groundnuts, who do you think will be picked first? 

    Boli: So you’re a pick me now?

    Bole: What???

    Boli: Why don’t you face me, plantain to plantain, without all the extras? 

    Bole: The extras are what make me, me!

    Boli: Ohooo, so you’re not good enough on your own? 

    Bole: That’s not what I’m saying-

    Boli: Ladies and gentlemen, bole has agreed that he can’t taste good on his own. Hence —

    Bole: At least I’m not surrounded by dirt with all the Lagos garbage that have stained your white.

    Boli: You think you’re cleaner than me? Your city is literally covered in soot!

    (Everyone gasps)

    Moderator: Okay, that’s enough. Time’s up. Let’s take a short break and give the judges time to collate the results and decide on a winner. 

    (One of the judges walks to the stage) 

    Judge: Let me start by saying that both of you are winners. It’s just that one person must come first.

    Bole and Boli: 

    Judge: Although there were a few low blows here and there, you both made solid arguments. After much deliberation, the best roasted plantain between PH Bole and Lagos Boli is…

  • What problems do you have? Pleasing your partner’s parents? Passing IELTS? Fighting your account manager because your last transfer didn’t go through? Your japa plans aren’t clicking? Like it or not, the invisible “s” in life is for stress, and it’ll follow us wherever we go.

    But do you know something that’ll never disappoint or add to your stress, though? These food combos. 

    Hot akara and today’s agege bread

    Put the akara inside the bread and proceed to squeeze it like you’re trying to choke that conductor that ran away with your ₦50 change five years ago. Then slam it with a chilled can of Malta Guinness. Wiun.

    Jollof rice and Malta Guinness

    Plus chicken and egg that they forgot inside pepper stew. Ever been to the clouds before? Welcome home, dear comrade.

    Ewa agoyin and soft bread

    Repeat after me — soft bread with ewa agoyin every time. Life is not hard, enjoy it with some chilled goodness. If you buy bread that can pass as the stone used to kill goliath, you’re on your own.

    The amala trinity (AKA amala, gbegiri, and ewedu) plus assorted meats

    Wash it down with a cold bottle of your favourite Malt drink, and you might just wake up in heaven.

    Anything with Malta Guinness, really

    Sometimes, there’s no combo. Why? Because a sip of Malta Guinness does a world of good tbh, and who doesn’t like to feel good? Nobody!

    Whether paired with tasty party jollof rice, or that shawarma you just bought with your last ₦3k, Malta Guinness is the perfect complement for your favourite meals. Malta Guinness has partnered with your fave restaurants to bring you exciting meal combos to elevate your meal experience.

    Follow Malta Guinness on Instagram and Facebook to know more about these amazing meal combos.

  • Imagine if Z!KOKO owned a restaurant called Z! Restaurant (sadly, “Z Kitchen” was taken). Here’s what would happen:

    We’d be closed on public holidays

    We don’t joke with rest. If other people get to not work on their public holidays, so should we, please. 

    The ambience would be purple and white 

    Image source: Fohlio

    It’s not Zikoko if it’s not purple and white, duh. Expect to see our colour theme everywhere, down to cutlery. 

    Waiters would wear whatever they want 

    Image source: Happy Shopping

    Our servers would be GenZs, and if we tried to tell them to wear uniforms, they wouldn’t answer us. The most they’d allow is name tags that also have their pronouns. Because you shall not misgender. If you saw someone wearing fishnets and a bucket hat, asking you what you’d like to eat, don’t be afraid, they’re a waiter. 

    Menus would be quizzes 

    The menus would be bar codes. Once scanned, you’d have to take a random trivia quiz to access the menu. If you got below five, no food for you. 

     QUIZ: What Type of Restaurant Are You?

    You’d eat interesting meals

    You’d get the utmost fine dining experience. We’d serve meals like Eba et ketchup, Ice cream and plantain, Indonesian noodles avec okra, etc. 

    Foods would be named after gen-z terms 

    We’d have names like “Purr” for catfish and potatoes. You’d also see food named “It’s giving Nigerian babe” for seafood pasta, and “I stan”: the goated meal that is amala. 

    ALSO READ: If Gen Zs Don’t Say These 12 Things in a Day, They Might Actually Die

    Semo would never be served 

    Because we don’t deal with bad vibes. 

    Waiters would talk to you like they’re interviewing you 

    Waiters wouldn’t just walk up to you, say hi and ask for your order. They’d ask follow-up questions concerning your life, your meal choice, when you come to the restaurant etc. They’d even ask you to rate your love life on a scal of 1 – 10 Because there may be a story there, and we’d write it. 

    There’d be sections named according to flagships 

    There’d be different seating areas in the restaurants named according to Zikoko Flagships: Naira Life for fine dining, Love Life for dates, Man Like for geez who just want to hang out after work, What She Said for the hot gurls, Sunken Ships for ex-friends trying to reconnect or gain closure, etc. And they would all have their unique attributes. 

    You’d do a TikTok dance before we let you you enter

    At Zikoko, we value entertainment and fun. That’s why before you’d gain entry into our fine establishment, you’d be made to record a TikTok dance with our staff. We promise it’d be fun. 

    ALSO READ: 10 Things to Know Before Going to a Lagos Restaurant


  • In recent times, Nigerians have embraced meal ordering as a safe and convenient option to crowded restaurants. Owing to this and the need to promote local restaurants, Jumia introduced its Food Festival campaign in 2020 and has since used it to encourage more consumers to order their favourite dishes online. The online food festival is even bigger this year, with more restaurants partnering to offer exciting deals and discounts. 

    For two years, Jumia’s Food Festival campaign has provided restaurants with a platform to expand their reach while offering consumers access to tasty meals at the best prices. The options are endless, from breakfast to brunch and desserts if you crave convenience and affordability.

    To kick off the mouth-watering experience, here are five categories you might want to explore: 

    1. Immerse yourself in the adventure of finger-licking local dishes

    Are you looking for the best local cuisines, or do you miss the warmth of mama’s village recipes? Then visit Chopnownow. With a 20% discount on the entire menu, you can get a range of local delicacies like amala and ewedu soup, akara, moi moi, ofada rice, and sauce, to mention a few, for a steal. 

    2. Enjoy a variety of tasty staple foods

    Do you love noodles so much that you never get bored eating them? If you are looking for new places to taste a new noodle recipe, then do well to order as many plates as you want from Indomie Cafe this campaign season. You will surely be in for a noodle feast with a whopping 35% off all food prices.

    3. Indulge your sweet tooth cravings with a “buy 1 get 1 free” offer

    Imagine taking a scoop of your favourite ice cream on a sunny day and how it awakens a hormone of happiness that helps reduce stress levels in the body. Jumia allows you to have two cups of your favourite ice cream at Cold Stone Creamery during the online food festival. Also, Pastry lovers are not left out. With an extra free box of 3, you can enjoy more of the yummiest doughnuts from Krispy Kreme Doughnuts & Coffee.

    4. Get varieties of food in quick service restaurants

    A quick service restaurant is what we commonly call a fast food restaurant. If you’re a lover of fries, sandwiches, chicken, burgers, and pizza, you can order with a 25% slash on food prices at Sooyah Bistro and get all burger meals delivered free from Burger King during this Jumia awoof season.

    5. Enjoy intercontinental cuisine from the comfort of your home

    Try out various intercontinental cuisines, from Chinese cuisines to Korean beef rice, for a complete food adventure. The Place is one of the best restaurants serving intercontinental dishes.

    Now that you have all the information, don’t miss the chance to get the best food experience during the Jumia Food Festival. The ongoing campaign lasts till the 9th of October, 2022. So, hurry! Visit food.jumia.com.ng or log on to your Jumia Food app to get started. 

  • Between work, traffic and Nigeria just Nigeria-ing, everybody is tired. They’re also hungry but would like to eat without having to cook for 45 minutes to an hour when they return from work. What’s that thing Fireboy said again? “There’s no time. There’s no energy.” Exactly. And that’s why I’ve listed seven quick recipes you can cook for dinner in under 20 minutes. With these recipes, you don’t have to do too much or get too many ingredients. 

    Concoction rice 

    Photo credit: Bella Naija 

    This is the traditional “There’s nothing to eat” meal Nigerians cook when there are very few ingredients in the house. Most people cook this by throwing whatever they find in the pot. But if you need a recipe to follow, I’m here for you. 

    Find recipe at  The Kitchen Muse 

    ALSO READ: 5 Types of Rice Nigerians Need to Respect More

    Suya sandwich 

    Image source: Joy Editor

    Before you slander this combination, note it’s basically a beef sandwich but beef suya instead. To make it better, use agege bread. ₦500 suya plus ₦150 agege bread, and you’re good to go. Spread some butter or mayo inside (you won’t regret it). For extra oomph, add a sunny-side-up egg. 

    Find the recipe at Joy Etor

    Indomie frittata

    Photo credit: Delta Pikin

    Try this if you’re tired of eating your Indomie and egg the same way every time. Mix everything together and fry at once(after cooking your Indomie, of course). It slaps, I promise. 

    Find the recipe at Delta Pikin 

    Egg Spaghetti 

    Photo credit: Learn to cook with me 

    The fastes go-to for spaghetti is usually to pair it with stew. But I need us to move forward in life. The recipe below can get addictive just by how quick and easy it is to cook. I introduced it to my friend, a Nigerian bachelor who hates cooking, and he made it every day for one week straight. Don’t be as extreme as him though.

    Find the recipe at Learn to Cook With Me 

    ALSO READ: Make Bougie Creamy Pasta With Less Than ₦10k

    10-minute fried rice 

    Photo credit: The Foodie Takes Flight 

    A faster and cheaper way to cook fried rice. The link below offers two recipes: one with few ingredients, while the other has some extras like soy sauce and mixed vegetables. Choose which one to make depending on your time, money and energy. 

    Find recipe at The Foodie Takes Flight 

    Boiled potatoes in tomato sauce 

    Photo credit: Nic Homecooking 

    Potato and stew, but make it fancy. I want to send dollars to the person who came up with this recipe. 

    Find it at Nic Homecooking

    Yam and egg stir fry 

    Photo credit: Ndudu by Fafa

    A twist on fried yam and eggs. All I’ll say is once you try this, you may never go back to eating just fried yam and fried eggs. 

    Find the recipe on Ndudu by Fafa


    ALSO READ: 9 Low-Budget Recipes You Can Make With Ingredients in Your House

  • I didn’t go to a boarding house for secondary school, so I have no idea what the eating situation there is like. But I’m constantly hearing stories about terrible school food and the weirdest combinations students are made to eat. 

    I’ve been intrigued about this for the longest time. Today, I finally decided to ask young Nigerians about the most bizarre things they ate in boarding school. Their answers will terrify you. 

    “We mixed egusi soup and beans because we were late for lunch”

    —  Emeka*,19

     On this particular day, eba and egusi soup was served for lunch. Unfortunately, my friends and I couldn’t make it to the lunch room on time, and all the eba had finished. We collected the soup, and some girl in the lunch room said she had leftover beans from breakfast. Because hunger was killing us, we took it and mixed it with the egusi. We created a space in the middle of the beans and poured the soup, and that’s how we ate it. The soup was so watery, some ate it like beans and garri. They’d take one spoon of beans, then drink the egusi.

    Another time, we had Jollof garri. This was made by cooking raw garri, palm oil, crayfish, onions and pepper, in a pot with no water. I still eat it to this day. The only problem is the severe constipation you’ll face much later. 

    “I drank garri with sardine inside”

    —  Abiola*, 21

    School food always tasted terrible, and we would do anything not to eat it. This meant we had to rely on our provisions whenever we were hungry. Once our provisions and money for snacks finished, we had to come up with ways to combine foods so we won’t die of starvation. 

    A lot of the weird things we ate revolved around eba. There was “ebansa”:eba and sardine, “ebange”: eba and geisha and “ebanspice”: eba with Maggi, salt, pepper and a little water. But it all started with “ebanketch”, which is eba and ketchup. 

    I remember a time we stole scent leaves from someone’s farm, washed and cut it, put it in a plate of water, and added salt, Maggi and pepper. We ate it with eba. When the eba finished, we ate the rest of the “soup” with Cabin biscuit. We spent the rest of the day going back and forth to the toilet. It was epic. 

    We also tried beans and pineapple, bread and palm oil, boiled egg with pepper, salt and Maggi. Sometimes, I drank garri with sardine inside.  

    ALSO READ: 9 Life Hacks From Boarding House That Helped Us Survive in Nigeria

    “We ate termites and raw corn” 

    — Ogochukwu*, 21

    Termites were a special delicacy for students in my boarding school. 

    We’d catch them by putting bowls of water underneath the lights they were swarming around, before going for prep at 7 p.m. When we came back at 10 p.m., there would be a lot of termites in the bowl. For the next two hours, we would sit and stick long broomsticks through them and wrap in newspapers. In the morning, after breakfast, we’d head to the kitchen and roast them over coal, garnished with salt and pepper. We ate the termites while drinking garri. 

    We also ate raw corn. My school was a federal government college, so there were many farms owned by staff and people who rented land around it. We were prohibited from going to the farms, but we always snuck in to steal corn. We’d try to roast it at night over the coal iron in our room, but the smell always spread immediately, so we couldn’t roast for more than five minutes. This meant we always ended up eating it raw, but the corn was very milky and juicy, so we didn’t mind. I’m sure this contributed to my appendicitis a few months after graduating.

    “Fasting made me eat eba and beans” 

    — Fatimah*, 20 

    During Ramadan, we ate beans and eba for Iftar in the evening. Due to the fasting, we had to combine our afternoon meal(beans) and evening meal (eba and soup). It actually tasted nice. There was also this meal called “fetch”, which was basically eba mixed with sardine or geisha. We ate it like eba and soup. It was very disgusting, but we ate it almost every weekend because we had no choice; the school food was awful.

    “We made our sandwiches with groundnut, milo and milk”

    — Ismaila*,23

    On Sundays, our school served us bread, butter, Milo and milk for breakfast. And my friends would make a sandwich out of all the ingredients, including Milo and milk, then add sardine. Jollof rice with boiled eggs and fruits was served for lunch one particular day. I’d kept my breakfast till after lunch because I wanted to add the boiled eggs and groundnuts to my sandwich. So it became a sardine, butter, milk, Milo, groundnut and boiled egg sandwich. I loved it. 

    ALSO READ: 10 Nigerians Talk About Traumatic Experiences They Faced In Boarding School

    “We created our own cereal by mixing cornflakes, garri and sardine”

    — Itohan, 21

    We mixed cornflakes with garri, sardine and pepper. It was a delicacy we ate once in a while, usually on Saturdays. Some of my roommates would do just garri or cornflakes, but I liked to do both. And it had to be Nasco because it tasted better than any other cereal. Everything about the combination was elite; the crunch, the flavour, the pepper… they mixed well to make such a delicious meal. I still eat it at home once in a while. 

    “One of the best things we had was Milo candy”

    —  Kai, 22

    Back in school, we mixed ground cabin biscuits with butter, milk and sugar. If we had money, we’d also add chocolates. It tasted amazing, much better than school food. We also did this thing where we’d put Milo in sheets of paper and place it under our mattresses for at least a day. The next day, it would be really hard like candy. We loved it so much because we didn’t have access to candy or anything sweet in our school, except when people’s parents visited. We also mixed Tasty Time and Nutri C to make soda during hostel parties. It tasted great back then, but it’s not something I’d drink now. 


    ALSO READ: Ranked! Boarding House Meals

  • In this Nigerian economy, I can’t understand how and why mothers are feeding their babies Cerelac. First, it’s expensive (if you can afford Cerelac, you’re part of the rich we should be eating). Secondly, with the type of energy babies expend, there’s no way a mix of wheat and milk is enough for them. They need to eat proper food like the ones I’ve listed below. 

    Akara and Bread

    Image source: Maryam’s Nitty Wall

    Only feed this to them on Saturday mornings. So they know it’s part of a routine. It’ll even be better if you give them a few chores to do before they eat. That way, they’ll learn about delayed gratification and reward for hard work. 

    Jollof rice 

    Image source: Premium times 

    If there’s one significant meal babies must eat, it’s Jollof rice, the meal that brings Nigerians together across all tribes. It’s a part of our traditional and pop culture. Feeding them white man’s food (Cerelac) is almost disrespectful when they’ve not had Nigeria’s staple. Also, they need context to properly fight the Jollof wars when speaking to their baby friends from other African countries. 

    Amala, ewedu and gbegiri 

    We’ve been blessed with an elite meal, amala, and I don’t see why babies should be deprived of such a blessing. Also, how else will they understand the jaiye lifestyle if they’re not eating one of the significant Nigerian party foods?

    ALSO READ:  I Liked Eating These Meals as a Child, But Now I Hate Them

    Rice and stew 

    Image source: Spark Recipes

    This is to remind them that there’ll always be rice at home. Let them get used to the taste of what that feels like. So when they tell you they want to eat burger, and you say, “there’s rice at home”, they won’t give you an attitude. 

    Beans 

    Image source: Bella Naija

    Do you not want your babies to grow? So feed them what their body needs. But let it be ewa agoyin with fried plantain and two ponmo because that’s the complete package. You can blend the ponmo if you want. 

    Akpu 

    Image source: Cookpad

    Akpu is to teach them that life can be hard sometimes. If you’ve eaten akpu before, you’ll know what I’m talking about. From the name alone, you can already tell how hard the food is. 

    Isi ewu 

    This teaches them that they’ll always be the head and not the tail in life. And it’s also sort of a prayer that they’ll be G.O.A.Ts in whatever they do. 

    Creamy pasta 

    Image source: No spoon necessary

    Babies need to eat creamy pasta to be bad bitches when they grow up. The type who goes to Ilashe beach on weekends and knows how to enjoy life. 

    Semo

    Image source: Cookpad 

    Only feed them this meal once. So they’ll know to avoid it for the rest of their lives. Nobody deserves to eat semo, not even crackheads babies. 


    ALSO READ: Nigerian Women Need to Leave Pasta Alone and Try Out These 8 Other Meals

  • If you ever happen to have a Nigerian woman in your life who refuses to eat or can’t decide what to eat — which is almost every time — here are six tried and trusted ways to convince her. 

    Bring the food directly in front of her 

    You’re using the food to trap her in her seat or bed. By the time the only way she can move is to eat what’s in front of her, you won’t have to tell her twice. 

    Eat beside her 

    She don’t want her own, but knowing it belongs to you will make her want to eat. She’ll keep picking at your plate until she’s finished everything in it. 

    RELATED: 6 Reasons Why Nigerian Women Don’t Iron Their Clothes 

    Pay her to eat 

    One thing women love? Money.  I can’t believe we’ve gotten to a point where we have to pay women to take care of themselves, but here we are. 

    Cook the food for her 

    If she refuses to eat, remind her that you spent hours in the kitchen cooking for her. Don’t be above using guilt to get her to take care of herself better. So enter kitchen and start cooking. 

    RELATED: 7 Reasons Why Women Love Bodysuits

    Seize her coffee or tea

    It’s become transactional. If she doesn’t eat, deny her access to her drinks. The love Nigerian woman have for those drinks will force her to eat, even if it’s a little. 

    Gist her and just give her food 

    There’s something about gist that makes a woman not even realise she’s eating. Just invite her over because you want to give her sweet gist, and be dumping the food into her lap. It’ll be gone before you know it. 

    RELATED: 7 Reasons Why Nigerian Women Love Pockets