Eba is a stiff dough made by soaking
garri in hot water and kneading it with a wooden baton until it becomes a smooth doughy staple. It is served as part of a meal with soups and sauces. Some of these include okra soup,
egusi soup,
vegetable soup,
afang soup,
banga soup and
bitter leaf soup. Similar starchy doughs are found as staples in other African cuisines.
Kokoro is a Nigerian snack food common in southern and southeast Nigeria, especially
Abia State,
Rivers State,
Anambra State,
Enugu State and
Imo State. It is made from a paste of
maize flour, mixed with
garri and sugar and deep-fried. As a
snack, cereal, or light meal,
garri can be soaked in cold water (in which case it settles to the bottom), mixed with
sugar or
honey, and sometimes roasted
peanuts and/or
evaporated milk, also known as Soaking Garri. The amount of water needed for soaked
garri is 3:1.
Garri can also be eaten dry with sugar and roasted peanut. Other ingredients include coconut chunks,
tiger nut milk, and cashews. In
Liberia,
garri is used to make a dessert called
kanyan which is combined with peanuts and honey. In its dry form,
garri is used as an accompaniment for soft cooked
beans and palm oil. This food mix is called
yoo ke garri, or
garri-fɔtɔ/
galli-fɔtɔ (crushed garri) in the
Ga language of
Ghana and the
Gen dialect of southern
Togo and
Benin. This type of garri is a mixture of moistened garri kneaded with a thickened tomato paste, oil, salt, seasonings. Yoo ke garri is garri with beans, which is typically eaten as lunch. It is also eaten with bean cake (
Akara) in Nigeria. Smooth
garri (known as
lebu to the
Yoruba) can be mixed with pepper and other spicy ingredients. A small amount of warm water and
palm oil is added and softened by hand. This type of
garri is served with fried fish. It is served with
frejon on
Good Friday. In Nigeria, the Efik people use dry
garri to thicken light soups like egg soup and white soup (also known as up and down soup) ==Variations==