Amhara dishes The
Amharas' cuisine features a wide variety of dishes and beverages, often centered around
injera, a sourdough flatbread made from
teff flour. The cuisine is known for its use of spices, rich stews, and traditional cooking methods.
Dishes • Injera – a sourdough flatbread made from teff flour, serving as the base for most meals and used to scoop stews and dishes. • Doro wot – a spicy chicken stew with boiled eggs, flavored with berbere spice mix and niter kibbeh (spiced clarified butter). • Tibs – sautéed meat (beef or lamb) cooked with onions, tomatoes, and spices, often served sizzling hot. • Siga wot – a rich and spicy beef stew made with berbere and slow-cooked to tenderness. • Anebabero – layered thick injera soaked in a butter and spiced berbere mixture, enjoyed for its rich and savory flavor. •
Fir-fir – shredded injera or bread mixed with spicy stew or
wot, often served as a hearty breakfast. •
Asa goulash – a flavorful fish stew cooked with onions, tomatoes, and berbere, often served with injera or bread.
Snacks • Dabo
(traditional bread varieties include ambasha, difo dabo, and hibist) • Ambasha dabo – a celebration bread that is slightly sweet, with decorative touches made on the dough before baking. • Difo dabo – baked bread wrapped in false banana leaves for a unique flavor. •
Dabo kolo – crunchy, fried or baked dough snacks seasoned with a hint of spice, popular as a light snack. • Kolo – roasted barley or wheat mixed with peanuts, enjoyed as a nutritious and portable snack.
Beverages •
Tella – traditional Tigray beer brewed with barley, hops, and gesho leaves, often consumed during celebrations. •
Tej – sweet Amhara honey wine, served at special occasions and known for its distinct flavor. •
Birz – A non-alcoholic honey beverage, lightly fermented and enjoyed as a refreshing drink.
Oromo dishes The
Oromos' cuisine consists of various vegetable or meat side dishes and entrées. As part of a long-established custom, practice, or belief, people do not eat
pork in
Oromia. • Anchotte – a common dish in the western part of Oromia • Baduu – liquid remaining after milk has been curdled and strained (cheese) • Chororsaa – a common dish in the western part of Oromia • Chukkoo – also known as
micira; a sweet flavor of whole grain, seasoned with butter and spices • Ukkaamssa (affaanyii) – stewed ground beef with spices, minced onion, garlic, green chili pepper, and clarified butter. ===
Gurage dishes===
Kitfo '' served rare Another distinctively Ethiopian dish is
kitfo (frequently spelled
ketfo). It consists of raw (or rare) beef mince marinated in
mitmita (Ge'ez: ሚጥሚጣ
mīṭmīṭā a very spicy chili powder similar to ) and .
Gored gored is very similar to , but uses cubed rather than ground beef.
Ayibe (or
ayeb) is a local cheese made from the curds of
buttermilk that is mild and crumbly, close in texture to crumbled
feta.
Gomen kitfo Gomen kitfo is another typical Gurage dish.
Collard greens (ጎመን
gōmen) are boiled, dried and then finely chopped and served with butter, chili and spices. It is a dish specially prepared for the occasion of
Meskel, a holiday marking the discovery of the
True Cross. It is served along with or sometimes even
kitfo in this tradition called . ===
Sidama dishes===
Wassa The
enset plant (called
wesse in the
Sidamo language) is central to Sidama cuisine and after grinding and fermenting the root to produce
wassa, it is used in the preparation of several foods.
Borasaame Borasaame is a cooked mixture of
wassa and butter sometimes eaten with
Ethiopian mustard greens and/or beans. It is traditionally eaten by hand using a
false banana leaf and is served in a ', a vase-like ceramic vessel. A common variant of
borasaame uses
maize flour instead of
wassa and is called
badela borasaame.
Borasaame is typically paired with a seasoned yogurt drink called
wätät. Both are common foods for funerals and the celebration of
Fichee Chambalaalla, the Sidama new year.
Amulcho is an enset flatbread used similarly to to eat wats made from beef, mushrooms, beans, gomen, or pumpkin.
Gomen ba siga Gomen ba siga (ጎመን በስጋ, Amharic: "cabbage with meat") is a stewed mixture of beef and Ethiopian mustard served under a layer of bread.
Maize A commonly grown crop in Sidama, maize (
badela in Sidaamu; also known as "corn" in North America) is often eaten as a snack with coffee. It can be ground into flour to make bread, roasted on the cob, or the kernels can be picked off to make
bokolo, which is served either boiled or roasted. == Breakfast ==