Perfect Egusi Soup without the Bitterness https://www.allrecipes.com/recipe/12978/egusi-soup/
My Name Is Oge And I’ve Been Cooking Egusi Since I Was A Child
Not for money back then
Just for my family
My mother used to make me grind the egusi on that old grinding stone we had in our backyard
My arms would ache for hours after
And she would stand there watching me
Telling me to grind finer
Telling me to stop being lazy
She would taste the egusi raw before she let me add it to anything
She’d put a little on her tongue and close her eyes
If she nodded, we were good
If she shook her head, I had to go back to the market with her to buy fresh ones
I used to think she was just being difficult
I was a child
I didn’t understand why she was so particular about everything
Now I’m forty-something years old and I do the exact same thing
I taste every batch of egusi I buy before I use it
If it’s bitter, it goes back
No arguments
No second chances
I don’t care how much I paid for it
I don’t care how far I traveled to get it
Bitter egusi is bitter egusi and no amount of cooking will fix it
That’s the first thing you need to understand
Let Me Tell You Something About Egusi That Might Surprise You
Egusi is not supposed to be bitter
I don’t know who started that lie
Maybe someone burnt their soup and tried to convince themselves it was traditional
But the truth is that egusi has a natural sweetness
The seeds contain oils that are actually quite pleasant when they’re fresh
When you cook them right, that sweetness comes through and balances everything
But those same oils?
They go bad
And when they go bad, they taste bitter
Sharp and unpleasant and impossible to hide
That’s why I taste my egusi before I cook it
If the oil is already rancid, no amount of seasoning will save you
You’ll add salt and it’ll still be bitter
You’ll add sugar and it’ll still be bitter
You’ll add crayfish and it’ll still be bitter
You’ll cook it for hours and it’ll still be bitter
Waste of meat
Waste of oil
Waste of time
Waste of everything
So please
Before you start cooking
Before you even think about heating your oil
Taste your egusi
Just a tiny bit on your tongue
If it’s good, proceed
If it’s bad, throw it away and start over
I know it hurts to throw away food
But it hurts more to throw away a whole pot of soup
Trust me
I’ve been there
Where Does Bitterness Actually Come From
I’ve identified three main sources of bitterness in egusi soup
Three things that can ruin your pot if you’re not careful
Let me walk you through each one
First Source: The Egusi Itself
Like I already told you
Old egusi goes bad
The oils in the seed oxidize and turn rancid
And rancid oil tastes bitter
That’s just chemistry
No way around it
But here’s something people don’t realize
Egusi can go bad even if it looks fine
You can’t always tell by looking
The seeds might still look yellow and fresh
But the taste will tell you the truth
That’s why I always taste
I don’t trust my eyes
I trust my tongue
Also, storage matters a lot
Ground egusi is more vulnerable than whole seeds
Once you grind it, the oils are exposed to air and they go bad faster
I keep my ground egusi in airtight containers in the fridge
Not the cupboard
The fridge
I’ve had egusi stay good for weeks that way
But if you leave it in a plastic bag on your counter?
It’ll go bad in days
Especially in this heat
Especially with all the humidity we deal with
So store your egusi properly
And taste it before every use
Even if you think it’s still good
Even if you just used it last week
Taste it
Second Source: Burnt Crayfish
This one is sneaky
You might not even realize it’s happening
Crayfish burns really fast
Like, seconds fast
And when crayfish burns, it doesn’t taste like burnt food
It tastes bitter
Sharp and unpleasant and it spreads through your whole soup
Here’s the problem
A lot of recipes tell you to add crayfish early
“Add crayfish and fry with the pepper” they say
And that’s a mistake
I used to do that
I’d add crayfish with my peppers and fry everything together
And my soup would always have this little bitter undertone
I couldn’t figure it out
I tried different egusi
Different palm oil
Different peppers
Nothing worked
Then one day I was cooking and I actually watched the crayfish in the oil
It was browning really fast
Turning almost black in spots
I tasted it and it was bitter
And that’s when it clicked
The crayfish was burning
It was frying for too long
Now I add crayfish at the very end
After the soup is already cooked
After I’ve added the stock and the meat and everything is simmering nicely
I put the crayfish in, stir it, and let it cook for maybe three or four minutes
That’s all it needs
Just enough to release the flavor
Any longer and it starts to burn
The difference was immediate
My soup stopped having that bitter undertone
People started asking me what I changed
I told them I stopped burning my crayfish
They laughed but it’s true
Third Source: Bitter Leaf
This one is different because the bitterness is actually supposed to be there
Bitter leaf is bitter
That’s the whole point
But there’s a difference between pleasant bitterness and overwhelming bitterness
And if you don’t prepare bitter leaf properly, it will take over your entire soup
I cook for all kinds of people
Some of them want bitter leaf in their egusi
Some of them don’t
Some of them want it but only a little bit
So I’ve learned to be flexible
If I’m cooking for a crowd and I don’t know what people prefer, I use ugu leaves
That’s pumpkin leaves
No bitterness at all
Everyone eats ugu
It’s safe and it’s delicious
But if you want bitter leaf, you have to work for it
First you pick the leaves
Wash them thoroughly
Then you squeeze them
And I mean really squeeze them
Grab handfuls and squeeze until your hands cramp
The water that comes out will be dark green and very bitter
Throw that water away
Wash again
Squeeze again
Throw that water away
Keep doing this until the water runs clear
After that, boil the leaves for fifteen to twenty minutes
Drain that water too
Then taste a small piece
If it’s still too bitter, boil it again
Once it’s at a level you can handle, add it to your soup
And add it early
The longer bitter leaf cooks, the more the bitterness mellows out
But honestly?
Most of the time I just use ugu
Less work and people love it
I’ve never had anyone complain that I used ugu instead of bitter leaf
But I’ve had plenty of people complain about bitter leaf
So I play it safe
Now Let Me Tell You How I Actually Cook Egusi
Not what I read in a book
Not what someone told me
What I actually do in my kitchen
Step by step
The way I’ve been doing it for years
First: The Meat
I start by boiling my meat
Whatever I have
Beef, shaki, cow foot, chicken
Sometimes all of them together
I season with salt, seasoning cubes, and a small onion
I add enough water to cover everything
Then I cook until everything is soft
Cow foot takes the longest
Sometimes an hour or more
I just keep checking with a knife
When the knife goes through without resistance, it’s done
While the meat is boiling, I prepare the egusi
Second: Roasting The Egusi
This is the step that most people skip
And it’s the step that makes the biggest difference
I put a dry pan on low heat
No oil
No water
Just the pan
I add my ground egusi and I stir
Constantly
Without stopping
For about two minutes
The goal isn’t to change the color
The goal is to smell that nutty aroma
That’s how I know the oils are waking up
That’s how I know the raw taste is going away
I learned this from an older woman who used to cook for parties in my neighborhood
I watched her do it one day and asked why
She said it removes the raw taste and makes the soup richer
I tried it and never went back
Third: Making The Paste
After roasting, I mix the egusi with a little water
Just enough to make a thick paste
Thick like eba
Thick like akamu
I use the stock from the boiling meat if I have it
The stock adds flavor
But water works too if you don’t have stock
The important thing is the consistency
It should be thick enough to hold together
Not runny
Not dry
Somewhere in between
Fourth: Frying The Egusi
Now I heat my palm oil
This is where I have to be careful
Palm oil burns fast
And burnt palm oil tastes bitter
I heat it until it’s hot but not smoking
If you see smoke, it’s too hot
Turn down the heat and wait for it to cool
Once the oil is ready, I drop spoonfuls of my egusi paste into the oil
And here’s the important part
I don’t stir immediately
I let it sit for three or four minutes
I let it form those chunks
Those chunks are what give egusi its unique texture
The little curds that float around in the soup
If you stir too early, everything blends together
You lose that texture
After the chunks form, I break them up gently
I fry everything for a few more minutes
Until I see the oil starting to separate
That’s when I know the egusi is properly fried
Fifth: Adding The Pepper
Then I add my pepper
I blend tatashe, onion, and scotch bonnet
Sometimes a little tomato too
It depends on what I have
I add it to the pot and I fry that as well
I keep frying until the oil separates again
This is the base of the soup
It has to be properly fried
If it’s not, the soup will taste raw
And nobody wants raw pepper taste in their egusi
Sixth: Adding The Stock
Then I add my meat stock
All of it
Every drop
And the meat too
I stir everything together
Then I let it simmer
Seventh: Simmering
This is where patience comes in
I let the soup simmer for thirty to forty minutes
Not boiling
Just simmering
The egusi needs time to absorb all the flavors
The pepper needs time to mellow
The meat needs time to release its flavor into the soup
During this time, I taste
I taste for salt
I taste for seasoning
I taste to see if the egusi has cooked properly
If it still tastes raw, I let it cook longer
If it needs more seasoning, I add it
Eighth: Adding The Crayfish
After thirty minutes of simmering, I add my crayfish
Just a few minutes before I’m ready to serve
I stir it in and turn the heat down to low
Three or four minutes is all it needs
Just enough to release the flavor
Any longer and it starts to burn
Ninth: Final Adjustments
Before I serve, I do a final taste
If the soup is too thick, I add a little more stock
If it’s too thin, I let it cook longer
If it needs more salt, I add it
If it needs more pepper, I add it
Then I turn off the heat
And I let the soup rest for about ten minutes before serving
What Changes When I’m Cooking For A Crowd
I get asked this a lot
People want to make egusi for fifty people and they don’t know where to start
So let me tell you
When you’re cooking for a crowd, things behave differently
The heat doesn’t distribute the same way
The oil takes longer to get hot
The egusi takes longer to fry
But here’s the thing
You don’t double the cooking time
That’s not how it works
Maybe you add ten or fifteen minutes
But that’s it
The soup reaches its peak flavor after thirty to forty minutes of simmering
Whether you’re cooking for five people or fifty
What I do change is the ratio
Less palm oil proportionally
Because the meat and egusi release more fat in a large batch
So you need less oil to start
And I always keep extra stock nearby
Large pots lose moisture faster
You’ll need to add more stock as you go
Also, seasoning doesn’t scale linearly
If you’re cooking double the quantity, don’t double the salt
Add salt in stages
Taste
Add more
Taste again
Trust your tongue
Not the measurements
What I Do When Things Go Wrong
Because things go wrong
Always
Sometimes I add too much salt
Sometimes I don’t add enough
Sometimes I burn the palm oil and have to start over
Just last week I was cooking for a small event and I added the crayfish too early
The soup had that bitter undertone again
I was so annoyed with myself
But that’s cooking
You never stop making mistakes
You never stop learning
The important thing is knowing how to fix it
If you add too much salt, add more stock or water
If the soup is too thick, add more stock
If it’s bitter, try adding a little sugar
Just a pinch
And a little more salt
It won’t fix everything
But it can help balance things out
If nothing works, you might have to start over
It happens
I’ve started over many times
It hurts
But it hurts less than serving bad food to your guests
Storage
My freezer is always full of egusi
When I cook, I make extra
I let the soup cool completely
Hot soup in the freezer changes the texture
Then I portion it into freezer bags or containers
I label everything with the date
Egusi freezes really well
I’ve reheated soup that was in the freezer for three months
It still tasted fresh
The trick is to thaw it slowly in the fridge before reheating
And when you reheat, do it on low heat
Don’t rush it
Low and slow
That’s the way
What I Want You To Remember
If you take anything away from this conversation, let it be these things
Taste your egusi before you cook it
If it’s bitter raw, it’ll be bitter cooked
Don’t waste your time and ingredients
Don’t fry crayfish
Add it at the end
Just let it warm through
That’s all it needs
If you’re using bitter leaf, prepare it properly
Wash it, squeeze it, boil it, drain it
Taste it before you add it to your soup
Roast your egusi before you fry it
Dry pan, low heat, two minutes
It makes a difference
Trust me on this one
Control your heat
Palm oil burns fast
Burnt oil tastes bitter
So watch your fire
Taste as you go
Don’t wait until the end to taste
Taste early and taste often
And don’t be afraid to make mistakes
Everyone makes mistakes
The difference between a good cook and a bad cook is knowing what went wrong
And fixing it next time
One Last Thing
I’m sitting in my kitchen right now
Typing this on my phone
There’s a pot of stew on the fire
Not egusi today
But the same principles apply
Fresh ingredients
Good heat control
Taste as you go
These are the things I’ve learned over the years
And I’m still learning
Every time I cook, I learn something new
That’s the beauty of this work
You never arrive
You never know everything
You just keep getting better
So go and cook your egusi
Make mistakes
Learn from them
And come back and tell me how it went
I’m always here