Kilishi (also Kilichi) is the spicy Beef Jerky, another snacks from Northern Nigeria. This is one of those
snacks that you can eat till your chin pains you, yet you will not want to
stop.
Kilishi can be likened to Suya in that they
have similar ingredients but the preparation and texture is different.
Traditionally, Kilishi is dried
under the sun's intense heat for about 3 days but here's how to make it in your
kitchen in under an hour.
·
10 pieces wafer-thin beef
- 1 tablespoon suya spice (suya pepper)
- 3 cloves of garlic
- 1 teaspoon cloves (Kanafuru)
- A small piece of ginger
- 1 small stock cube
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon dry cayenne pepper seeds
Notes
about the ingredients
1.
The beef you will use for Kilishi
should be cut from the reddest part of the beef with no fat at all.
2.
Cut the beef as thin as possible. It
is usually as thin as 3mm. The Mai Kilishis have the sharpest knife in the
world. Their ability to cut a large blanket of beef so thinly is a skill that
cannot be rivalled.
3.
By 3 cloves of garlic I mean 3 small
pieces of garlic you get when you break up a bulb of garlic.
4.
Cloves is a spice that gives the
Kilishi a unique flavour.
5.
You can used fresh ginger, but you
can also use dry ground ones instead.
6.
You only need a small quantity of
salt. You may not even need it if you do not eat a lot of salt. Be careful when
adding salt else the Kilishi will be over-seasoned when done.
7.
You get the dry cayenne pepper seeds
by removing the red part of the pepper.
Prepare
the Kilishi Spice Solution
1.
Grind the cloves with a dry mill and
set aside.
2.
Peel the garlic and ginger and
pound/grind into a smooth paste.
3.
Add the ground cloves and crushed
stock cubes to the garlic and ginger paste.
4.
And some water, stir and sieve to
get an extract of these spices and seasoning.
5.
Add the suya spice and cayenne
pepper seeds to the solution, stir and set aside.
Directions
for making Kilishi
1.
Cut the beef into very thin fillets
if it has not been done for you by the butchers.
2.
Cut off all traces of fat from the
beef.
3.
Set your oven to 250°C (475F) or Gas
Mark 9 to preheat. If your oven temperature settings are not up to these, use
the highest possible setting but this means that your own drying times will
change. If your oven has a fan, turn it on as well because it helps dry the
beef faster.
4.
Sprinkle a tiny quantity of salt on
the fillets of beef and spread them around. You only need a tiny quantity and
you can skip salt altogether.
5.
Line your oven tray with a baking
sheet and lay the pieces of beef flat on it.
6.
Put the tray of beef into the oven
and bake for 15 minutes. Flip the beef every 5 minutes for even drying.
7.
After 15 minutes, bring out the beef
from the oven and brush the Kilishi all over them, making sure that both sides
of the beef are well covered.
Note: The way they do it in the North is to dry the fillets of beef in the sun
for 2 days then soak them in the Kilishi spice solution and spread in the sun
(on flat rafia baskets) till dry. Some grill it after soaking in the Kilishi
solution.
8.
Put them back in the oven and bake
for additional 10 to 15 minutes. Flip them from time to time and this time,
keep a very good eye on it else it will become bone dry. You want it dry and
chewy not crunchy.
Please note that the Kilishi will
become drier when it has cooled down completely so bear this in mind when
deciding the time to bring it out of the oven.
Serve with more pepper (if you wish)
and a chilled drink.
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