Tourists page Investors page Immigrants page Citizens page South Africans Abroad page Home page Sun, 08 Nov 2009
Essential Information
  About South Africa
     more  Culture
       Democracy
       Demographics
       Education
       Fauna and flora
       Geography and climate
       Government
       Health
       History and heritage
       Social development
       Sustainable development
       Science and technology
       Sport
  South Africa map
  SA web directory
  Site map
Public Services
  Advice for citizens
  Advice for foreigners
  South Africans abroad
Doing business
  Economy
  Investing in South Africa
  Trade with South Africa
  Trends & Growth
  Business news
Plan a trip
  Holiday experiences
  Smart travel tips
What's happening
  News and features
  Arts and entertainment
  Conferences and expos
  Sport

Weather

South African Weather Service


Quick forecasts
SA Weather Service

SA Web Directory
SA Web Directory

Mapping the best sites in SA cyberspace - goSouthAfrica

South Africa Map
South African Map

Find your way
on our interactive
macro-to-micro South Africa map



And the others?

Turkey is very popular in the holiday season. Peri-peri for chicken and prawns, a gift of the Portuguese in Mozambique, has enlivened palates for decades. And one cannot - as much as one might like to - forget the McDonalds, springing up with some success in cities across the country.

Something fishy
The strandlopers aren't the only South Africans who have enjoyed local fish, although it's harder today than ever before, with the waters off the Cape and Namibia under siege from vast fleets of foreign fishing trawlers from countries that have depleted their own stocks from overfishing. Besides a national passion for prawns, South Africans show a fondness for an odd fish called the kingklip - baked, deep-fried, grilled or pan-fried - and for snoek, a game fish that is braaied, usually, or smoked. Knysna, on the south coast, is world-famous for fabulous oysters: large and small, wild and cultivated.

Another perfect dawn in Africa
Rusks - descended from the Dutch rusk, the French biscotte and the German zwieback - are far superior to any of these. They are chunks of bread made with yeast or baking powder, baked as a loaf, separated into rectangular slabs, then shoved back into the oven to dry out. They come in a variety of flavours - buttermilk, marmalade, aniseed, even muesli. They last a very long time - useful for trekkers and farmworkers and, today, an essential with morning coffee before setting out on a game drive or facing a day at the office.

That coffee - especially if it is ordered at one of the many superb Brazilian coffee shops - is likely to be the best outside Italy, thanks to an influx of Italian immigrants in the mid-20th century. Clearly South Africa hasn't just got the rainbow - it has managed to hold on to the pot of gastronomic gold as well.



Page: 7 of 7 - back


Print this page Send this article to a friend



 
  • South African cuisine  
  • Footprints in the sand  
  • From Bobotie to Biryani  
  • The great mielie  
  • The meat of the matter  
  • The Afrikaner kitchen  
  • And the others?


  • South African Tourism Wines of South Africa Proudly South African South Africa Government Online South African Broadcasting Corporation Department of Trade and Industry South Africa
    Tourists | Investors | Immigrants | Citizens | South Africans Abroad Home | Site Map | South Africa Map | SA Web Directory
    Design, contents, site maintenance: Big Media Publishers (Pty) Limited
    Queries about the site? Contact the webmaster
    Published for the International Marketing Council of South Africa.
    Reliance on the information this website contains is at your own risk.
    Please read our Terms and Conditions of Use.