Yes. It was a great learning experience. The food was delicious 😋. We appreciate your hospitality. When we find everything we need, we will invite you and Karen over to cook some American Soul Food. 😁😋
She didn’t really get de chance tah exhibit how it’s really done in Zambia , idk it was giving more of America tryna culture shame sum, I look forward to the unapologetics so this was a clip i had to catch. Becos I mean it was a pleasure to experience s/o to Florence beautiful ppl but uncomfortable to watch,, I didn’t get to pronounce or catch now seasoning to cop 😮💨
This is my tribe's food and soup. We the Ewes of Ghana, Togo, Benin, and Parts of Nigeria prepare our banku and spinach soup the same way. Only that her approach is a bit different but all the ingredients are the same. We are just one people in Africa. Thanks, family.
@MY PEOPLE I prefer the phrase "ethnic group" to "tribe", as it sounds classier! 😁 In the West, the word "tribe" conjures up images of savages running around in the bush. And oh, I am an Ewe too . . . . from Keta and Anyako 👍🤗
One thing I like about you guys is; you're humble and down to earth and these will help you adopt to the African way of living, unlike some African Americans who came here with an attitude, judgmental and thinking they are up there. I adore the unapologetic normards. ONE LOVE.
That was awesome! Oh my gosh, African Americans BACK HOME cooking with our people! I am so happy I could cry. I can't wait to take a trip. I feel like going by myself because I could leave tomorrow but I'm waiting for family to be ready. Grrrr
Waiting for your family could end up derailing your dream. If they’re not sure when they will be ready the best you can do is go it solo since you’re saying you got the means to. When you get to Africa and show them how it like this side I can assure you that they will easily follow you. Unless they have something they’re doing that they can’t leave hanging but you know that they’ll be done within a specified period of time then you can wait for them.
@@itscyberqueen13 my contribution was simply a suggestion which you can take or disregard since you know what’s going on in your family. Hope you’ll have a great time whenever it will be that you’ll visit Africa.
We are so closed to Zambia but to get there either we need to drive many kilometers or to fly to South Africa! I would love to visit one day. They were so kind to receive us as refugees when we had our civil war even when most of us did not speak English...
Her name is ( Florence Jonathans ) subscribe to her channel. I’ve never met her but I feel she deserves the love . But I’ve seen her great videos. SHE DESERVES SOME LOVE ❤️ 👍🏽👍🏽✅✅✅
Love Zambia..veteran friendly and hospitable people....culture..food...tourism. Great to see this. Great Zambia TH-camr🔥🔥❤ One love ❤ 🇿🇲 One love family From South Africa ❤🇿🇦
Everyday Save the Children are asking money here in The Netherlands for starving children in some countries in Africa but also for India and South America.
We Africans, Indians and South Americans should not just care about what other races say about our food. Our food is organic and the most delicious in the world. Of course there are some people who cannot afford such nice food, just like the poor in the western world who cannot afford to eat nice food.
@@dalisobanda5575 it's sad . The whole purpose of marriage and family is being destroyed further by feminism movements. That's why I find it hard to believe that this couple and family are actually american . They behave with so much respect for each other , just the chemistry between the wife and husband can tell the respect they have for hierarchy and ultimately symbiotic mutual exclusivity . Trickles down all the way to the daughter. It's almost like they aren't american ...not to say that they aren't americans with such a family but it's extremely rare , we've all seen it .
When addressing elders/other people in a formal way, put Ba- in front of their name. Example: BaDavid, instead of just David. Ba is pronounced similar to Wa, ask a local Zambian for the exact pronunciation. Happy to see you‘re having a great time, great content!
If your nshima water has boiled, you can first soak the dry mealie meal in cold water before adding it to the boiling. That way, you stop the dry meal from lumping.
@@bokani14ify the South africa one is a very soft version. In comparison, it is as soft as mashed potato. In south africa, most people use spoons to eat their pap. In zambia on the other hand, nshima is harder and consumed with hands. You can also use folk and knife.
@@mubs4life really. I used my hands to eat the pap in South Africa. The prepartion when water is boiling differs. Most Zambian add the mealie-meal straight to the water with out making lumps (a skill I never aquired). Some make a paste cold water and mealie meal (That one is easy). Zimbabwe Ndebele use uphehlo (an African whisk) add mealie-meal boiling water and kill the lumps with uphehlo. Method after that is basically the same. Texture changes with people's preferences.
P.s. thank you so much for promoting channels that need love also . We see you 👍🏽. Most channels only look for bigger channels. This channel promotes all from what I see
commenting from Nairobi Kenya, Pap, nshima, ugali .....they're all the same thing. We just have philosophical differences about what it actually is in consistence, ingredients, preparation, density....etc etc . What is not in dispute is that we obsess about it all day long and the further south you go in Africa, the softer it becomes.
Wow its wonderful and beautiful moments guys. Africans America and Africans meets together as ONE family as Africans. You are back to your roots. Eating with your hands its culture of every Africans so you are a part of this culture and above from that eating natural and fresh food. We are doing the same in Sudan but little difference, visit us in Sudan we have lots to show you how our culture and tradition as Africans. Just come you will see.
Greetings UAN. the traditional dishes in Kemet AKA Africa are similar across the continent with various names per dish. UAN, it must be grand to be a male in the Zambian culture and the hospitality is out of this world, I am on the next plane .. Thanks for sharing.
Papa Nomad remembers kalembula(sweet potato leaves) from the previous meal he had😂....it's actually my favorite type of greens too, can have it all day everyday 😋
Its really good to teach our children about our roots. Your girl is getting the learns from the natives. Try visiting Uganda as well. Its a beautiful country with good people and delicious dishes as well.
22:51 Imagine there are HUGE pots that women have learned how to cook Nahima in. Hopefully you can witness that... it's an arm workout for sure and a lot of hard work.
Love how you are so grounded. I am Zambian with American born children. It's nice to see how your daughter is so grounded and ready to learn the culture.
Life is too short; let's have fun. You guys are doing it, fam! I envy you guys. No matter where you come from, as far as you are a Black man/Black woman, you are an African. Africa, my home sweet home.
Being from that part of Africa, this is the best way to learn how to cook Fufu, because this will work with any type of flour, in Zambia they use white corn flour that's very tricky and it takes more than 35 min to cook perfectly, less time than that it will come too soft and not cooked well and will give you stomac problems, but here in the US we mostly use semoulina floor that is very easy and using this process you only need 20 min to get a very good fufu ready to go, sorry I enjoy cooking this video was really fun to watch.
Love it when i see my kind of people eating or sampling African food. I have two friends planning to travel with me and eat our Zambian food instead of always asking for Chinese, or Mexican foods...lol
Some people coock nshima (phaleche) slightly differently , that's how we cook it too in Botswana especially northern parts of Botswana Wow.. my mom had 'stenge' at home, One of my aunt's used to wear just like that for years 🤣🤣.. before South Africa changed her when she went schooling there .. I like the Zambian and SA vlogs, I might revisit your Rwanda vlogs because I saw something very interesting recently on Facebook, we discovered that Rwanda traditional dance is very very similar to Botswana traditional dance and the rythms and everything, while watching Rwandan stuff I remembered ho you guys said you liked it there ..
We eat all this vegetables in Kenya. Pumpkin leaves are full of nutrients. I grow all my Kenyan vegetables in Texas. Now I’m growing bitter leaves though I don’t know how to use it.
That was so good,I always remember my British and American friends who still yearn for nshima now that they went back,It really hits the spot,glad you get to make it yourselves,hope you get to try the dried fish aswell
Hi unpologetic nomads, there is also anchovies, that we call kapenta in our Zambian language. It is very very delicious either cooked using cooking oils, tomatoes & onions or it can be cooked with cooking oil, onions & tomatoes, then add homemade peanut butter to it. It's absolutely tasty. Get someone to teach how to prepare the dish whilst you're in Zambia.
I'm so impressed with your stirring abilities. For a first timer this is amazing! Takes quite a bit of strength to stir inshima but you get used to it with time. The larger the nshima the more difficult the stirring. Well done you! 💪💪🙌🙌
Well done for learning to cook. I learned how to cook in a college. For nshima, I mix the meal meal with cold water & then pour it in cooling boiled water in the pot. Then I add little meal meal as I cook until it gets ready. For veggies, I fry the onions & tomatoes separately in a frying pan & then the veggies onto the frying pan to finish off the cooking. Different ways to skin the sheep for the same results. Those veggies are healthy & they protected the people from cancers & other diseases.
Learning and laughing at the same time! Y'all are hilarious! Papa and Mama Nomad were having a moment in the kitchen and I wasn't sure Papa was gonna be available for any new videos! Bahahahaha!
Nshima is pap here in South Africa, it's our staple food but I think there is a lot of ways to cook that, so it depends on which way would you prefer to do it and the results will be just the same
you guys make me smile watching and am proud to be Zambian 🇿🇲 . please you should also try , Zambian Street food. like, michopo,cassava and groundnuts combo , chikanda , fritas, dondos, street samusas , sweet balala, chili bites, chips mayau etc and zambian wild fruits like, masuku, gayi, pundu, mabuyu baobao fruits etc. n some traditional drinks like chibwantu , munkoyo, and tobwa ❤❤❤ love you gys , keep making exciting videos
Florence should have told them that the way she held the cooking stick is the correct way of preparing Nshima. Ela spilt the water when mixing the mealie mill with water because she wasn’t shown how to hold the cooking stick correctly. Otherwise everything else was perfectly done.
Mmmm I just learnt something. I never knew you could fry impwa like that I normally boil them and fry tomatoes and onions separate, drain the water from the impwa and mix them.
My mama boils them whole without chopping them until they're soft enough to peel the skin off and drain the water, then back in the pan with chopped onion and tomato to briefly fry.
This was a lot of fun to watch, unapologetic nomads.🤗🤗🤗. I really enjoyed the cultural dive. Perhaps you should make this ( learning toprepare a local dish ) part of your travel vlogs's constant episodes. Just thinking out loud.
This the dopest family I have seen this year. Got out on to this channel and I’m subscribed and watch everything they upload. Thank you for coming to Zambia!
I like the layout of your house. I will start building my house soon. Can you invite me to your house when I come to Zambia? Where is that Kingston in Zambia?
@Mary Kingston is residential area in the outskirts of Lusaka when you’re heading to the North. You branch off to your left when you reach the road leading to Precem motel. Buy a farm and start growing tomatoes and watermelons - you would recover your investment within a short period of time.
Hey guys!! Very nice. That looked really tasty wow. And that one dish reminded me of the stuff pourage back in Tanzania. It looks the same just given a different name depending where you are. How about that very very nice guys🤗🤗😃❤. Please keep coming out with more vlogs!!
I just stomped on your vids and immediately subscribed😍😍😍 seeing you enjoy the Zambian vibe makes me feel good... Zambian people cook delicious local meals
Very good video. Life in Zambia looks like in Burundi. The food in Zambia and in Burundi is almost the same. The chima is tsima (ubutsima) in kirundi (which is the language of Burundians). It may be the same name originally. The pumpkin leaves are called soma (umusoma) in kirundi. The dress with the long loincloth is also the same. Girls and women put it on when they go to do homework. It’s a kind of apron.
I loved the cooking it was great team work.we cooked so well and the food was delicious .cnt wait to learn how to cook American food too.
Yes. It was a great learning experience. The food was delicious 😋. We appreciate your hospitality. When we find everything we need, we will invite you and Karen over to cook some American Soul Food. 😁😋
Bondwe is (Amaranth leaves )
She didn’t really get de chance tah exhibit how it’s really done in Zambia , idk it was giving more of America tryna culture shame sum, I look forward to the unapologetics so this was a clip i had to catch. Becos I mean it was a pleasure to experience s/o to Florence beautiful ppl but uncomfortable to watch,, I didn’t get to pronounce or catch now seasoning to cop 😮💨
@Florence Jonathans, gurl!!! You out did yourself. The food looked delicious 😋
I know y'all enjoyed yourselves.
I enjoyed watching this vlog.
Unapologetic Nomads, congratulations! Guess you did justice to the nshima 👏👏👏
Btw, you rocked those chitenge wrappers 😍
This is my tribe's food and soup. We the Ewes of Ghana, Togo, Benin, and Parts of Nigeria prepare our banku and spinach soup the same way. Only that her approach is a bit different but all the ingredients are the same. We are just one people in Africa. Thanks, family.
Yes, I know that Ewe akple/akplo is similar to what we call pap here.
@@miss_pearl , I will be coming to Zambia for 12 months. Let me know if we can link up.
@@mypeople6590 unfortunately I am not from Zambia. I am from Swaziland.
@@miss_pearl , Wow ! Nice to hear that.
@MY PEOPLE
I prefer the phrase "ethnic group" to "tribe", as it sounds classier! 😁
In the West, the word "tribe" conjures up images of savages running around in the bush.
And oh, I am an Ewe too . . . . from Keta and Anyako 👍🤗
One thing I like about you guys is; you're humble and down to earth and these will help you adopt to the African way of living, unlike some African Americans who came here with an attitude, judgmental and thinking they are up there. I adore the unapologetic normards. ONE LOVE.
That was awesome! Oh my gosh, African Americans BACK HOME cooking with our people! I am so happy I could cry. I can't wait to take a trip. I feel like going by myself because I could leave tomorrow but I'm waiting for family to be ready. Grrrr
Waiting for your family could end up derailing your dream. If they’re not sure when they will be ready the best you can do is go it solo since you’re saying you got the means to. When you get to Africa and show them how it like this side I can assure you that they will easily follow you. Unless they have something they’re doing that they can’t leave hanging but you know that they’ll be done within a specified period of time then you can wait for them.
@@manyande8682 You're not wrong.
@@itscyberqueen13 my contribution was simply a suggestion which you can take or disregard since you know what’s going on in your family. Hope you’ll have a great time whenever it will be that you’ll visit Africa.
@@manyande8682 Thanks so much.
please come over we shall receive you with open hands
When you hear that Africans live in the bush,in trees and etc this is how it looks like..welcome to Zambia. I enjoy your vlogs
We are so closed to Zambia but to get there either we need to drive many kilometers or to fly to South Africa! I would love to visit one day. They were so kind to receive us as refugees when we had our civil war even when most of us did not speak English...
Her name is ( Florence Jonathans ) subscribe to her channel. I’ve never met her but I feel she deserves the love . But I’ve seen her great videos. SHE DESERVES SOME LOVE ❤️ 👍🏽👍🏽✅✅✅
Thanks for the genuine support
@@Florence66694 You are welcome. Do not want to be seen to you as a liar 👍🏽😉😉😉
@@Florence66694 How far down are your watch hours now ?
Remaining with few hours to Go
@@Florence66694 Sounds good. Im going to stick around until you get monetized Be faithful 👍🏽😉😉
I miss home Zambia. Mostly I am appreciating my black Americans family who risked it all to know who we are as African and Zambian🇿🇲👍🏾♥️💕😥
Love Zambia..veteran friendly and hospitable people....culture..food...tourism.
Great to see this.
Great Zambia TH-camr🔥🔥❤
One love ❤ 🇿🇲
One love family
From South Africa ❤🇿🇦
For those who lie about no food in Africa...Thank you Ms Moyo.
Everyday Save the Children are asking money here in The Netherlands for starving children in some countries in Africa but also for India and South America.
We Africans, Indians and South Americans should not just care about what other races say about our food. Our food is organic and the most delicious in the world. Of course there are some people who cannot afford such nice food, just like the poor in the western world who cannot afford to eat nice food.
I love this family. You make all Africans (African Americans and Africans from Africa) proud. Thank you so much.
yes they do
welcome to the motherland! These meals you will find in every african country
The best part was when the Wife bow in respect to the husband when giving food, real Africanism🍲😍and the washing of hands was the cherry on top🖐️😂
That part ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Couldn't stop smiling at the moment wifey was washing husband's hands 😪😂😂 pure african initiation into our tradition
Unfortunately that has faded drastically... Feminism aggressively corrupting young African women..
@@dalisobanda5575 it's sad . The whole purpose of marriage and family is being destroyed further by feminism movements. That's why I find it hard to believe that this couple and family are actually american . They behave with so much respect for each other , just the chemistry between the wife and husband can tell the respect they have for hierarchy and ultimately symbiotic mutual exclusivity . Trickles down all the way to the daughter. It's almost like they aren't american ...not to say that they aren't americans with such a family but it's extremely rare , we've all seen it .
@@dalisobanda5575 it has nothing to do with feminisim🙄
@@dalisobanda5575 in a lot of africsn countries we still do that
Me too 😆😆💕
When addressing elders/other people in a formal way, put Ba- in front of their name. Example: BaDavid, instead of just David. Ba is pronounced similar to Wa, ask a local Zambian for the exact pronunciation. Happy to see you‘re having a great time, great content!
Yep Ba is important!
The African Hospitality is unmatched❤️💛💙
If your nshima water has boiled, you can first soak the dry mealie meal in cold water before adding it to the boiling. That way, you stop the dry meal from lumping.
I love Zambian food. I do prefer shema over pap, even though I'm South African🤭☺️..mmmm yummy! You must try Kapenta too
What is the difference. Thought nsima and pap are ibe and the same thing.
@@bokani14ify the South africa one is a very soft version. In comparison, it is as soft as mashed potato. In south africa, most people use spoons to eat their pap. In zambia on the other hand, nshima is harder and consumed with hands. You can also use folk and knife.
@@mubs4life really. I used my hands to eat the pap in South Africa. The prepartion when water is boiling differs. Most Zambian add the mealie-meal straight to the water with out making lumps (a skill I never aquired). Some make a paste cold water and mealie meal (That one is easy). Zimbabwe Ndebele use uphehlo (an African whisk) add mealie-meal boiling water and kill the lumps with uphehlo. Method after that is basically the same. Texture changes with people's preferences.
@@bokani14ify It's spelt nshima.
@@bokani14ify It's spelt...nshima.
Zambian are very creative when it comes to foods 🍳😋👌🏾 I must visit this beautiful country 😍😃
This was cool ala watching from Cameroon 🇨🇲
P.s. thank you so much for promoting channels that need love also . We see you 👍🏽. Most channels only look for bigger channels. This channel promotes all from what I see
Welcome to Zambia unapologetic Nomads. You are promoting our country. Thank you.
commenting from Nairobi Kenya,
Pap, nshima, ugali .....they're all the same thing. We just have philosophical differences about what it actually is in consistence, ingredients, preparation, density....etc etc . What is not in dispute is that we obsess about it all day long and the further south you go in Africa, the softer it becomes.
☆☆☆ Burundian from Burundi 🇧🇮 is watching ☆☆☆ thanks for restoring your display treasure.
Wow its wonderful and beautiful moments guys. Africans America and Africans meets together as ONE family as Africans. You are back to your roots. Eating with your hands its culture of every Africans so you are a part of this culture and above from that eating natural and fresh food. We are doing the same in Sudan but little difference, visit us in Sudan we have lots to show you how our culture and tradition as Africans. Just come you will see.
Muli shani uko, from Victoria Australia. All that's left to add is kablangeti beans, sending lots of love to the family, wonderful content 😃
Kablangeti beans na nshima yawama greetings from Brisbane Queensland Australia 🇦🇺
kulishani ku Australia
@@mukukamwenya9800 kulichemushe
muli bwanji? 🤗 greeting from Melbourne Australia 🇦🇺 to all my Zambian brothers and sisters one Zambia one nation 🇿🇲🇿🇲🇿🇲🇿🇲 ❤️ 🙌🏿
😅😅 ka blangeti!!
You're really miss, sorry...
14:05 🤣🤣🤣🤣 Papa Nomad is really digging that aspect of Zambian culture.
That stirring of the pot was so funny!! 😆 This vid is a vibe! It’s so beautiful there wow!
🙏🏾
i know 😂it was everything for me made me respect our zambian women and ,mothers and cooks both male and female for there hard work in the kitchen
That is how Haytians do it when cooking cornmeal.
Interesting! That is our Africa.
Greetings UAN. the traditional dishes in Kemet AKA Africa are similar across the continent with various names per dish. UAN, it must be grand to be a male in the Zambian culture and the hospitality is out of this world, I am on the next plane .. Thanks for sharing.
Hello Unapologetic Nomads, the Zambian Food looks sooo healthy and delicious!!! I think African Food is underated, especially here in the Us!!! TFS!!!
Hi, where are you? I’m in Chicago. I can make all these for you.
@@namwinga.6839 I live in Los Angeles!!!
@@tinadiggs7456 oh okay.
Papa Nomad remembers kalembula(sweet potato leaves) from the previous meal he had😂....it's actually my favorite type of greens too, can have it all day everyday 😋
I enjoyed this live. Ala said that stirring the pot should be a Sport! Hilarious! 😂 😃 😄
I love how you served him and he treats you like a Queen. Your daughter has a great personality. Y’all are blessed. Such a sweet family. 🙏🏽
Stay a little longer in Zambia, you won't be disappointed
Micki you're natural look how you cooking nshima Ala too proud of you Family.
She did great for a first time cooking nshima. The stove is still clean, she did not pour half on the stove. Welldone
Absolutely loved this ! always happy watching you guys we gotta get you that Zambian citizenship you know 😄
yes the should, the whole nine yards including names of the from main local languages
Nice video,it's good to see black people from different parts of the world having a good time as a family. I give this one 2 thumbs 👍 up.
Nice..nice..nice. kudos to the host for inviting you guys over. Best way to learn cultures.
I love the use of vegetables!!
the weather man is enjoying our culture heheheh. great to see you people
Its really good to teach our children about our roots. Your girl is getting the learns from the natives. Try visiting Uganda as well. Its a beautiful country with good people and delicious dishes as well.
We Are One🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Welcome to the Zambian Family! Its Official
This is so beautiful, am sure you can now prepare a delicious Zambian meal 🙌🏿🙌🏿🙌🏿
Bondwe is callaloo in USA. You should have shown them how we cook pa mbabula pamalasha the Zambian way. Loving this trip ❤️❤️❤️
Never disappointed each time I watch your videos. .greetings and respect from Uganda
22:51 Imagine there are HUGE pots that women have learned how to cook Nahima in. Hopefully you can witness that... it's an arm workout for sure and a lot of hard work.
Someone needs to invite them to a relatives matebeto.
It's spelt as: nshima.
@@nannanyambe599 stop it already! I’m Zambian!
Love how you are so grounded. I am Zambian with American born children. It's nice to see how your daughter is so grounded and ready to learn the culture.
Life is too short; let's have fun. You guys are doing it, fam! I envy you guys. No matter where you come from, as far as you are a Black man/Black woman, you are an African. Africa, my home sweet home.
The next time you come to Zambia you should attend a chilanga mulilo and Kitchen party, traditional celebrations before a couple gets married
Waauuhh!!!
Finally you've arrived in Africa.
That's wonderful!
Ala is getting the best practical education ever. Keep up the wonderful work guys.
Such a humble family! I love the way you try to learn the culture. Wishing you all the best in your journey through Africa!
Being from that part of Africa, this is the best way to learn how to cook Fufu, because this will work with any type of flour, in Zambia they use white corn flour that's very tricky and it takes more than 35 min to cook perfectly, less time than that it will come too soft and not cooked well and will give you stomac problems, but here in the US we mostly use semoulina floor that is very easy and using this process you only need 20 min to get a very good fufu ready to go, sorry I enjoy cooking this video was really fun to watch.
Love it when i see my kind of people eating or sampling African food. I have two friends planning to travel with me and eat our Zambian food instead of always asking for Chinese, or Mexican foods...lol
Some people coock nshima (phaleche) slightly differently , that's how we cook it too in Botswana especially northern parts of Botswana
Wow.. my mom had 'stenge' at home, One of my aunt's used to wear just like that for years 🤣🤣.. before South Africa changed her when she went schooling there ..
I like the Zambian and SA vlogs, I might revisit your Rwanda vlogs because I saw something very interesting recently on Facebook, we discovered that Rwanda traditional dance is very very similar to Botswana traditional dance and the rythms and everything, while watching Rwandan stuff I remembered ho you guys said you liked it there ..
THAT WAS AWESOME. THANKS FOR GIVING US A GREAT VARIETY ON YOUR VLOG. LOVE YOU GUYS.
Blessings to you lot embracing our culture and participating. Peace and love pon your family . Keep doing what you doing .
We eat all this vegetables in Kenya. Pumpkin leaves are full of nutrients. I grow all my Kenyan vegetables in Texas. Now I’m growing bitter leaves though I don’t know how to use it.
That was so good,I always remember my British and American friends who still yearn for nshima now that they went back,It really hits the spot,glad you get to make it yourselves,hope you get to try the dried fish aswell
Hi unpologetic nomads, there is also anchovies, that we call kapenta in our Zambian language. It is very very delicious either cooked using cooking oils, tomatoes & onions or it can be cooked with cooking oil, onions & tomatoes, then add homemade peanut butter to it. It's absolutely tasty. Get someone to teach how to prepare the dish whilst you're in Zambia.
Nice to see you cooked and enjoyed zambian food. It is good to try new things
Awww that’s my home country! Enjoy 😊
I'm so impressed with your stirring abilities. For a first timer this is amazing! Takes quite a bit of strength to stir inshima but you get used to it with time. The larger the nshima the more difficult the stirring. Well done you! 💪💪🙌🙌
I love nature but where I'm from in North west of Senegal we have only 3months to enjoy the beauty of green weeds in the whole year
Nice episode ❤❤❤! Appreciating from South Africa!
Well done for learning to cook. I learned how to cook in a college. For nshima, I mix the meal meal with cold water & then pour it in cooling boiled water in the pot. Then I add little meal meal as I cook until it gets ready. For veggies, I fry the onions & tomatoes separately in a frying pan & then the veggies onto the frying pan to finish off the cooking. Different ways to skin the sheep for the same results. Those veggies are healthy & they protected the people from cancers & other diseases.
yes i do it differently on some dishes but same results ❤
Learning and laughing at the same time! Y'all are hilarious! Papa and Mama Nomad were having a moment in the kitchen and I wasn't sure Papa was gonna be available for any new videos! Bahahahaha!
I'm enjoying the video. I'm taking notes too how to cook their food and learn the culture.
Please, please 🙏🙏🙏 try fimbombo....with this meal, you will feal like you are in heaven😋😋😋
😃😃😃
Kkkk
yes when you eat nshima vimbombo , beans and vegies its fire 🔥 😋
@@pariliuwa2147 for real 😋
Nshima is pap here in South Africa, it's our staple food but I think there is a lot of ways to cook that, so it depends on which way would you prefer to do it and the results will be just the same
Actually in Southern Africa our staple food is maize
you guys make me smile watching and am proud to be Zambian 🇿🇲 . please you should also try , Zambian Street food. like, michopo,cassava and groundnuts combo , chikanda , fritas, dondos, street samusas , sweet balala, chili bites, chips mayau etc and zambian wild fruits like, masuku, gayi, pundu, mabuyu baobao fruits etc. n some traditional drinks like chibwantu , munkoyo, and tobwa ❤❤❤ love you gys , keep making exciting videos
Hello Beautiful Unapologetic Nomads Family and how are everyone doing on that beautiful day and all of this food looks so delicious 😋
Florence should have told them that the way she held the cooking stick is the correct way of preparing Nshima. Ela spilt the water when mixing the mealie mill with water because she wasn’t shown how to hold the cooking stick correctly. Otherwise everything else was perfectly done.
You guys are amazing at what you do, this is entertaining and educative at the same time. Peace!!
I'm so excited to see you again lovely family.
ONE LOVE 🤞🏾
Wow! I would love to learn how to cook African food! You guy’s are so blessed!
That's interesting, I always make a paste with the mealie meal when making shima, but maybe that's just how I was taught
You guys are amazing.
Mmmm I just learnt something. I never knew you could fry impwa like that I normally boil them and fry tomatoes and onions separate, drain the water from the impwa and mix them.
My mama boils them whole without chopping them until they're soft enough to peel the skin off and drain the water, then back in the pan with chopped onion and tomato to briefly fry.
I orefer them like that. In congo we xut them in half and put them a lot in our vegetables
Loving your videos, and great to see that you are doing this as a family. Y'all just made a brotha hungry....LOL
This was a fun video to watch. Really enjoyed every bit of it👌🏽.
I cooked fufu when I was young in Liberia. (Smiling)
This was a lot of fun to watch, unapologetic nomads.🤗🤗🤗. I really enjoyed the cultural dive. Perhaps you should make this ( learning toprepare a local dish ) part of your travel vlogs's constant episodes. Just thinking out loud.
You have a "COMEDIAN" with you there. The young girl
13:43 my boy is very concerned about that kneeling while serving part. 🤣🤣🤣
Bondwe is Amaranth as scientific name. Some call it, pig weed.
Well done with the cooking of Zambian local foods. 🔥👏👏
U guys i enjoy your African trips
For the first time this shima cooking is really good. Well done.
I love you guys... You need a tour of matero and its ghettos... Great people out here
This the dopest family I have seen this year. Got out on to this channel and I’m subscribed and watch everything they upload. Thank you for coming to Zambia!
BIG-UP 2D NOMADS !!! LUUUUVD IT !!!🖤🖤🖤🖤🖤🖤🖤
Best video, I love it.
Ala i see you looking real africana woman i love it🤣😂😂🤣
I like the layout of your house. I will start building my house soon. Can you invite me to your house when I come to Zambia? Where is that Kingston in Zambia?
@Mary Kingston is residential area in the outskirts of Lusaka when you’re heading to the North. You branch off to your left when you reach the road leading to Precem motel.
Buy a farm and start growing tomatoes and watermelons - you would recover your investment within a short period of time.
Zambian culture is similar as baganda culture in uganda.men are most respected because is the head of the family
Bantu ppl
@@chips01fulify yep. All bantus are like that. But its not bantus. Even in west africa its thr same. Notth africa too
I think its an african thg
Hey guys!! Very nice. That looked really tasty wow. And that one dish reminded me of the stuff pourage back in Tanzania. It looks the same just given a different name depending where you are. How about that very very nice guys🤗🤗😃❤. Please keep coming out with more vlogs!!
It is porridge before you make it a bit hard.
Yeah in Tanzania we call it Ugali
@@Sangaadam Nice🙂.
Just came across your videos today and straight away subscribed😀
I just stomped on your vids and immediately subscribed😍😍😍 seeing you enjoy the Zambian vibe makes me feel good... Zambian people cook delicious local meals
Very good video. Life in Zambia looks like in Burundi. The food in Zambia and in Burundi is almost the same. The chima is tsima (ubutsima) in kirundi (which is the language of Burundians). It may be the same name originally. The pumpkin leaves are called soma (umusoma) in kirundi.
The dress with the long loincloth is also the same. Girls and women put it on when they go to do homework. It’s a kind of apron.