Taste for money - an innovation by Nigerian women

Thousands of West African women earn a cash income by making daddawa (a protein-rich seasoning made from locust beans and used for soups and stews) in low-capital input, small scale enterprises at home, and selling it in local markets. Now Nigerian farm women in the Kafanchan area have developed a soybean-processing technique which is much more efficient in terms of time and input than locust-bean processing. The women fry the soybeans, grind them to remove the skins, and boil them only once for about six hours (less than a quarter of the time used for locust beans). The fermentation takes the same time as for the locust bean, so the great saving is that of water and fuel in the cooking time. Another advantage of using soybeans is that the women can now grow their own beans in the fields traditionally allocated to them by their husbands or fathers instead of having to buy locust beans or tree-harvesting rights. For more information, contact; Anne Waters-Bayer, Rohnsew eg 56, D-3400 Gotingen, GERMANY

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Main Author: Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
Format: News Item biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation 1989
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/45068
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-450682021-06-17T11:53:53Z Taste for money - an innovation by Nigerian women Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation Thousands of West African women earn a cash income by making daddawa (a protein-rich seasoning made from locust beans and used for soups and stews) in low-capital input, small scale enterprises at home, and selling it in local markets. Now Nigerian farm women in the Kafanchan area have developed a soybean-processing technique which is much more efficient in terms of time and input than locust-bean processing. The women fry the soybeans, grind them to remove the skins, and boil them only once for about six hours (less than a quarter of the time used for locust beans). The fermentation takes the same time as for the locust bean, so the great saving is that of water and fuel in the cooking time. Another advantage of using soybeans is that the women can now grow their own beans in the fields traditionally allocated to them by their husbands or fathers instead of having to buy locust beans or tree-harvesting rights. For more information, contact; Anne Waters-Bayer, Rohnsew eg 56, D-3400 Gotingen, GERMANY Thousands of West African women earn a cash income by making daddawa (a protein-rich seasoning made from locust beans and used for soups and stews) in low-capital input, small scale enterprises at home, and selling it in local markets. Now Nigerian... 1989 2014-10-08T13:15:55Z 2014-10-08T13:15:55Z News Item CTA. 1989. Taste for money - an innovation by Nigerian women. Spore 21. CTA, Wageningen, The Netherlands. 1011-0054 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/45068 en Spore Open Access Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation Spore
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description Thousands of West African women earn a cash income by making daddawa (a protein-rich seasoning made from locust beans and used for soups and stews) in low-capital input, small scale enterprises at home, and selling it in local markets. Now Nigerian farm women in the Kafanchan area have developed a soybean-processing technique which is much more efficient in terms of time and input than locust-bean processing. The women fry the soybeans, grind them to remove the skins, and boil them only once for about six hours (less than a quarter of the time used for locust beans). The fermentation takes the same time as for the locust bean, so the great saving is that of water and fuel in the cooking time. Another advantage of using soybeans is that the women can now grow their own beans in the fields traditionally allocated to them by their husbands or fathers instead of having to buy locust beans or tree-harvesting rights. For more information, contact; Anne Waters-Bayer, Rohnsew eg 56, D-3400 Gotingen, GERMANY
format News Item
author Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
spellingShingle Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
Taste for money - an innovation by Nigerian women
author_facet Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
author_sort Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
title Taste for money - an innovation by Nigerian women
title_short Taste for money - an innovation by Nigerian women
title_full Taste for money - an innovation by Nigerian women
title_fullStr Taste for money - an innovation by Nigerian women
title_full_unstemmed Taste for money - an innovation by Nigerian women
title_sort taste for money - an innovation by nigerian women
publisher Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
publishDate 1989
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/45068
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