Classroom lesson · Food · 🇪🇹 Ethiopia

Doro wat - Ethiopia's national dish

A rich red chicken stew served on injera at every special occasion

A bowl of doro wat - rich red chicken stew with a boiled egg

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Doro wat is Ethiopia's most famous dish - a deep red, slow-cooked chicken stew that is brought out at every birthday, holiday and family gathering. It is rich, warm and a little bit spicy, and it is always served on top of injera bread.

Tell me more

The colour comes from a spice mix called berbere. It is made from chillies, garlic, ginger, basil, cinnamon and many other spices, all ground together to a deep red-orange powder. Almost every Ethiopian family has their own berbere recipe, often passed down from grandma.

To make doro wat, the cook starts by slowly browning a huge pile of finely chopped onions in butter for an hour or more, until they are sweet and soft. Then they add the berbere, the chicken, and water, and let it bubble gently for hours until the stew is thick and rich.

A boiled egg goes into the pot near the end. By the time the stew is ready, the egg has soaked up the warm red sauce and turned a deep colour itself. There is usually one egg per person at the table, and being given the egg is considered a small honour.

Doro wat is the meal for special occasions. Christmas, Easter, weddings, Eid, the Ethiopian new year - whenever a family gathers, there is doro wat. It takes hours to make. That is part of the point: the long slow cooking is how you say 'we are happy you are here'.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why do you think slow-cooked food often tastes especially good?
  2. 02Most families and cultures have a 'special-occasion' meal. What is yours? Who cooks it?
  3. 03If you spent five hours cooking something for your family, how would that feel different from heating something up in five minutes?
Try this

Classroom activity

Each pupil writes down one 'special-occasion food' from their family - something only made for birthdays, holidays or visitors. Share them as a class. How many different traditions are in your room? Pin them onto a world map.