Classroom lesson · Food · 🇨🇮 Ivory Coast

Kedjenou de Poulet

Slow-cooked chicken in a sealed clay pot

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Kedjenou is one of the most beloved dishes in Côte d'Ivoire. It is made by placing chicken, tomatoes, onions, ginger, and peppers inside a traditional clay pot called a canari, sealing the lid tightly, and placing it over a gentle fire. No water is added – the chicken cooks slowly in its own steam and juices, making the meat incredibly tender.

Tell me more

The name 'kedjenou' comes from the Baoulé language and means something close to 'shake gently'. That is a key part of the recipe: instead of stirring the pot with a spoon, the cook shakes the sealed canari gently every few minutes to mix the ingredients without letting the steam escape. The sealed pot creates its own little cooking atmosphere inside.

The dish is associated with celebrations and family gatherings. Cooking it takes patience – a proper kedjenou might take two or three hours over a slow fire. The reward is chicken so tender it falls off the bone, bathed in a rich, fragrant sauce of tomatoes, peppers, and spices.

Kedjenou is most often served with attiéké, a couscous-like side dish made from fermented cassava. The fluffy attiéké soaks up the sauce perfectly. Some families serve it with rice or foutou banane (pounded plantain) instead, depending on the region and tradition.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Kedjenou is cooked without adding any liquid. What do you think happens inside a sealed pot that allows the food to cook properly?
  2. 02Many cultures have a special dish that takes a long time to prepare. Why might slow cooking be connected to celebrations?
  3. 03The technique of shaking the pot instead of stirring is unusual. Why might keeping the steam inside be important?
Try this

Classroom activity

Write a recipe card for kedjenou de poulet – you can use the information from this lesson. Include a list of ingredients, numbered steps, cooking time, and a drawing of the canari pot. Imagine you are writing the recipe card for a friend who has never cooked it before.