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Reclaiming Food Sovereignty: Chef Ska Moteane Revives Basotho Cuisine

1 March 2024 by Pascalinah Kabi and Naira Davlashyan

Lesotho’s most decorated chef, Ska Moteane, shares a laugh with a Phamong villager during a cooking session two years ago. Credit: ‘Mamokete Makoko for Euronews.


Seen as food for the poor, traditional Basotho dishes aren’t as popular in Lesotho as their Italian or American counterparts. As a result, the country’s food culture is rapidly disappearing. How does this affect this African country?

A number of years ago, Lesotho star chef, Ska Moteane, received a rather unusual request from a client. They wanted her to incorporate some Sesotho dishes into a menu she was preparing for them, “and I just realised then I didn’t even know how they are cooked!”

Chef Ska laughs remembering this conversation from 2009 when she had returned to her home country after walking away from a hugely successful career in South Africa.

“I looked everywhere, I went on Google, I looked in bookshops… I could not find any Sesotho recipes.”

Chef Ska realised that if she didn’t document Sesotho cuisine, it might disappear, so this became her labour of love.


Listen to the episode:

If you want to know more about Lesotho’s food culture and hear the full story of Chef Ska Moteane, listen to this episode of the Star Ingredient. Ska will also share her recipe for a traditional Basotho dish, Nyokoe.


Saving Basotho food culture

“Everywhere I went, I was just looking for the senior people there to sit down with, so they can tell me the stories behind the food and the stories behind the dishes”, she recalls.

The food Chef Ska discovered was “simple” and full of “clean flavours”.

“We don’t use a lot of spices. You’d find that our dishes have two, three ingredients”, she says.

Sorghum and beans, amaranth, wild greens and African spinach… Chef Ska was rediscovering the food of her ancestors and taking notes.

The thing that surprised her the most was discovering how “nutritious” Basotho food was.

“Actually, we don’t need more than what we have because we’ve always been eating complete meals”.

In the beginning, the villagers received Chef Ska with a mixture of intrigue and bemusement. After all, traditional Basotho dishes are more often seen as food for the poor and aren’t very popular in the cities.

“Everyone was like, Why? We want the Western stuff and you come to us with this boring stuff”, chuckles Ska, remembering her trip.

“I’m like, Look, I just want to do it. I just want it to be documented. I want it there for my children, for my great, great, great, great, great-grandchildren. For future generations”.

Upon her return Chef Ska standardised the recipes and compiled them into a cookbook, “Cuisine of the Mountain Kingdom: Cooking in Lesotho”, which she then self-published.

Written in English, the book has piqued the curiosity of readers beyond Lesotho’s borders. Chef Ska’s interviews have appeared in publications across Africa, Asia and Europe.

“When I self-published, it was just to keep the information”, she remembers.

“I didn’t know that the book would do so well because I think I didn’t understand why nobody had ever thought of doing it before”.

In 2012, Ska won the prestigious Gourmand Cookbook award for best African cookbook. But the most remarkable feedback came from the Basotho people themselves.

“Basotho people were like, I never knew how to prepare this dish. My grandmother used to make it, she passed on and I never got a chance for her to teach me how it’s done”.

Helping rural famers

Phamong female farmers clean spinach during a cooking session with Chef Ska two years ago. Credit: ‘Mamokete Makoko for Euronews

Completely surrounded by South Africa, Lesotho is heavily dependent on its richer neighbour for resources, including remittances.

While trying to cook traditional recipes, Ska realised the scale of the challenge in securing locally grown ingredients.

Small-scale farmers struggle to bring their produce to the cities, and the cities rely instead on imported foods.

“If COVID taught us anything with the problems that we experienced during the lockdown when the borders were closed”, she points out.

“We are now working very, very hard to reclaim food sovereignty, to make sure that we actually feed ourselves”.

Once Ska finished writing her book, she turned her attention to educating farmers on the importance of producing and distributing local ingredients. But thankfully, she didn’t have to embark on this journey alone.

This story was produced by Euronews, funded by European Journalism Centre, through the Solutions Journalism Accelerator. This fund is supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

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