Travel News Namibia Special Edition 2020

Page 37

EAT LIKE A

uring your time in Namibia make sure you try some of the local foodstuffs before you leave. The combination of German colonial history, arid and dry weather conditions and a long coastline has for the most part determined the culinary culture for the majority of the country’s population. Here are our recommendations for what you need to try (and why!) to get a taste of Namibia:

VENISON

Gemsbok, springbok, kudu, zebra. Even ostrich. Consider game meat the healthiest option on any Namibian menu. Free-range, organic, low fat and good for the environment. Plus super tasty. Lodges throughout the country frequently feature venison on their menus, the novel item cooked to perfection - a tasty dish to enjoy.

Nina van Zyl

D

LOCAL Dried fish on offer at the massive Frans Indongo Open Air Market in Oshakati.

KAPANA

MOPANE WORMS

France has frogs and Asia has grasshoppers. In Namibia there are mopane worms. These little critters get their name from the mopane trees the leaves of which they peacefully munch, whiling away the days before metamorphosing into moths. That’s if they don’t get picked. The crunchy texture and high protein content of the worms made them a staple in the Owambo culture, and they are sold at open-air markets in northern Namibia’s major towns, but more recently you are even able to order them off the menu at traditional restaurants in Windhoek.

Matthew Walters

Meat is the national cuisine and you will easily see why when you visit Namibia’s capital city and towns. Informal vendors along Windhoek’s streets sell strips of spiced meat barbequed on open fires and known as kapana. Make your way to the Katutura Market where you can pick out pieces of meat to be cooked for you right there and then.

Try kapana at Single Quarters on a tour of Katutura.

VETKOEK

Perhaps not entirely Namibian, vetkoek is nonetheless an iconic street food that you will be sure to find throughout Windhoek, if not the country. Balls of dough are deep fried in hot oil, hence the name, which is Afrikaans for “fat cake”. The “cake” is eaten with butter, jam, cheese or even plain. Women carry large transparent containers with Vetkoek on their heads to sell the baked goods to workers on their tea breaks in Windhoek’s industrial areas.

LOCAL BEER

Namibians have been brewing beer commercially since the first German settlers arrived, and the local tribes can tell you how before that the fruit of indigenous trees was fermented to produce traditional beer. The largest brewery in the country, Namibia Breweries Limited, produces its beers according to a strict purity code that means no preservatives, additives, artificial flavours or in fact anything other than hops, barley and water are used in the brewing process. Translation: no hangovers or at least, that’s what the locals say.

Windhoek's Octoberfest is a fun annual event. Try the Festbier, which is specially brewed by Namibia Breweries Limited for the festival each year.

TRAVEL NEWS NAMIBIA SPECIAL EDITION 2020

35


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Articles inside

To the Desert

2min
page 53

SOSSUSVLEI AND THE NAMIB-NAUKLUFT

1min
pages 78-79, 81

CENTRAL AND THE CAPITAL CITY

2min
pages 72-73, 75

NORTHEAST THE KAVANGO AND ZAMBEZI

1min
pages 68-69, 71

DEEP SOUTH

2min
pages 60-61, 63

DAMARALAND AND THE RUGGED SURROUNDS

1min
pages 46-47, 49

THE COAST

2min
pages 38-39, 41

KAOKOLAND AND THE WILD NORTHWEST

1min
pages 28-29, 31

7 Must-try restaurants to try in Namibia

4min
pages 42-43

TAKE A TOUR

2min
page 77

Wild things to see in Namibia

5min
pages 22-25

The 9 most Instagrammable places in Namibia

1min
page 82

SPECIAL SPOTS : SKIP THE CROWDS & VISIT NAMIBIA'S LESSER-KNOWN PLACES

7min
pages 50-51, 53-55, 57

10 EXPERIENCES YOU'LL ONLY FIND IN NAMIBIA

5min
pages 32-35

Coffee lovers have it good

3min
pages 44-45

EAT LIKE A LOCAL IN NAMIBIA

2min
page 37

Local Namibian brews and distilleries

2min
pages 58-59

10 Ways to be a green traveller

3min
pages 64-67

ETOSHA AND THE CENTRAL NORTH

2min
pages 18-19, 21

Editor's Letter

2min
page 5

Message from the Namibia Tourism Board

2min
pages 12-13
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