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British Nigerian Adejoké Bakare is the first black female chef in the UK to be awarded a Michelin star.

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00:00Nigerian-born British chef Adechoke Bakare was awarded the Michelin star for her modern
00:07West African cuisine.
00:09How did she do it?
00:15Her London restaurant, Chichuru, serves culinary masterpieces like guinea fowl with caramelized
00:20onions and lemon sauce.
00:22But how is it different?
00:24The spices are different, the ingredients are different, and the styles and techniques
00:29are different.
00:31As a black woman, Bakare is still an exception in the white, male-dominated world of Michelin.
00:36How does she feel about the award?
00:38We're not cooking to attract Michelin, but I think it puts West African food on the map.
00:46Adechoke Bakare opened Chichuru in 2020, originally as a pop-up restaurant.
00:52Four years later, the untrained chef has reached star status.
00:57It's like a Cinderella story.
01:01Gourmet African cuisine, Chichuru's fine dining is making waves.
01:06You hardly see people like me in high-end kitchens, especially in this country, if nowhere
01:12else.
01:13I think with what is happening now, more people that look like me will want to say, OK, maybe
01:20there's a space for me.
01:23Born in Nigeria, Adechoke Bakare has had very different jobs in London over the years.
01:28For a long time, she only cooked for friends.
01:31Her biggest role model?
01:32Her grandmother.
01:33She used to sell street food.
01:35Whenever I'd go to my grandma's place, I'd sit with her, just watching her make the street
01:40food.
01:41So maybe that's part of it, maybe something else.
01:44I've always been interested in cooking, right from when I was little.
01:50Smoked eel with sweet potato cream, or crispy bean fritters with okra and candied chilies.
01:55For Bakare, there is no typical Nigerian cuisine.
01:59Culinary traditions in West Africa transcend the borders of today.
02:03Before we became nation-states, we were mainly empires, which cut across the present nation-states.
02:15And because of that, loads of us have cultures that are similar, that have been influenced
02:20by religion, influenced by trade, and all of that.
02:23And you see that similarity in our food.
02:26Bakare's menus are bringing a new audience to West African cuisine.
02:31She's a role model for others, too.
02:33There have been people trying to do it, but doing it with leaning on the established cuisines,
02:43I think now more and more people are being more unapologetic and putting West Africa
02:50on a plate and presenting it.
02:53The word Chichuru stems from the Hausa language, and refers to that silence that spreads around
02:58the table when a meal is simply delicious.
03:01Bon appétit!

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