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Pacilisa Wanyonyi masters millet flour baking

Though her real name is Pacilisa Wanyonyi, she’s popularly known as Mama Wimbi in Osia village in Teso South, Busia County, where she lives.

Pacilisa Wanyonyi bakes cakes, chapattis and mandazis in her bakery that’s within her compound. She uses an oven, a charcoal stove and a traditional firewood stove. Photo by William Inganga

Her nickname is a pointer to her passion. She’s been pursuing her career with zeal, knowing that it helps her eke out an honest living through the modest financial returns that she gains.

Every morning, from Monday to Saturday, draped in her overalls, she ferries specific utensils from her permanent house to a tin-walled bakery that’s partially covered and therefore well ventilated. The bakery is within the same compound as her house.

A stainless steel oven stands in the bakery and seems to be silently waiting for the time that it will be put to use. Besides, a traditional firewood stove appears dormant, but not for long. It will come alive after hot charcoal embers have heated the oven. These precede the mixing of Mama Wimbi’s ingredients.

Mrs. Wanyonyi adds value to millet flour. Her ingredients are wheat flour, baking powder, sugar, vanilla, grated lemon, eggs, and salt. She’s mastered the correct proportions for mixing. “The ratio of wheat to millet flour is 2:1,” she says. Depending on the desired outcome, a 1:1 ratio is also an option,” she adds.

Wheat flour appears smooth to the eye and between the fingers. However, Mama Wimbi doesn’t assume. She measures one moderate cup of wheat flour. She thoroughly sieves it. “Wheat flour usually has some coarse substances,” she says.

“When baking cakes, those particles could be a nuisance in the mouth. Here are the particles,” she says after completing the sieving. Next to be filtered is the millet flour, which settles in the same container with the wheat flour. “It’s ground at a local miller, and so it has to be sieved for better quality,” Mama Wimbi adds.

The final products that Mama Wimbi makes: Chapattis, cakes, mandazis and porridge, using a mix of wheat and millet flour. Photo by William Inganga

The particles from the millet are coarser than those from the wheat flour. Two spoonfuls of the whole grated lemon are sprinkled onto the flour compound, followed by three spoonfuls of baking powder and a pinch of salt.

The most obvious sweetener is sugar. The quantity varies depending on the preferred outcome. Using a tablespoon, Mama Wimbi stirs four whole eggs mixed with some sugar in a plastic container. The beating continues until the abrasive, crystalline feel of the container is considerably diminished.

She takes a break from the egg beating to mix the two flours and the grated lemon, using a wooden cooking stick. She returns to beating the eggs. She measures six caps of vanilla into the egg and sugar solution. She resumes the beating. She realises that she hadn’t mentioned one liquid that’s in a cup.

“This is lemon juice,” she says. She sieves it to restrain the seeds. She measures four tablespoons of the lemon juice into the egg solution. The stirring continues.

One of her employees joins her. Mama Wimbi says, “She’ll make chapatti from wimbi flour.” She assures this writer and those accompanying him, “You’ll leave this place satisfied. There are cakes, chapattis, and porridge, which you should begin taking,” she says, justifying the reason for her statement: “You’ve visited a bakery, so you shouldn’t stay hungry.”

Had we known that this kind of hospitality was awaiting us, we wouldn’t have taken breakfast at our hotel.

These are some of Mama Wimbi’s products—mandazis and porridge. Photo by William Inganga

Mama Wimbi’s 19-year-old daughter, Pauline Ndeda, joins her. While Mom gently pours the egg solution into the mixed flours, Ndeda does the kneading. The dough stiffens. A little water is intermittently added between kneadings.

“When I was in school, I loved home science because of my mother,” Ndeda says, adding, “I was interested in things like cooking.” However, she was not taught how to prepare millet-based dishes, and her mother has filled that gap.

Ndeda discloses that home science is the subject in which she performed best. “I had a plain A,” she says, revealing she desires to pursue a hospitality course in college as she loves cooking.

Mama Wimbi lifts some of the dough with the wooden stick. The dough gently streaks into the trough. “If the dough is thick, the results won’t be good,” she says.

The last ingredient is a generous scoop of margarine. The final stirring gels the dominantly brownish compound with the yellow margarine. A fine paste is produced. But wait a minute!

Mama Wimbi tells her daughter to continue with further smoothing. Meanwhile, Mama Wimbi cleans the aluminium baking trays to be used. She coats the inside of the trays, the bottom, and the sides with a film of liquid cooking oil. “If you don’t do this, the cake will stick onto the tray.”

The process here sounds like a relay, albeit a confectionary one. The mother takes over. She smoothly releases the paste onto the two trays. One is round, and the other is square-shaped. A metallic spoon is used to plaster the top of the dough in each tray. The oil forms the boundary between the dough and the inner walls of the trays.

By this time, the charcoal embers in the oven are partially teetering between black and orange as they glow. They have reached a state where they can heat the oven to the right temperature for baking.

Mama Wimbi’s oven has four layers of racks. The two trays are slipped into the oven. Square one goes into the third level, while round one goes into the second. “You put them where you want,” she says.

She shuts the doors of the oven. “I’ll check after 40 minutes,” she says. Following a similar process as earlier described, another mound of dough is made. This is for Mandazis. To bridge the time before the cake is ready, Mama Wimbi seizes this opportunity to narrate her story.

John Were enjoys a glass mug of millet flour porridge prepared by Mama Wimbi.

After forty minutes, she opens the oven’s doors. She slips a knife into one cake and then the other. “They are not yet quite ready,” she says. “Parts of the cake shouldn’t stick to the knife.”

A charcoal stove is panning chapattis while the traditional firewood concrete stove has been fired up. Oil is being heated in readiness for the preparation of mandazis.

After a few more minutes, the knife for measuring the level at which the cake has baked is slipped into the cakes. This time, they pass the test. The pans are carefully retrieved from the oven, with hands safely padded with a cloth to avoid scolding.

The aromatic smell confirms that this is indeed a bakery. The cakes are let loose on plates. One of them is cut into pieces. Each visitor is handed a hot, steaming piece. Nods affirm how tasty the cake is.

One two-kilogram packet of wheat flour produces 27 chapattis for Mama Wimbi. But blending the two types of flour gives her almost double, depending on the chosen ratios.

Having completed preparing the variety of millet foods, Mama Wimbi sets a table. Included are millet-bottled crackies that had been made earlier. A thermos of wimbi flour porridge is also inviting.  See video: Mama Wimbi

Under normal circumstances, nutritionists will likely frown at someone sinking his teeth into several layers of a folded millet chapatti and washing it down with a gulp of millet porridge. Itchy hands scouring the surface of a millet cake would also be yearning to chip off a piece. Roaming eyes may not have ignored the millet crackies and the palate could go on demanding a share.

But this is a sampling. After all, 2023 is the International Year of Millets. The millets must prove that they are desirous of recapturing the glory they had when our grandfathers thrived on them. Mama Wimbi’s table hasn’t disappointed.

The International Maize and Wheat Improvement Centre (CIMMYT—Spanish acronym) Partnerships and Seed Systems Lead under the dry land crops programme is Dr. Chris Ojiewo.

Kenya Agricultural and Livestock Research Organization’s nutrition specialist, Dr. Francis Wayua, in a millet farm of one of the farmers he’s been working with to monitor the development of millets. Photo by William Inganga

He says, “There is hidden hunger. You don’t see somebody hungry because the person has a full stomach. But the individual is missing on micronutrients that are important for the body’s development.”

A Kenya Agricultural and Livestock Research Organisation (KALRO) food scientist, Dr. Francis Wayua, says, “For a long time, millet has been promoted as food for the sick, the elderly, and the young.” This attitude ‘stigmatises’ the crop considering how underutilised it is.”

The micronutrients Dr. Ojiewo is referring to are Iron, Zinc, and selenium, among others, which are critical in ensuring proper health and curbing mental retardation.

Rather than taking such micronutrients as supplements in the form of tablets or capsules, Dr. Ojiewo recommends getting them via millet foods.

If people were to consume more millet, Dr. Ojiewo believes that multiple solutions about nutrition, health, education, and national development would be more easily tackled.

Dr. Ojiewo recognises that several millers are using millet and sorghum to blend maize. “Even if they blend it with 10, 20 percent, that is huge,” he says, adding: “If 100, 50, or even 80 percent of Kenyans would consume that maize blended with millet, the market base will be so huge that the farmers are likely to make a lot of money from millet production.”

Mama Wimbi is proud to have a ‘presidential snack’ since former President Uhuru Kenyatta tasted her crackies during a food festival at the Kenyatta International Convention Centre a few years ago.

Her earnings have enabled her to assist her husband, a teacher, in educating their children and meeting the cost of other expenses.

By William Inganga

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