NIGERIAN JOLLOF RICE

5 from 3 votes
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The great Nigerian Jollof Rice! Who can resist a bowl of luscious jollof rice with chicken?Ā Filled with big flavors, thisĀ is the ultimate African chicken and rice dinner or party food! Also, check out the video in the post to see how to make it!

Authentic Jollof Rice

Happy World Jollof Rice Day! Last year, I celebrated World Jollof Rice Day with a video for my Cameroonian Jollof Rice recipe. This year, I am celebrating by sharing another jollof rice recipe: Nigerian Jollof Rice! Jollof Rice is such serious business that it is celebrated on August 22nd every year. All hail Jollof!

A while ago, I went to help a Nigerian family friend cook to receive some guests. She was going to make Nigerian Jollof Rice and she asked me to help her cook it.

Our family friend’s mother-in-law makes the best Nigerian Jollof Rice I have ever tasted. But on this particular day, her mother in law was not around.

I put on my big-girl-food-blogger panties and cooked the Jollof Rice for her.

You guys, our family friend said my Jollof tasted just like her mother-in-law’s. I felt so proud!

Nigerian Jollof Rice

So this is it – Nigerian Jollof Rice that tastes so good, so authentic like the one an experienced Nigerian caterer will make (our family friend’s mother-in-law has been a caterer for years!). When you look at it, you just see red/orange-looking rice which resembles Mexican rice. But put a spoonful in your mouth and there is an explosion of FLAVOR. It is spicy, smokey, moist but not mushy, rich and so good!

This is the rice I will eat at Nigerian parties and crave for more. This is the rice that reminds me of the Jollof I ate at a restaurant during my post-graduate days in Nigeria. It is so bomb.com.

Jollof Rice and Chicken

What is Jollof Rice?

Jollof Rice is a kind of West African pilaf or paella. It is perhaps the most known African dish. It is basically rice cooked in some sort of tomato sauce with a variety of spices mostly served with some form of protein: meat, chicken, or fish. Jollof Rice can be served vegan too! It is cooked in many different countries and the recipe varies from country to country and even from home to home. Yet one thing that is constant with Jollof Rice is it always involves rice and tomatoes.

Jollof Rice Origin

The name Jollof Comes from the name Wolof – the name of a West African ethnic group in northwestern Senegal, The Gambia, and southwestern coastal Mauritania. The Wolof people are the largest ethnic group in Senegal so it is safe to say in summary that Jollof Rice originated from Senegal.

Is Jollof Rice Nigerian?

No. Jollof Rice is eaten in a number of African countries including Senegal, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Ghana, Cameroon, Nigeria, and Togo. In French countries, it is called “riz au gras”.Ā Jollof Rice is cooked in many different ways across all these countries but the main ingredients are always rice, tomatoes, and oil.

How Do You Make Great Jollof Rice?

My secret is to make homemade chicken stock then use the chicken stock to cook the rice. Homemade chicken stock is unbelievably easy to make. You just need to cook the chicken in herbs, spices and seasoning et voila, you have chicken stock! My favorite herbs and spices to use include thyme, rosemary, garlic, and ginger.

Nigerian Jollof - Jollof Rice Recipe

Jollof Rice and fried chicken is just a classic. No wonder it’s such a hit at African parties! To make the meal even better, I served it with some coleslaw on the side.

My mama said I should always serve meals with vegetables and I love obeying mama. So Jollof Rice with Fried Chicken and Coleslaw for the win! P.S Click here for my coleslaw recipe.

For more Jollof Rice goodness, check out these 5 jollof rice recipes and this oven-baked jollof rice (so good!)

And once again, happy #WorldJollofRiceDay!

Watch How To Make Nigerian Jollof Rice:

How to make Jollof Rice

Nigerian Jollof Rice

5 from 3 votes
Here is how to make phenomenal Nigerian Jollof Rice complete with tasty fried chicken on the side. It is the African rice and chicken meal you will want to make over and over again. Watch the video to see me walk you through the process.
Prep: 20 minutes
Cook: 50 minutes
Total: 1 hour 10 minutes
Servings: 8 servings

Ingredients  

  • 4 cups rice
  • 4 medium tomatoes
  • 1 red bell pepper
  • 1 onion (medium to large)
  • 1 cup tomato paste
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 1 teaspoon curry powder
  • 1 teaspoon thyme
  • 1/2 teaspoon white pepper
  • 4 seasoning/stock cubes 4g per cube - I used Knorr seasoning cubes
  • 11/2 teaspoons salt
  • 1/2 cup oil
  • 1 teaspoon garlic powder
  • 1 teaspoon ginger powder
  • 4-5 pounds chicken
  • 1/2 teaspoon dried rosemary

Instructions 

African Fried Chicken

  • Wash chicken thoroughly and place in a pot. If using a whole chicken, cut into little pieces before placing in the pot. Add water to just about the level of the chicken (I used 4 cups of water). To the chicken, add half a teaspoon of salt, 2 seasoning cubes half a teaspoon of thyme, half a teaspoon of rosemary and all the garlic and ginger powder.  Mix to ensure seasoning coats all of the chicken. Cover and let it cook on medium high heat for about 20 minutes.
  • Drain chicken from the stock. Keep the stock for later. Place oil in a frying pan up to 2 inches and let it heat up to about 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Place the chicken in the oil and fry until golden brown flipping halfway through. About 2 minutes on each side. (Alternately, place the chicken on a baking pan and broil in the oven for about 20 minutes. Grilling is good too and healthier!)

Nigerian Jollof Rice

  • Roughly chop then blend together the fresh tomatoes, onion and bell pepper (remove seeds from bellĀ pepper before blending). Place in a pot and bring to a boil. Let them cook on high heat until the water in the tomato blend dries out. Add in the tomato paste and stir then add in the oil.
  • Fry the tomatoes in the oil until they visibly shrink. About 10 minutes.
  • To the tomatoes, add the curry, and thyme then stir. Then add in 5 cups of liquid (the chicken stock you reserved plus more water if needed). Add the bay leaves, 1 teaspoon of salt and 2 seasoning cubes (or teaspoons of bouillon powder). Stir well then wash the rice and add to the pot. Stir well then carefully wrap the top of the pot with aluminum foil before covering with the lid of the pot. Let it cook on medium heat for about 30 minutes until the rice absorbs all the liquid and is soft.
  • When the rice is done, you might still see concentrates of tomato sauce over the rice. This is very normal. Spinke the white pepper on top then gently stir rice with a wooden spoon to combine. (See note 3)
  • Serve warm with the fried/grilled chicken on the side.

Notes

1. Chicken cooking times may vary depending on the thickness of your chicken so be sure to adjust as needed. If your chicken slices are too big, cook for a longer time.
2. SubstituteĀ the seasoning cubes with bouillon powder. 1 teaspoon per 1 cube.
3. To make your Jollof Rice tastier, place 3 tablespoons of butter in the on the rice once it is done and mix it in to melt. This takes the taste to a whole new level!
4. You can garnish with your jollofĀ rice with carrots and peas before serving if you wish.
5. Jollof Rice might burn at the bottom when you cook it. That is perfectly okay and it learns the rice a smokey flavor that is to die for.

Nutrition

Calories: 792kcal | Carbohydrates: 80g | Protein: 28g | Fat: 36g | Saturated Fat: 6g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 8g | Monounsaturated Fat: 16g | Trans Fat: 0.2g | Cholesterol: 82mg | Sodium: 2694mg | Potassium: 531mg | Fiber: 3g | Sugar: 3g | Vitamin A: 2075IU | Vitamin C: 31mg | Calcium: 54mg | Iron: 4mg

Additional Info

Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Nigerian
Calories: 792
Tried this recipe?Mention @preciouscore or tag #PreciousCore!

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Cooking for yourself is one of the greatest skills you can ever learn. So learn all you can and cook all you can.


About Precious

Welcome to my core! I am Precious Nkeih, the recipe developer and writer right here on my blog, Precious Core. My goal is to show you insanely delicious recipes you can replicate in your kitchen. And I love to tell stories too. Hope you find recipes here that will make cooking easier for you! Check me out on YouTube at YouTube.com/PreciousKitchen.


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26 Comments

  1. Hi!

    Great recipe. Iā€™m just wondering if thereā€™s a specific type of rice I should be using. Thank you!

    1. Hi Nadia, the rice labeled “parboiled rice” works well. A favorite brand for me is Uncle Ben’s.

  2. Hello Precious I really want to try this recipe but the instructions say to add tomato sauce, the video says to add tomato paste, but the ingredient list doesn’t mention either. Which do I use and how much?

    Thank you!

    1. Hi Tori, thanks for pointing this out. You actually need 1 cup of tomato paste for this recipe. I have updated the ingredient list and instructions to reflect that. Hope this helps and happy cooking!

  3. Great recipe. I plan on trying it out. Just wanted to know if the thyme and the rosemary leaves are to be ground before been put in the jollof rice??. Thanks

    1. Hi Olive, no I don’t grind them, I mostly use dried thyme. For rosemary you could use dried or fresh. For fresh throw in the entire stem and take it out when the rice is done. Hope this helps.

  4. Hi Precious,
    Iā€™ve been married to a Nigerian for 21years and didnā€™t take the time to cook jalof rice till now. Iā€™ve made it twice now and my husband loves it. Thank you for teaching something I should have learned a long time ago.

  5. Hi Precious Core. I am a black woman -African American- from the southern USA (Charleston, SC) where we make a dish we call red rice. It is a bit like Jollof rice in that it includes rice, tomatoes, protein, oil and seasonings. I plan to try your Jollof rice recipe as it sounds divine. Once I make it I will post my results. It won’t be as good as yours because I no longer eat rice (my total weakness and most favorite food) but use a rice substitute because I started eating low carb keto 3 years ago – but I will make this dish in a keto way and hope to thoroughly enjoy it. I did the same with our red rice dish but used cauliflower rice. For Jollof rice, I will use shirataki rice. Thank you so very much for this recipe and your teachings about the history of food and peoples of Africa. I sure miss and crave the heritage and history we lost when they brought us to the shores of America during Middle Passage and thereafter.

    1. I am so glad you learned something from this post, Helen. A .low carb alternative sounds great. Please let me know how it turns out for you.

  6. Hi Precious,

    This recipe is amazing! I can’t count the amount of times I have made this now. My husband loves this too, I have made for family and friends and all really love! I love the technique of adding the curry powder to the tomato when it is frying. Really flavour-som. I also love watching your Youtube videos – you have a really lovely, positive and happy energy about you and always put a smile on my face when I am cooking.

  7. The food recipes are making me hungry, I love your site, I am from an African background, born in the UK, living in the States, it’s hard to find good stores, being in a small community, I would have to go to larger city. Thanks again for your site, really encouraging, God’s blessings on all you do.

  8. I havenā€™t made any of your recipes yet but I will in due course they all look great, I wish I had a mother with your cooking skills.

  9. Empress,
    Your Spinach stew is outstanding!!! My cousin prepared this and I am telling you I wanted to lick the plate! Yummy yummy in my tummy. Super delicious!

    Marcha

  10. Hi Miranda, cooking recipes from Ghana is such a great idea! For afternoon tea you could try these Ghanaian doughnuts: http://ndudu-by-fafa.blogspot.com/2014/02/the-ghanaian-doughnut-bofrot.html
    Or this perfect plain cake: https://www.preciouscore.com/perfect-plain-cake/
    Or these Ghana Chips: https://www.africanbites.com/ghana-chin-chin-chips/
    Sweet fried plantains are also a great choice. Find the recipe here: https://www.preciouscore.com/sweet-fried-plantains/
    You could serve the plantains with African-style omelette. Find the recipe for the omelette here: https://www.preciouscore.com/fried-potatoes-and-eggs-breakfast-recipe-video/

    1. Hi Precious,
      Thank you for all the great recipe sites. I thought Ghana was famous for it’s chocolate, do cook with it much?
      Blessings
      Miranda

  11. Hello Precious,
    Thank you for your recipes. I am from Queensland, Australia and my Girlsā€™ Brigade Company is looking at the country Ghana. We are going to cook some of the foods from there and also learning about the country.
    I was wondering if you could recommend some foods could we try for afternoon tea with the girls please?

    Blessings
    Miranda

  12. Not only do you pay attention to exquisite details in outlining your steps in preparation, you take out the time, energy and pains to report so elegantly on details one might consider minute. You taught me about the origin of jollof rice! I love you but I adore your kitchen haha.

  13. Good day Aunty Precious, I have been reading for a very long time. What I love almost as much as your cooking is the way you write it. When I get my own kitchen, I will try everyone of your recipes from scratch…. I can’t wait.