particularly great. sear the beef, cook the onion, garlic, peppers, and carrots, deglaze with ground peanuts and broth, bringing up all that good stuff from the pan, then simmer until tender and awesome. serve hot over rice. anthony: wow. youssou: ah. anthony: that looks good. youssou: that s good. good, good, good, good, good. thank you. anthony: wow. this is very, very good. youssou: the symbol of connection, mali and segegal, is the mafe. this dish, you can appreciate here, you can appreciate in mali also. anthony: so, what s the future? youssou: future? anthony: the future. 20 years from now, where will senegal be? youssou: what i hope is in 20 years, senegal is gonna be the place for great and big contribution of what we call islam. anthony: do you think there s any danger of, the kind of radical islam that we see taking hold in many places in africa?
anthony: people started to talk about you when you age 12 when you started to perform, uh, professionally. youssou: yeah. anthony: but did you come from a musical tradition? youssou: my mom, she s a griot. griot are the storytellers and they are also singers, rappers, and everything. and i, i grow with my grandma, she was a big singer. she give me a lot of things. and from there going to the school for two years, then left the school and start my career. anthony: tonight we are having a beef mafe, which is a stew thickened with ground peanuts. there are similar preparations throughout west africa, but the senegalese version is
she give me a lot of things. and from there going to the school for two years, then left the school and start my career. anthony: tonight we are having a beef mafe, which is a stew thickened with ground peanuts. there are similar preparations throughout west africa, but the senegalese version is particularly great. sear the beef, cook the onion, garlic, peppers, and carrots, deglaze with ground peanuts and broth, bringing up all that good stuff from the pan, then simmer until tender and awesome. serve hot over rice. anthony: wow. youssou: ah. anthony: that looks good. youssou: that s good. good, good, good, good, good. thank you. anthony: wow. this is very, very good. youssou: the symbol of connection, mali and segegal, is the mafe.
anthony: masa, rice cakes made from nigerian sticky rice, sugar and potash, a mineral-rich salt. this is fura, it s made from millet and milk. anthony: it s more like a yogurt, slightly sour. yes. anthony: that s great. this is sort of a surprising food. it s also made of beans. anthony: this is all beans? yes. anthony: danwake, high protein bean flour dumplings served with tomatoes, onions in a peppery sauce. mmm, delicious. moringa. anthony: and moringa salad, made from the leaves of the zogala tree. it s said to have medicinal properties. kuli-kuli powder is a garnish or condiment made from ground peanuts. what do you see the future of this area and your people? everything relies on education. we promote both western and arabic knowledge. the whole africa, even the whole world, is represented in lagos, so we have to work together. the prophet of islam muhammad,
and from there going to the school for two years, then left the school and start my career. anthony: tonight we are having a beef mafe, which is a stew thickened with ground peanuts. there are similar preparations throughout west africa, but the senegalese version is particularly great. sear the beef, cook the onion, garlic, peppers, and carrots, deglaze with ground peanuts and broth, bringing up all that good stuff from the pan, then simmer until tender and awesome. serve hot over rice. anthony: wow. youssou: ah. anthony: that looks good. youssou: that s good. good, good, good, good, good. thank you. anthony: wow. this is very, very good. youssou: the symbol of connection, mali and segegal, is the mafe. this dish, you can appreciate here, you can appreciate in mali also. anthony: so, what s the