One of the many good things about travelling in Senegal was the widespread availability of fresh fruit, root and flower juices, typically sold in small plastic bags by smiley, buxom ladies on street corners. At first perplexed as to how one drinks from a plastic bag, we soon learnt you nip off a corner with your teeth and then suck out the delicious juice as you continue round the market. Nothing could be better on a hot, dusty day.
Ginger was our favourite; its intense zinginess can’t fail to jolt you awake and fill you with an overwhelming sense of vitality. Also excellent were bouye (made from the fruit of the giant baobab tree), ditakh (some kind of cucumbery tasting fruit we never identified), and bissap (infused with dried, crimson hibiscus flowers, often with mint).

Aside from the obvious economic benefits (our CFA went directly to the women who made our drinks), there were health benefits too. Gingembre is widely recognised to give energy, stimulate the appetite and aid digestion, while bouye is said to soothe tummy trouble - in fact we met a man who swore it cured the runs.
Recipe: Ginger juice.pdf
Serves: 4-6
Time: 45 mins (of which 30 sunbathing)
200g fresh, chubby root ginger, washed
1 litre water
approx 100g caster sugar
vanilla essence (optional)
Scrape skin off ginger. Using a teaspoon is easier and less wasteful than using a knife. It doesn’t have to be perfect.- Roughly chop ginger and then pound to a coarse pulp using a mortar and pestle. A deep wooden one works best, but any will do. The juices should start to run. Alternatively use a blender or processor, using a little water if needed to get it going.
- Scrape ginger into a bowl and add water, washing out mortar as you do to catch all the gingery goodness. Give it a stir.
- Let stand 30 minutes or more while you build up a thirst in the sunshine.
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Strain through a fine-meshed sieve, then stir in sugar to taste until dissolved. Dilute if too fiery for you, and add a few drops of vanilla if you like (or use vanilla sugar). - Serve chilled with ice. Leftover juice will keep in a bottle in the fridge for a day or two, but quickly loses its vibrancy.
- NB: If you don’t want to waste the leftover ginger pulp, use it to make a second infusion, or spread out to dry in the sun then grind it to a powder, sieve and add to your spice collection.

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