This post seeks to teach you how to Prepare Shito. Shito is undoubtedly one of the popular sauces in Ghana especially for students. It’s also normally referred to as student’s companions in school because most students can go to school without them.
Find below the steps on how to prepare shito for school or at home.
Enjoy your prepared shito with the food of choice.
Preparing Jollof rice the Ghana Style should not be a difficult task. Jollof rice is a popular food enjoyed by a lot of Ghanaians, Nigerians, and other West Africans.
It can be prepared in several ways; can be made with meat, vegetables, or tofu. The uniquely colored rice is often enjoyed at dinnertime, and also served at various parties, engagements and weddings.
Find below the steps on how to prepare Jollof rice the Ghana style.
It is a very popular feature in the daily lives of Ghanaians. There’s always a kelewele vendor somewhere close-by especially during the later hours of the day.
Kelewele
To locate a vendor, just take a walk along the street in the evenings and the aroma is going to alert you that a vendor is nearby.
Manhyia is an Akan word which means gathering of the town’s people. The Manhyia Palace is the seat of the Asantehene of Asanteman, as well as his official residence.
It is located at Kumasi, the capital of the Ashanti Kingdom and Ashanti Region. The first palace is now a museum. King Opoku Ware II built the new palace, which is close to the old one and is used by the current Asantehene, King Osei Tutu II.
The palace courtyard hosts numerous important Asante traditional events. These include the Adae festival, which occurs every sixth Sunday, when the Asantehene receives homage from his subjects and subservient chiefs.
Asantehene, King Osei Tutu II
The palace built by the British after the “War of the Golden Stool” was converted into a museum and officially opened on 12 August 1995 by the then king, Otumfuo Opoku Ware II. The opening of the museum was part of activities that marked the Silver Jubilee of his accession to the Golden Stool.
This palace was used as the office of the Kings. It served as Administrative headquarters of Asante Nation from 1925 to 1974 until Otumfuo Opoku Ware II moved from this office to the new residence at Manhyia. Several artefacts are displayed in the museum. They include furniture used by the Kings, the bronze head of Nana Sir Osei Agyeman Prempeh II, and a sketch map of the Asanteman.
There is also Asanteman’s first television at the museum, as well as life-sized wax effigies of some of the kings and queens of Asanteman.
‘Cabo Corso,’ meaning ‘short cape’, is the name the Portuguese settled on for the local settlement within which its trade lodge was built in 1555. Its corruption to ‘Cape Coast’ is now the accepted name of the capital of the Central Region of Ghana. The Swedes, led by Krusenstjerna, however, were the initiators of the permanent structure presently known as Cape Coast Castle. They built a fort in 1653 and named it Carlousburg, after King Charles X of Sweden.
Its proximity to St. George’s Castle (Elmina Castle) and its sheltered beach were all forceful ‘pull factors’ for European nations to the Cape Coast. In addition, the immense viability of the area’s trade implied that the ensuing quest for control led to the Swedes having trouble holding on to their fort. It was captured in turn by the Danes and the local Fetu chief.
Cape Coast Castle
Dutch occupation commenced in 1660. Finally, the British fleet, led by Captain Holmes, conquered the fort in 1665 and by 1700, had upgraded it into a castle.
Colonial rivalry between England and France peaked in 1757 during the Seven Years’ War. A French naval squadron bombarded Cape Coast Castle, leaving it badly damaged, and after 1760, the English reconstructed the castle entirely – with more durable materials and an improved sea defence system.
The English retained control of the Castle into the late 19th century. The slave trade was principal until its ban in 1807 by the British, and it ‘is estimated that around 1700, the Royal African Company was exporting some 70,000 slaves per annum to the New World’ . After 1807, trade centred on precious metals, ivory, corn and pepper. In the eighteenth century, the castle’s role altered, as it became the centre of European education in Ghana.
The Cape Coast Castle has served as the West African headquarters of the president of the Committee of Merchants; the seat of the British governor; and a school.
Cape Coast Castle
Open to the public, it is currently a historical museum with a Ghanaian arts and crafts gift shop, and it is the regional headquarters of Ghana Museums and Monuments Board.
The castle’s opening hours are 9:00am to 4:30pm daily.
Entrance Fee
Pupils from Primary to JHS 3 – GH¢ 0.30
SHS Students – GH¢ 0.50
Tertiary Students with ID – GH¢ 1.00
Ghanaian Adults – GH¢ 2.00
Foreign Children – USD 2.00 or its equivalent in Ghana cedis
Foreign Students with ID – USD 4.00 or its equivalent in Ghana cedis
Adult Foreigners – USD 7.00 or its equivalent in Ghana cedis
*Entrance fees might have changed
Contact Details:
Tel +233-3321 32529
References:
The Royal African Company.
Anquandah, Kwesi J., Castles and Forts of Ghana, 1999, page 49.
The Ghana Museums and Monuments Board.
Located in the coastal environs of the Central Region of Ghana, Kakum National Park protects an area of rainforest and serves as home to several endangered mammals including forest elephants, bongo antelopes and primates like the Diana monkey.
The park is also rich in butterflies and birds; African grey parrots and hornbills.
The Canopy Walkway, suspended 30 meters above the ground, is a major feature of the site. It provides treetop views of the forest.
In 2000, the Park was listed under UNESCO’s tentative List of World Heritage Sites after the Museums and Monuments Board of Ghana proposed that it should be declared a natural World Heritage Site.
In 2017, the Park introduced a Children’s Park. The less publicised Children’s Park is an artificial version of the main park with a smaller canopy walkway designed for children.
Children’s Park, Kakum National Park. PHOTO CREDIT: Ekow Simpson
Kakum National Park is located 33 kilometres north of Cape Coast and Elmina near the small village of Abrafo. It is easily accessible by taxis from the town center but most visitors arrive in organized tour buses.