"Many people in Ethiopia are poor, but we will save and make sure we have this dish at any big function."
She said the dish was considered to be healthy because both the beef and flatbread had a high iron content.
Teff, a valued iron-rich grain, is mixed with water and left to ferment for several days to make injera.
Ms Asfaw said injera was the staple bread for Ethiopians, much like roti is in India.
"We will always make our children eat kitfo because we think the beef is good for them and will make them strong and give lots of energy," she said.
At her cafe, Ms Asfaw serves kitfo either completely raw or slightly cooked with injera on the side.
To eat kitfo, spoonfuls of raw beef can be placed into a piece of injera or you can use your fingers to tear off bits of the flatbread and dig into the beef.
Ms Asfaw said injera could also be replaced with standard sliced bread.
Kitfo
Ingredients
• 1 kg topside beef (freshly cut)
• 6 teaspoons ground cayenne pepper (mitmita*)
• 4 tablespoons clarified butter (nitir kebe*)
• 1 teaspoon cardamom powder (korerima*)
• salt and black pepper
* You will find these spices in Ethiopian or Indian shops/groceries
Method
1. Cut the beef into small pieces and remove fat
2. Hand mince meat, marinate with mitmita and place the spicy ground meat in a dish
3. Melt the butter in a small pot on low heat, add the remaining mitmita, cardamom powder, (salt and black pepper to taste); remove from heat
4. Combine the spicy ground meat with the spicy butter; mix until completely marinated
5. Serve it immediately in a dish with injera or bread
• Cafe Abyssinia is at Shop 6, Tulja Centre, 190 Stoddard Rd, Mt Roskill. (09) 620 5599.
The series
Today: Kitfo (Ethiopia)
Tomorrow: Haejangguk (S Korea)
Wednesday: Bheja fry (India)
Thursday: Herbal duck (China)
Friday: Rainbow stir fry (Thailand)
Saturday: Oysters with coriander dressing (NZ-Fusion)