What I Eat

‘I Don’t View My Ingredients I Use For My Food as Niche Anymore’

Yewande Komolafe talks about what she’s been cooking and writing for her upcoming cookbook

Sam Hill
Heated
Published in
7 min readAug 4, 2020

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Yewande Komolafe wearing round glasses with iridescent lenses, holding a blurry dessert item.
Photo: Steph Goralnick

Yewande Komolafe is a chef, recipe developer, and food stylist who grew up in Lagos, Nigeria, and moved to the U.S. to go to college at 16. Throughout her career, Komolafe has studied cultural connections through food, urging others to pay attention to where food comes from and the history behind recipes.

She authored 10 Essential Nigerian Recipes for The New York Times; has tested hundreds of recipes for the James Beard Foundation, Bon Appétit, Saveur, and NYT Cooking; and hosts a dinner series called My Immigrant Food Is… out of her Brooklyn kitchen that offers immigrants a platform to speak about their food. She’s working on a cookbook of Nigerian recipes to be released in the fall of 2021.

Heated’s Sam Hill caught-up with Komolafe at the beginning of the summer to talk about what she’s been cooking during quarantine, finding comfort in immigrant cuisine, and the spices she always has on-hand.

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Heated
Heated

Published in Heated

Food from every angle: A publication from Medium x Mark Bittman

Sam Hill
Sam Hill

Written by Sam Hill

Sam Hill is a freelance journalist living in Portland, Ore. He’s written for Digital Trends, Outside Magazine, Serious Eats, Boston Magazine and other outlets.