
Source Attribution
Original Cookbook Name: The Black Family Reunion Cookbook
Published By: The National Council of Negro Women, Inc.
Year of Publication: 1991
Page Number: 90
Category: Main Meals
Recipe Type: Heritage Recipe
Author / Contributor: JoAnn Eavery Simpson, Executive Chef, Hook’s Catering
Moui Nagden (Rice in Beef Stew) represents the beautiful complexity of African American foodways—where African, Middle Eastern, and Southern cooking traditions converge in a single pot. This dish reflects the Islamic heritage present within African American culture, particularly among families whose ancestors maintained Muslim practices from West Africa or who later embraced Islam in America. The name “Moui Nagden” and the use of curry powder suggest connections to West African Jollof-style rice dishes and the rich spice traditions of the African diaspora.
The technique of browning meat in a Dutch oven, building layers of flavor with curry and aromatic vegetables, then cooking rice directly in the stew creates a complete one-pot meal that has sustained families for generations. This cooking method—where starches absorb the flavors of meat and spices—appears across African, Caribbean, and Southern cuisines, each culture making it their own. The inclusion of curry powder reflects both historical spice trade routes through Africa and the creative adaptation of global flavors within African American cooking. Hook’s Catering’s Executive Chef JoAnn Eavery Simpson preserved this heritage recipe, ensuring that these complex cultural connections would be honored and passed forward.
Ingredients
- 3 pounds stewing beef, cubed
- 1 teaspoon curry powder
- Salt
- White pepper
- Salt
- Crushed red pepper
- 1 bay leaf
- ¼ cup vegetable oil
- 1 medium onion, sliced
- 1 large ripe tomato, quartered
- 1 large green bell pepper, diced
- 2 cans cooked red kidney beans (optional)
- 6 cups water
- 3 cups uncooked long-grained rice
Instructions
- Season beef with curry powder, white pepper, salt, and crushed red pepper.
- Place in a Dutch oven. Add bay leaf and a small amount of water.
- Cook on low heat until the meat is tender.
- Place in a Dutch oven. Add heat until the meat is tender. Reserve stock.
- Heat oil in a skillet. Add meat.
- Brown on all sides. Remove meat. Strain oil.
- Wash and dry the skillet. Return oil to the same skillet.
- Add onion. Cook 5 minutes.
- Add tomato, green pepper, and kidney beans (if used). Cook 10 minutes. Add meat.
- Stir in the reserved stock and water. Reduce the heat slightly.
- Bring to a boil on high heat. Add rice. Cover medium.
- Cook, stirring once or twice, until rice is cooked as desired. Remove bay leaf before serving.
Yield: 4 to 6 servings
Editor’s Note
This recipe uses a two-stage cooking method that builds exceptional flavor. First, the beef is gently cooked with minimal water until tender (1½-2 hours), creating a rich stock. Then the meat is browned in oil separately before being combined with vegetables and rice. While this seems like extra work, it ensures tender meat and deep flavor. If short on time, you can brown the seasoned beef first, then add liquid and simmer until tender—though the traditional method yields superior results.
The amount of water may need adjustment depending on your rice and cooking vessel. Start with 6 cups and add more if needed—the rice should be just covered with liquid. Long-grain rice works best; avoid short-grain or sticky rice. The rice will absorb the beef stock and spices, becoming deeply flavored and aromatic. Stir gently and infrequently to prevent rice from becoming mushy.
Curry powder varies widely in heat and flavor—start with the 1 teaspoon called for and adjust to taste. The “crushed red pepper” adds heat; use ¼-½ teaspoon depending on preference, or omit entirely for a milder dish. The optional kidney beans add protein and bulk, making the dish stretch further—drain and rinse canned beans before adding. Fresh tomatoes are ideal, but canned diced tomatoes (drained) work in a pinch. This is a forgiving, adaptable recipe that welcomes variations based on what’s available.
Cultural Insight
Moui Nagden embodies the layered history of African American foodways, where Islamic West African cooking traditions, Caribbean influences, and Southern techniques blend seamlessly. Many enslaved Africans brought to the Americas were Muslims from regions where rice cultivation, curry spices, and one-pot stewed dishes were central to daily cooking. Though Islam was often suppressed during slavery, culinary practices persisted—the knowledge of how to cook rice perfectly, how to layer spices, and how to stretch meat with grains and beans survived and evolved.
The 20th century saw a resurgence of Islamic practice within African American communities, and with it came renewed interest in foods that connected to both African and Muslim heritage. Dishes like Moui Nagden—which might appear in various forms across West African, Creole, and Southern Black cooking—carry these cultural memories forward. The use of curry powder reflects both historical spice routes through Africa and the global nature of African diasporic cooking, where ingredients from India, the Middle East, and the Caribbean became part of the African American pantry.
The method of cooking rice in seasoned meat stock, common in West African jollof rice and Caribbean pelau, represents a sophisticated culinary technique that contradicts racist stereotypes about African American cooking being simple or primitive. This is complex, skilled cooking that requires timing, layering of flavors, and understanding of how ingredients interact. The fact that this recipe comes from a professional caterer—Hook’s Catering, with Executive Chef JoAnn Eavery Simpson—and is designated a Heritage Recipe speaks to its importance within the community and the pride in preserving these techniques.
When families gathered for reunions and served dishes like Moui Nagden, they were participating in cultural preservation and celebration. Each bowl of rice and beef stew carried stories of African ancestors, Islamic practices, survival and adaptation, and the ongoing creativity of Black cooks who honor the past while feeding the present. This isn’t just dinner—it’s edible history, delicious proof that African American cuisine is diverse, globally connected, and deeply rooted in traditions that span continents and centuries.
Visual Reference
