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Pumpkin and rooibos ice cream on menu as Cape Town café champions African flavours

When Tapiwa Guzha first started making ice creams 12 years ago, he never imagined he would one day be whisking pumpkin puree and milk together to make an African flavoured ice cream at a cafe in Cape Town.

Hailing from Zimbabwe, 36-year-old Guzha says he wants to educate locals and visitors alike on African flavoured experiences and correct a narrative that things made in Africa are second rate or are not as tasty.

A customer tastes ice cream before she buys some at the Tapi Tapi ice cream shop in Observatory, in Cape Town, South Africa, December 20, 2022. REUTERS/Esa Alexander

“At some point it became an aspirational thing to say I don’t eat African food … so I started addressing … that problem,” he said at his Tapi Tapi shop.

Located in the bohemian suburb of Observatory in Cape Town, he hopes to share the different flavours in tubs and cones, and celebrate African food culture, rituals and folklore.

Flavours include combinations of indigenously sourced food like pumpkin, popped maize, peanuts, sweet potato, clay, samp – a mushy dish made of dried corn kernels.

Tapi Tapi ice cream shop owner, Zimbabwean Tapiwa Guzha, mixes dry ice into the ice cream ingredients at his shop in Observatory, in Cape Town, South Africa, December 21, 2022. REUTERS/Esa Alexander

Every flavour he makes has a story behind it.

One such flavour is made from rooibos – a popular tea plant in South Africa – and sweet potato jam.

“It’s quite common in Zimbabwe … to eat tea with sweet potatoes instead of bread,” Guzha says.

People often bring him ingredients from other parts of the continent, he says, who get a free tub of ice cream in return.

Some customers said they found the flavours surprising and heart-warming and were struck by the familiarity of it.

A staff member scoops ice cream for customers inside the Tapi Tapi ice cream shop in Observatory, in Cape Town, South Africa, December 20, 2022. REUTERS/Esa Alexander

Growing up, customer Clive Sibanda knew ice cream could be vanilla, something that is not native to South Africa.

“Now, if you eat something like samp, something … you grew up eating … it connects you with your childhood,” he said. (Reuters)

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