Kenyan Samosa
Submitted by cuddles1959
Kenyan samosa-style bread machine loaf with spiced ground beef, peas, and East African aromatics. A fusion bread that bakes the flavors of Kenya into a yeast loaf.
YIELD
12 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
180 minREADY
195 minThis is samosa flavor, transformed into bread machine loaf form. Kenyan samosas (sometimes called sambusa) are a beloved East African street food brought to the region by South Asian traders centuries ago, and the spice blend reflects that cultural cross-pollination: cumin, cardamom, cloves, nutmeg, cinnamon, and black pepper all working together. Instead of folding that filling into pastry triangles and frying them, this clever recipe builds it directly into a savory yeast bread. Browned ground beef and softened onions go into the bread machine along with the spice blend, bread flour, and yeast. The peas get added at the end of the first knead so they stay whole instead of breaking apart in the dough. The result is a savory, deeply spiced loaf that smells like a Mombasa market while it bakes. Slice it warm, slather with butter, and you’ve got something between samosa and meat pie that no bakery can sell you.
Kitchen Tips
- Drain the cooked beef well after browning. Excess fat will make the dough greasy and prevent proper rise.
- Let the beef and onion mixture cool to room temperature before adding to the bread machine. Hot meat kills the yeast.
- Use whole spices freshly ground if possible. Pre-ground spices lose their volatile oils within months of opening.
- Add the peas at the beep or end of first knead. Earlier and they get pulverized; later and they don’t distribute evenly.
- The loaf is best the day it’s baked. Stale slices toast beautifully and crisp up like savory rusks.
Variations
Ingredients
Directions
Braise or sauté the beef til browned.
Add garlic and onion.
Cook until softened. Let cool.
Put the whole mess, except the peas in bread machine.
Dump peas into the machine at the end of the first kneading or at the beep.
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