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Bene bene - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Bene cakes, bene balls, bene squares, bene sticks, you name it we do it. These traditional sweets were first made popular in Tobago where they are still sold by vendors either in the airport, at the busy vendor’s strip at the entrance to Store Bay and even on the beaches themselves.

At the ANR Robinson Airport, Crown Point, you will find a colourful array of sweet offerings, sugar-cakes, nut-cakes, red preserved mango, plums and the iconic bene balls, also called jaw breakers. But have we ever stopped to think where did bene originate?

The bene is a West African name for sesame seed, (sesamum indicum). The first seeds are believed to have been brought to the Caribbean by African slaves some 300 years ago.

It is believed that the African slaves in the Caribbean bought the bene seeds with them and planted the bene in their small home gardens.

They looked to the seeds to fortify, thicken and add much needed sustenance and protein to their meagre meals.

It is considered to be the oldest oilseed crop known to humanity, being of high commodity value land owners become interested in it. As a result it then made its way to Charleston SC from the Caribbean. Soon it was incorporated into recipes there becoming part of the now popular Lowcountry and Gullah cooking (a fusion of West and Central African cooking techniques).

In the Caribbean it quickly became part of the crops planted on the plantations. When slavery was abolished, the used-to-be-enslaved people then used what was familiar to them to create treats which could have been sold, bringing them much needed income. The sugar plantations at that time paid their workers in sugar, as a result they created such saleable items utilising ingredients familiar to them.

Today, bene or sesame seed is used worldwide in products familiar to us like Tahini paste, sesame cookies, sesame butter, oriental sesame oil to name a few. It has countless presentations in recipes and when toasted its nutty flavour brings great flavour to both sweet and savoury dishes.

[caption id="attachment_914983" align="alignnone" width="1024"] - David Reid[/caption]

Bene balls

4 cups granulated sugar

4 cups bene seeds or sesame seed

Pinch salt

Heat a non-stick frying pan, add bene seeds and parch to a dark golden colour.

Place sugar into a heavy, large saucepan and cook until sugar melts to a thin consistency, add bene seed and stir well to coat seeds with sugar, add salt.

Remove from heat and drop by heaped teaspoonfuls onto an oiled baking tray.

Oil your hands and roll into smooth balls.

Place on an oiled plate until dried then wrap in plastic wrap.

To make bene squares, follow the instructions above, grease a 9x9-inch non-stick baking pan, pour mixture into pan, smooth out. Carefully mark your squares, when cool, turn out onto a cutting board and cut into pieces.

Option: The sugar may be slightly caramelised to give a more intense flavour.

Choco

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