LAGOS — Nigerian pepper soup has been a comfort food, a hangover cure, a postpartum recovery meal, and a cold remedy for generations. Now science is confirming what Nigerian grandmothers always knew: it is genuinely good for you. Nutritionists and medical researchers have been examining the health properties of pepper soup’s key ingredients with consistently encouraging results.
The base of most Nigerian pepper soup is a combination of proteins, typically goat meat, catfish, chicken, or offal, slow-cooked in water with a blend of spices including uziza seeds, calabash nutmeg, African pepper, crayfish, and country onions. Each of these ingredients carries distinct health-promoting compounds.
Uziza seeds, also known as black pepper seeds, contain piperine, the same compound that gives ordinary black pepper its pungency. Piperine has demonstrated anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and antimicrobial properties in multiple studies. It also improves the bioavailability of other nutrients, meaning it helps the body absorb nutrients from other foods more efficiently.
Immunity and Pain Relief
African pepper, known as uda or Negro pepper, contains compounds that have shown antimicrobial activity against common bacteria and antifungal properties. Its traditional use as a postpartum recovery food has a biological basis: compounds in the seed have been shown to support uterine recovery and reduce postpartum inflammation.
Calabash nutmeg, known as ehuru in Igbo, contains essential oils with anti-inflammatory properties. Nigerian midwives have used it for centuries to manage postpartum pain. Modern analysis of its chemical composition confirms the presence of compounds that interact with pain pathways in ways consistent with its traditional use.
Nutritionist Dr. Adaeze Okonkwo said pepper soup is one of Nigeria’s most nutritionally dense traditional dishes when properly prepared. She said the combination of protein-rich broth, immunity-supporting spices, and anti-inflammatory herbs makes it genuinely therapeutic. She recommends it especially for recovery from illness, for elderly Nigerians with poor appetite, and for anyone managing chronic inflammation.
Discover more from News247 Nigeria
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
