Making high-quality cassava flour
Cassava is not fully utilized in Eastern Africa compared to West Africa (Nigeria, Ghana). Cassava is drought tolerant, easy to grow and simple to harvest. All parts of the cassava plant are valuable. Cassava leaves can be used to make soup or as feed for livestock, the stems can be used for planting more cassava, for mushroom production or as firewood, the root can be cooked and eaten fresh or processed into flour. High-quality cassava flour is made within a day of harvesting the root. Below are steps in processing high quality cassava by small holder farmers.
Author: Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation (CTA)
Organization: The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations FAO TECA
Year: 2020
Country/ies: Nigeria
Geographical coverage: Africa
Type: Practices
Full text available at: https://www.fao.org/teca/en/technologies/6923
Content language: English