Italian Food In The Heart Of Ethiopia? I’ll Stick To Beyaynetu….

By Leila

Although the menu looked promising, I opted for an Ethiopian lunch over pizza at an Italian restaurant in the heart of Ethiopia.

Our Italian Food Experiment In Awassa, Ethiopia

Awassa (also spelled Hawassa) is the capital of the Sidama Region of Ethiopia. Located on Lake Hawassa in the Great Rift Valley, it is a city of almost 600,000 people. As far as I could tell, this region of Ethiopia does not see a lot of visitors.

Our hosts wanted to treat us to Italian food (I find Italian food in Ethiopia a bit ironic, considering the Italians failed to colonize Ethiopia twice). Um, sure, why not…

We went to a restaurant called Venezia, a cute restaurant with indoor and outdoor seating.

a sign outside with trees and blue sky

a patio with a table and chairs and a tree

a covered patio with a bench and a table

a room with a couch and table

a room with a stone wall and a table and chairs

The menu actually looked decent. But when ordering roasted lamb, they were out. Milanese cutlet? Out. Roasted chicken? Out.

But there was pizza…

a menu on a table

My friends ordered pizza and it looked pretty good…

a pizza on a plate

But I ordered Ethiopian food, yes, I opted for the local beyaynetu over the Italian.

a plate of food on a table

So what’s on my plate?

  • The spongy bread underneath is injera, made from teff, a tiny grain native to Ethiopia
  • On top are multiple small servings of different dishes, typically including:
    • Misir wot – red lentils in a spicy berbere sauce (center, reddish-orange)
    • Ater kik alicha – yellow split peas cooked with turmeric (yellow mound)
    • Gomen – chopped collard greens (dark green)
    • Fosolia – sautéed green beans and carrots
    • Salata – tomato and onion salad
    • Shiro or chickpea stew (sometimes creamy)
    • Lentils in alicha – brown lentils (bottom right)

For regular readers, you know that I love my comfort food and take that sometimes to an extreme and arguably absurd degree (like Taco Bell in Thailand and Malaysia…).

But I actually really like Ethiopian food and this was a delicious lunch.

As for my favorite Ethiopian food, the next day we went to a traditional place and had lamb tibs (sautéed cubes of lamb, often cooked with onions, garlic, and other vegetables or herbs). You eat with your fingers, oy…

But it was so wonderful!

a group of people sitting outside a restaurant

a man sitting on a bench outside of a building

a sign from a ceiling

a plate of food on a table

So in what may be a first for me, I turned down Western food for the local cuisine…see, there’s hope for me yet!