Her skill at brewing
beer saved the family from disaster. In her small village, brewing
beer was a ritual exclusive to the women and was handed down from
mother to daughter. According to Henrique:
“My great-great grandmother bartered beer for agricultural
produce and thereby managed to make ends meet each month. Her
persistent husband never ceased hunting and each time he returned
empty-handed he consoled himself by drinking beer served in a
gourd while sitting on a straw mat."
She saved the family
by brewing beer for twenty years. Her husband kept searching for
porcupine though, and finally he disappeared on a hunt for three
months. Lacking any news of him, the family decided he must be
dead, and commenced a week of mourning. But on the third day,
the sound of xylophones announced his victorious return. He brought
porcupine meat with him for all the village to share.
Kabia’s great-great
grandmother brewed a special beer to celebrate this triumph. She
decided that instead of distilling palm wine she would make beer
from palm nuts. She used huge 10 gallon gourds to brew, and the
village enjoyed this delicious beer so much that the party lasted
three months! The villagers toasted the good times by saying "Mongozo"
- which means "to your health".
As Kabia tells it,
"The unique taste of the beer was appreciated by the entire
village and soon by the whole empire. There was a great demand
for it, and so my great-great grandmother built a small brewery
behind her stray hut. A large earthenware jug served as a vat.
Her oven consisted of 3 or 4 rocks around a few bits of burning
wood. This made up most of her equipment."
The Mongozo recipe
was passed down through the family’s generations of women
all the way to Henrique’s own mother. But she had no daughters
to teach the brewing skill, so she broke with tradition and taught
her son instead.
“It was a revolutionary
step. For the first time, a man - in the Lunda tradition - was
allowed to brew Mongozo. Maybe, she wanted me to have something
healthy to drink at the University. But, the fact that the whole
society was becoming more emancipated in Angola played also a
role in my mother’s course of action. I brewed the beer
during holidays and weekends. You can imagine that I was a very
popular guy at the University. Brewing became my favorite pastime,
and still is today,” Henrique Kabia explains.
This is fortuitous
for western drinkers who might otherwise never have the chance
to taste African beer styles. The Mongozo line includes three
different ales all of which are available in Europe and North
America.
The flagship ‘Mongozo
Palmnut’ is brewed with palm nuts just like Henrique’s
mother taught him. Although he has adapted his recipes to include
some modern techniques as well. For instance, the original Mongozo
beer was fermented with wild yeast. While a batch fermented, some
was scooped off to be used as a starter for the next batch, but
today Kabia uses a controlled yeast strain.
After his beer was
successfully received at numerous festivals and tastings, he decided
to go professional with the product. He formed a relationship
with the renown Van Steenberge brewery in Belgium, brewers of
such well known brands as Piraat and Celis White. Today, he brews
in partnership with yet a different world class Belgian brewery,
brewery Huyghe, makers of Delerium Tremens.
Nuts for Fair Trade
Kabia directly controls the import of the palm nuts used in his
ale, as well as the exotic calabashes used for drinking it. His
direct trading relationship insures that the African women who
grow, cut and dry the calabashes receive a fair percentage of
the sales. He is proud of the fair trade aspect of his endeavor
and describes it as “A true example of development aid resulting
from a private initiative."
The fair trade principles
Kabia follows are monitored and certified with the Max Havelaar
fair trade label, recognizing the contribution Mongozo beer makes
toward improving the lives of low-income farmers.
Like any beer brewed
in Belgium, Kabia explains that Mongozo is best enjoyed when served
in its own specially designed vessel. “When Mongozo beer
is served in a natural calabash it froths extremely well, maintains
its freshness longer than it would in a normal glass and moreover,
a calabash renders the complete flavor.”
“But,”
he continues with characteristically African equanimity, “for
those of you who are attached to your glass: don’t worry,
Mongozo tastes wonderful straight out of the bottle too, or in
a regular beer glass. There are Mongozo glasses available as well."
Besides Mongozo Palmnut,
Kabia also produces Mongozo Banana and Mongozo Quinua, made with
respectively with fair trade bananas and quinoa grain.
Mongozo Banana is based
on a traditional beer of the Massai people of Kenya, called ‘mbege’.
The Quinua brew originates from the other side of the globe, as
it is based on the traditional Andean ‘chicha’ beer.