Waakye: Ghana’s Beloved Rice & Beans Dish, Explained

What is waakye? Ghana’s favourite rice-and-beans dish explained: how it gets its red colour, the full plate of toppings, when to eat it and where to find the best.

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Ask a Ghanaian about their favourite food and there’s a good chance the answer is waakye. This humble dish of rice and beans — pronounced “waa-chey” — is the country’s ultimate comfort meal: cheap, filling, endlessly customisable, and beloved from dawn queues at roadside stalls to office lunch breaks. For a visitor, a proper plate of waakye with “the works” is one of the most authentic and satisfying things you can eat in Ghana. Here’s what it is, what goes on it, and how to order it like you know what you’re doing.

What is waakye?

Waakye is a Ghanaian dish of rice and beans cooked together — usually black-eyed peas or cowpeas — with dried red sorghum leaf stalks and a touch of kaun (a food-grade limestone). Those sorghum leaves are the secret: they give the dish its distinctive reddish-brown colour and subtle earthy flavour (the leaves are removed before serving). The name comes from the Dagbani language of northern Ghana — in Hausa it’s shinkafa da wake, “rice and beans” — reflecting its roots in the north before it conquered the whole country.

The full works: what goes on a waakye plate

Waakye is really a build-your-own feast. A loaded plate — traditionally served on a banana leaf for extra aroma — can include:

  • Shito — the essential dark, smoky chilli sauce.
  • Gari — toasted cassava granules for texture.
  • Spaghetti — known locally as talia (yes, pasta on rice; it works).
  • Boiled egg — a classic topper.
  • Wele — soft cooked cow skin, a much-loved addition.
  • Fried plantain, salad (cabbage, onion, tomato), and a protein — fish, chicken or beef — with a spoon of stew over everything.

Half the joy is choosing your combination at the stall.

When and how it’s eaten

Waakye is classic breakfast and lunch food — many Ghanaians swear by it first thing, and the best “waakye sellers” draw queues from early morning. A crucial local truth: the good pots sell out, often by late morning, so the early bird genuinely gets the waakye. It’s typically eaten with a spoon (or by hand), is hugely filling, and keeps you going for hours — the perfect fuel before a day of exploring.

How it’s made

The rice and beans are simmered together with the sorghum leaf stalks (and a little kaun, which helps soften the beans and deepen the colour) until tender and stained that signature red-brown. The leaves are then discarded, and the waakye is served with its long cast of accompaniments. It’s simple peasant cooking elevated by the toppings — comfort food in its purest form.

Where to eat the best waakye

The best waakye almost never comes from a restaurant — it comes from a dedicated roadside waakye seller, often a woman known across the neighbourhood for her pot, with a queue to match. Ask locals or your driver for the famous spot nearby; every area has one, and reputations are fiercely held. Go in the morning for the freshest serving and the full range of toppings before they run out. For eating-safely tips, see our street food guide.

How to order like a local

Ordering waakye is an art of add-ons. Start simple — “waakye with everything” works — or build it: name your protein and your toppings (shito and gari are non-negotiable for most). Say how much pepper you want (“small” if you’re cautious). Pay in cash or Mobile Money, find a spot, and dig in. Don’t overthink it; the seller will guide you, and they love a curious visitor.

Build your waakye: the toppings explained

Topping What it is
Shito Dark, smoky chilli sauce (essential)
Gari Toasted cassava granules for crunch
Talia Spaghetti — yes, on the rice
Wele Soft cooked cow skin
Boiled egg A classic protein topper
Salad & plantain Cabbage-onion-tomato salad; fried plantain

Is waakye healthy?

At its core, waakye is a wholesome combination of rice and beans — a complete plant protein with fibre and slow-release energy, which is partly why it keeps you full for so long. How healthy your plate is really depends on the toppings: pile on plenty of beans, salad and a lean protein and it’s genuinely nutritious; go heavy on fried elements, spaghetti and extra oil and it becomes more of an indulgence. Either way, it’s honest, satisfying food.

The bottom line

Waakye is Ghana on a plate — humble rice and beans transformed by sorghum-leaf colour, smoky shito and a pile-up of toppings into the country’s favourite comfort meal. Get to a famous waakye seller early before the pot runs dry, order it “with the works,” go easy on the pepper if you must, and eat it the way millions of Ghanaians start their day. It’s cheap, filling and unforgettable — and one of the truest tastes of Ghana. Explore more in our Ghanaian food guide.

FAQ

What is waakye?
Waakye is a Ghanaian dish of rice and beans (usually black-eyed peas) cooked together with dried red sorghum leaves, which give it a distinctive reddish-brown colour and earthy flavour. It’s eaten for breakfast and lunch with a range of toppings.
What is served with waakye?
A loaded plate typically includes shito (chilli sauce), gari, spaghetti (talia), boiled egg, wele (cow skin), fried plantain, salad and a protein like fish, chicken or beef, all topped with stew — traditionally served on a banana leaf.
How do you pronounce waakye?
It’s pronounced “waa-chey.” The name comes from the Dagbani language of northern Ghana, where the dish has its roots.
When do Ghanaians eat waakye?
Mainly for breakfast and lunch. The best waakye sellers start early and often sell out by late morning, so going early gets you the freshest plate and the full choice of toppings.
Where can I eat the best waakye?
From a dedicated roadside waakye seller rather than a restaurant — every neighbourhood has a famous one with a morning queue. Ask locals or your driver for the best spot nearby.