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Nutrition

 Akotonshi (Stuffed crab)

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Akotonshi

Akotonshi

 Akotonshi is a delicious stuffed crab dish that is associated with feasting in Ghana.

The dish is sprinkled with bread­crumbs and placed under a broiler. When served, akotonshi is usually garnished with chopped parsley.

Ingredients

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5 large whole crabs or cooked crabbed meat

2 large fresh ginger

3 tablespoonfuls of cooking oil

2 large onion minced

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1 tablespoonful of ginger ground

2 large tomatoes finely chopped

1 tablespoonful of tomato paste

1 large green bell peppers finely chopped

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1 tablespoonful of ground nut meg

1 tablespoonful of cloves ground

1 tablespoonful of dried thyme leaves

1/2 cup of dried shrimp

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1 cup of plain bread crumbs

2 tablespoonfuls of salt

Preparation

-When cooking crabs, clean them and bring a large pot of water to a boil.

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-Add in the ginger, cloves and the crab, cook for 15 minutes. Remove crabs and meat, keep shells for plating.

-If using just crab meat mix crab meat with ¼ cup water that has been boiled with the ginger piece and cloves for 15 minutes. Drain water, flake the meat and set aside.

-In a heavy pot, heat oil to me­dium temperature and add other ingredients in the following se­quence, stirring for a minute or so between each: onions, ground gin­ger, tomatoes, tomato paste, green pepper, cumin, nutmeg, thyme, grains of paradise, paprika, mashed peppers, and dried shrimp.

-Reduce heat and simmer for 4-5 min­utes, stirring constantly, until vegeta­bles are cooked.

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-Add crab meat and stir another cou­ple of minutes to heat it through. Then spoon the mixture into clean crab shells or ramekins (small individual baking dishes).

-Sprinkle breadcrumbs on top of each crab and toast under an oven broiler, being careful not to let the crumbs scorch. —Source: Pulse.gh

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Nutrition

 The N4G Paris Summit 2025: Ghana made commitments, now delivery is what matters

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Nutrition for growth is essential
Nutrition for growth is essential

In March 2025, world leaders gathered in Paris for the Nutrition for Growth (N4G) Summit, the most important global gathering on malnutrition of the decade. Over $30 billion in new financial commitments were pledged globally by more than 170 actors from 82 countries. Ghana was there. Ghana made commitments. The question now is: are those commitments enough, and will they be delivered?

Ghana made 10 commitments at the 2025 N4G Summit. One of the most significant is a pledge to spend at least $6 million annually from 2026 for the procurement of essential nutrition commodities including ready-to-use therapeutic food (RUTF), multiple micronutrient supplements (MMS), iron-folic acid tablets, vitamin A supplements, and anthropometric equipment for measuring child growth.

This financial commitment is meaningful. For years, Ghana’s nutrition programmes have depended heavily on donor funding, leaving services vulnerable to aid cuts and supply disruptions. A domestic budget line for nutrition commodities signals a shift toward ownership and sustainability. It also directly supports Ghana’s Nutrition for Growth commitments from the 2021 Tokyo Summit, several of which remain off track.

The Bigger Picture

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The 2025 N4G Summit was about more than funding. It called for systemic change: embedding nutrition in food systems, health coverage, climate resilience, and gender equality. Every dollar invested in nutrition is estimated to return $16 to the local economy. Yet malnutrition still costs Ghana an estimated 6.4 per cent of its GDP annually. That is not a public health statistic. It is an economic emergency.

The National Development Planning Commission (NDPC) has acknowledged that converting summit outcomes into actionable change requires transparent policy dialogue and locally driven solutions.

Commitments made in Paris must be tracked, funded, and implemented in Ghana’s communities. Programmes must move from pilot scale to national coverage. That will not happen without sustained political will, dedicated domestic financing, and public accountability.

Commitments made on global stages matter. But they only become meaningful when they translate into services in communities. The question is not what Ghana promised in Paris. It is what Ghana delivers at home.

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Feature article by Women, Media and Change under its Nourish Ghana: Advocating for Increased Leadership to Combat Malnutrition project

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Nutrition

ProofreadCabbage stew made with Coconut oilProofread

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Coconut oil cabbage stew
Nutrition for growth is essential

Cabbage is very rich in fibre, the main supplier of roughage. This helps the body retain water and it maintains the bulkiness of the food as it moves through the bowels.

Thus, it is a good remedy for constipation and other digestion-related problems.

Ingredients

-1 large cabbage

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– 4 large fresh tomatoes

– 1 large onion

– Pepper

-Garlic

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-2 large salmon

-1 tin of mackerel

-2 large green pepper

-Salt to taste

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Preparation

-Chop cabbage roughly and wash in a large pot of water

-Pour vinegar on it and wait until you make other preparations. Then drain.

-Heat coconut oil in a saucepan over medium heat

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-Cook and stir onion in hot oil until onion turns dark brown.

-Blend tomatoes, green pepper, garlic and onion and add to the oil

-Add tomato paste, mackerel and salmon to stew

-Add cabbage, stir and cover to cook for 7 – 10 minutes

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-Allow to simmer when it is soft and serve with rice, yam etc.

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