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Alhaji Suya review – Nigerian barbecue for takeaway and next day delivery

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Jerky, sizzling spice and all things nice in a Greenwich industrial estate

Lockdown, whether in spring or in autumn, can feel like a literal and metaphorical wall blocking you off from other parts of your own city, never mind the rest of the world. While food can offer a glimpse into the wider world beyond your own post code, its effectiveness can be a post code lottery.

Many London high streets offer little beyond anglicised Chinese, Indian and Turkish takeaways. At best they’re like Thomas the Tank Engine – while charming enough on their own terms, your horizons are ultimately narrowed rather than broadened given that they’re little more than cartoonish caricatures. They’re there to be outgrown.

Some parts of London are more blessed with takeaway bounty than others though, with surprises tucked away in the most unexpected of places. Alhaji Suya serves up Nigerian suya and kilishi, grilled marinaded meats and jerky respectively, from a unit in a North Greenwich industrial park having relocated from Peckham. Its location isn’t quite as incongruous as it first appears, with branches of Chinese supermarket See Woo and Swedish juggernaut Ikea – complete with takeout counter and cafeteria respectively – as neighbours.

You don’t need to be a North Greenwich local either, as Alhaji also offers its jerky and a limited selection of its vacuum packed suya for next day delivery throughout London and most of the UK.

The fatty beef or tozo suya is the only one that’s available for both local takeaway and nationwide delivery. Both versions of the tozo suya were consistently but modestly tangy and fatty with a light chew. Some bites were even more pleasing than others, adding a crisper, bouncier, caramelised chew into the mix. The fatty beef wouldn’t be complete without a helping of the powdered spice mix, or yaji, served on the side in a wee container. Slightly sweet and astringent with a citrusy brightness, it should nonetheless be applied with care as its cumulative heat brought bulging beads of sweat to my forehead and left my lips trembling.

illustrative photo of the fatty beef suya from Alhaji Suya
I suspect the yaji was made with liberal amounts of chilli and ginger, among other spices.
illustrative photo of the take away tozo suya from Alhaji Suya
Alhaji’s current Greenwich premises consists of an old-school street food van parked outside its unit in the Angerstein business park.
illustrative photo of the home delivery tozo suya from Alhaji Suya
Cut open the vacuum pack, remove the pre-cooked suya but leave its wrapping of butcher paper in place. Bung it in the microwave for two to three minutes.

As takeaway, you can also opt to have the tozo suya tightly tucked into a wheat flour tortilla along with a hefty heap of onions and a smoky hot dog. The former cut through the fatty, bouncy chew of the tozo suya and the potent spicy heat of the yaji. The hot dog wasn’t really necessary, but it did add some meaty variation and was hardly a distraction.

illustrative photo of the tozo suya wrap from Alhaji Suya
Hardly a sausage fest, but if you don’t fancy a wiener then you can opt not to have it in your wrap and save a quid in the process.

The ‘regular’ lean beef suya was far more dependent on the yaji for flavour and charm. Lacking the tozo’s beefy tang and mouthfeel, but with nothing to take their place, it made for a far less interesting and memorable eat.

illustrative photo of the lean beef suya from Alhaji Suya
Lean pickings.

If you’re averse to beef for whatever reason, then don’t opt for the chicken suya. It was, as expected, desperately lacking in texture and would’ve been a total bust for taste if not for the yaji’s pep. Chicken wings were barely any better.

illustrative photo of the chicken suya from Alhaji Suya
Clucking hell.
illustrative photos of the suya chicken wings from Alhaji Suya
Wings and a prayer.

The bovine-free option to go for instead has to be the lamb. Each meaty morsel not only had comparable levels of caramelisation, unctuous fattiness and bouncy crispness as the the best of the tozo, but packed in a gentle earthiness too. Laced with yaji, the lamb practically sprang out of the foil carton and into my mouth. Don’t overlook the puddle of meat juices at the bottom of the carton, both with the lamb and tozo suyas. Boldly moreish, it’s definitely worth mopping up with bread or drizzling over Alhaji’s citrusy bright and moreish jollof rice.

illustrative photo of the lamb suya from Alhaji Suya
Ram it in your gob.
illustrative photo of the ram suya from Alhaji Suya
The lamb suya was consistently good across multiple visits.
illustrative photo of the jollof rice from Alhaji Suya
This review’s procrastination was brought to you, almost entirely, by me constantly refreshing blue-and-red hued election maps.

The unexpected star of Al Haji’s menu was the kilishi. Not as fibrous or as tough and excessively chewy as some other jerkies, each slender wafer – for the most part – bent, snapped and sheared apart easily with only a modest toothy tug. Already exceedingly moreish, its deepily savoury character was enhanced further by the pre-applied yaji. Its astringent citrusy notes and bristling warmth are, for my money, better appreciated on the kilishi rather than the suya due to the superior grapple factor of its mouthfeel.

illustrative photo of the kilishi from Alhaji Suya
Don’t be a jerk, order some kilishi now.

The Verdict

Even though Alhaji Suya has one too many duffers for a menu so short, I still have a soft spot for this outfit as the best of its dishes linger long in the memory. With the tozo and lamb suyas as well as the kilishi, this small takeaway delivers big, bold and unmistakable flavours – all of which makes it a great gateway into the world of West African food. If more of the nation’s takeaways were like Alhaji Suya, then we’d all be immeasurably better off.

What to order: Lamb/ram suya, tozo fatty beef suya, kilishi

What to avoid: Chicken suya, chicken wings, lean beef suya

Name: Alhaji Suya

Address: Unit 15 Angerstein Business Park, 12 Horn Lane, North Greenwich London

Phone: ‭07459 739273‬

Web: https://www.alhajisuya.com/

Opening Hours: seven days a week noon-23.00 (order 30 minutes in advance).

Reservations? N/A.

Average cost per carton of suya: £10 approx. (£7 per 180g approx. if you order online for next day delivery)

Rating: ★★★★☆


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