Stories

Taste of Sierra Leone

Across the Table
Interviews with Welcome Merchant food vendors at Powerhouse Lane. Words by Ann Ding and Shivika Gupta
Kadiatu Bangura, Taste of Sierra Leone – Powerhouse Lane, Parramatta, 2024. Image: Ethan Smart

Powerhouse Lane was a celebration of the culinary and musical landscape of Western Sydney presented across four flavoursome nights on George Street at Parramatta Lanes in late October 2024.

As part of the festival, Powerhouse commissioned fbi.radio’s Snack Time team, led by presenters and food enthusiasts Ann Ding and Shivika Gupta, to conduct an interview series with Marjorie Tenchavez, founder of award-winning social enterprise Welcome Merchant, alongside four renowned local food vendors. Presented here is Across the Table: Taste of Sierra Leone.

Powerhouse Lane is proudly funded by the NSW Government in association with City of Parramatta Council and Powerhouse.

I went to Flemington last year and they had an African Eat and Dance Festival and there was no Sierra Leonean stall there … that’s how the idea came about.
Kadiatu Bangura
A hand holds a white tray filled with various foods, including a rice dish, a pastry, two fried balls and a piece of meat, against a colourful geometric mural.
A display case filled with four neat rows of golden brown pastries and fritters, with deep-fried balls at the top and flatter pastries along the bottom.
A person in a red top with an apron serves customers at a busy food stall which features a display of pastries. In the background is a diverse crowd of people.
A vendor with short hair and wearing a black top stands behind a glass display filled with four neat rows of pastries and fritters at a busy food stall.

Like many much-loved restaurants around the world, Taste of Sierra Leone is a family-run enterprise. Kadiatu Bangura, her twin sister, aunt and mum joined forces to fill a gap in the culinary scene of Sydney after they noticed an absence of Sierra Leonean cooking. In this interview, Kadiatu gives a fascinating look into the cuisine of one of West Africa’s smallest countries.

Inspired by rich memories of a lifetime of cooking for loved ones and the comforting community meals shared during Muslim celebrations such as Eid, Kadiatu and her family gave visitors to their Powerhouse Lane stall a similarly joyful and delicious eating experience, serving bottom belleh pie, jollof rice and Sierra Leonean sweets.