🍛 Tanzanian Cuisine in Nairobi: A Guide for Students
If you’re a Tanzanian student living in Nairobi, chances are you’ll start missing the comfort of home-cooked dishes like ugali wa dona, mishkaki, wali wa nazi, or a good plate of chapati na maharage. Luckily, Nairobi is not just a regional education hub — it’s also a melting pot of East African flavors, and you can find several spots that bring Tanzanian cuisine to life.
Here’s your go-to guide to where to find Tanzanian food, how to enjoy it affordably, and a few ways to even make it yourself!
🏠 1. Popular Tanzanian-Style Restaurants in Nairobi
🥘 Swahili Plate – South B
A student favorite! Affordable and authentic, this casual spot offers dishes like:
- Mshikaki (beef skewers)
- Maharage ya nazi (coconut beans)
- Wali wa nazi and nyama ya kukaanga
📍 Location: South B, near Mater Hospital
💰 Meals from: Ksh 150–300
⭐ Vibe: Very home-style, friendly to students
🍢 Mambo Poa Restaurant – Eastleigh
Known for its Tanzanian-style chapati, samaki wa kupaka, and amazing pilau that tastes just like home. The nyama choma here is slow-roasted the coastal way.
📍 Location: Eastleigh, near 1st Avenue
💰 Affordable combo meals: Under Ksh 500
💬 Swahili is widely spoken by staff
🐟 The Coast Dishes – Kilimani
If you want a little elegance with your vitumbua, this place blends Swahili coastal cuisine with urban Nairobi charm. They serve:
- Viazi vya rojo
- Mkate wa sinia
- Samaki wa kukaanga (whole fried tilapia)
📍 Location: Kilimani area
📱 Order on UberEats/Glovo if you’re staying in hostels
🍲 2. Street Food: Swahili Snacks on the Go
Nairobi has plenty of street vendors selling familiar Tanzanian snacks, especially near university campuses and student hostels:
- Mahambri & mbaazi (pigeon peas) – Ksh 20–50 each
- Vitumbua – Usually sold in packs or singles at bus stops
- Mshikaki – Beef or liver skewers from roadside grills
📍 Best spots: Kenyatta Market, Odeon Bus Stage, Kariokor
💡 Tip: Ask vendors if they’re originally from Tanga, Mtwara, or Moshi — they often bring their own regional twists!
👩🍳 3. Cook-It-Yourself: Tanzanian Groceries in Nairobi
If you have access to a kitchen in your hostel or apartment, cooking your favorites can be easy! Here’s where to find Tanzanian ingredients:
🛒 Tanzanian Groceries & Markets
- City Market: Find fresh coconut, spices, cassava, and dried fish
- Eastleigh & Gikomba: Bulk spices like pilau masala, curry, and dried chilies
- Carrefour or Naivas: Stock ugali flour, beans, coconut cream, and rice
🧺 Essentials for home cooking:
- Wali wa nazi? You’ll need rice, coconut milk, salt, and garlic.
- Pilau? Get pilau masala, cloves, cinnamon, black pepper, and beef.
- Chapati? Wheat flour, oil, salt, and hot water — super cheap and filling!
🍽️ 4. Campus Life: Tanzanian Dishes at Delight Technical College Cafeteria
Delight often includes East African meals in their student meal plans:
- Special Swahili-themed Fridays
- Chapati, beans, and rice & peas combo lunches
- They even take suggestions from Tanzanian students!
📣 Tip: Talk to the cafeteria manager or student rep if you’d like more dishes from home — many menus are adjusted based on student requests.
🌟 5. Weekend Potlucks and Student Cookouts
Many Tanzanian students in Nairobi organize casual weekend cookouts at hostels or parks like Uhuru Gardens or Ngong Hills:
- Everyone contributes a dish: ugali, mandazi, wali wa nazi, etc.
- It’s a great way to build community, share recipes, and fight homesickness.
📅 Ask around: Delight’s Tanzanian Student Association (TSA) often plans monthly cookouts.
📌 Final Thoughts: Nairobi Feels Like a Bit of Home
From the smoky taste of mshikaki to the coconut aroma of maharage ya nazi, Tanzanian students in Nairobi never have to feel far from their culinary roots. Whether you’re buying from a street vendor, dining out, or cooking with friends, there’s always a way to savor a bite of home in the city.