91大神

  • Creator Spotlight: Mitya, the Mukbang Creator Who Tells Stories Through Food

    “I got into mukbangs because I love food. Food for me is better than love. It鈥檒l never break your heart.” @mityasfooddiary

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    Hi, I鈥檓, my pronouns are she/her and I鈥檓 a food critic and tourist. My food ick is I have a problem with people who soak garri with groundnut and milk. And for an Igbo person, I don鈥檛 like ukwa. Something people don鈥檛 know is I鈥檓 reticent. I鈥檓 always expected to be outgoing and the life of the party, but I鈥檓 that millennial you鈥檒l find sleeping at the club by 4 a.m.聽

    Confession time. I remember seeing you on my timeline, always eating a lot of eggs 

    Oh no. You know the crazy egg lady. I used to talk about her like she never existed and tried to deny her. Those were dark times. But eating eggs is a big part of my diet. I support Ghanaians; eggs can go with anything. Egg in pepper soup, ogbono, banga and okro soup slaps. I鈥檝e decided not to be in the egg closet anymore, so I鈥檓 coming out now to say I鈥檓 proud of it.

    I鈥 Wow. Was that how you got into mukbangs?

    In 2020, I went on my . While I was there, we got the news COVID had hit. I was with my sister and friends, so we had to return to Warri. It didn鈥檛 take long before there was a lockdown. I鈥檝e always had a passion for food, so when I couldn鈥檛 travel to create content, I decided to start making mukbang content. For me, it was trying to show the world what I鈥檓 capable of through eating, basically, for bragging rights. I got into mukbangs because I love food. Food for me is better than love. It鈥檒l never break your heart.

    Mitya’s first mukbang.

    How many states have you created content in since then?

    I鈥檝e made content in Asaba, in Delta state, which is where I live. I鈥檝e been to Port Harcourt, Yenogoa, Oshogbo, Abuja, Lagos, Maiduguri, Ilorin and Ibadan. Just seven so far. 

    How did you stay safe in Maiduguri?

    After I went to Maiduguri, I realised all the rest of Nigeria sees is stories about the bombing and crises. I鈥檓 not a fearful person; I have a lot of passion for what I do and a 鈥測ou only live once鈥 mindset, so I don鈥檛 care if I die doing what I love. So yes, I went there because I needed to tell their story differently from what mainstream media shows. I understand it鈥檚 dangerous, but there鈥檚 a lot more happening in these places. 

    You鈥檙e fearless o

    Actually, Maiduguri was peaceful when I was there, but the surrounding towns weren鈥檛. In fact, after I left, I heard about a bomb blast in Maiduguri. But before you ask, I can鈥檛 wait to go back there, that鈥檚 how much I enjoyed it. It鈥檚 a secular state, and while I tried to blend in by wearing a hijab, there was no need to. I met friendly people, and they have Christians there too.

    And what about the language barrier?

     I kept meeting people who spoke English. Many people speak Hausa there, but it鈥檚 not a major dialect in Maiduguri. I wouldn鈥檛 have known that if I鈥檇 never visited. I also got to eat a bunny there. 

    What does a bunny taste like? Wait, don鈥檛 answer. What are some other weird foods you鈥檝e eaten?

    I wouldn鈥檛 say weird, but the most challenging thing I鈥檝e tried was the edible worms/tree lava called 鈥淏ayelsa suya鈥. It鈥檚 a major delicacy in Bayelsa, and while I wasn鈥檛 crazy about it, it鈥檚 an acquired taste. In Maiduguri, there were locusts which tasted like dried shrimps, camel meat slow-cooked over gas and a roasted bunny rabbit.  

    The poor rabbit.
    Mitya with edible worms.
    Her eating locust.
    Mitya eating a monitor lizard in Ilorin.

    Does your day job fund your mukbangs?

    Yes, but it鈥檚 not a nine-to-five. I co-own a food consulting company. We hire staff for restaurant development, social media management/strategy, staff training and tour guides. I mean, travelling and eating are expensive.

    What鈥檚 the most and least expensive state you鈥檝e been to so far?

    Both my Abuja food tours were costly. The cheapest was Osun state. At a point, I was even begging people to take my money there. 

    Travel to Osun, noted. Do you have a favourite state you鈥檝e visited? 

    No. Every state has its special memory and amazing food, and I wouldn鈥檛 compare them. Eating local dishes in their states of origin hits different. It鈥檚 like the dish is telling you a story, and my job is to tell stories about the culture of people through food. Nothing connects people like food, not even football.

    What are the best and worst things people have said about your mukbangs?

    People have told me I鈥檒l die soon, or be hospitalised, and I鈥檓 wasting money. Some have said I only do this because a man is funding me. Despite all that, I love when my old followers are proud of me and acknowledge my growth. Or when I leave food reviews, and people tell me it helped boost sales. 

    There鈥檚 also my dada. Being my biggest fan, he鈥檇 comment on every post and help me shoot videos; he still does these things. I got him to participate in a mukbang contest one time, and he won. People loved it. He鈥檚 where I got my appetite from. 

    How fulfilled do you feel?

    I don鈥檛 always feel fulfilled 鈥 sometimes, I get imposter syndrome 鈥 but what I do makes me happy. If I wasn鈥檛 creating mukbang, I鈥檇 be a poet. In fact, I鈥檓 a poet. I just didn鈥檛 blow with that one. All I want from life is to keep doing things that help me express myself. 

    What鈥檚 something you wish food content creators would do?

    I feel like sometimes, we are passive about our Nigerian dishes. I don鈥檛 see the excitement or flair we give western foods. I鈥檓 very pro-African food; my social media is full of it. Afro-fusion is nice, but our dishes are magical on their own. All of us as content creators need to shine more light on Nigerian Cuisine. 

    That鈥檚 why when I travel I make sure to showcase the traditional dishes of that particular region. There鈥檚 much more to Nigerian cuisine than suya, Jollof rice, Egusi soup and fufu, and food content creators across Nigeria can help showcase that.


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