Nigeria jollof in the Slow cooker
Set in the morning, eat at 6. The most forgiving way to make jollof.

Nigeria jollof rice can be made in the slow cooker. Set in the morning, eat at 6. The most forgiving way to make jollof. Total time is approximately 240 minutes. The method uses long-grain parboiled rice with vegetable oil as the cooking fat.
At a glance
Why cook Nigeria jollof in the slow cooker?
Every appliance extracts something different from Nigeria jollof rice. The slow cooker set in the morning, eat at 6. The most forgiving way to make jollof. For Nigeria jollof specifically, the crock pot interacts with the vegetable oil base and scotch bonnet pepper seasoning in ways that change the final colour, crust formation, and aroma intensity. Nigeria jollof is traditionally made over firewood or charcoal — adapting it to the slow cooker means deciding which part of that smoke character you are preserving and which you are letting go. The key variables — oil ratio, stock volume, and lid timing — all need adjusting from the stovetop baseline.
Nigeria jollof uses long-grain parboiled rice, which responds well to low-and-slow heat, but the absence of evaporation means you must deliberately reduce your liquid by 20% to avoid a soupy result.
- + Set and forget
- + Rich, deep flavour from the long simmer
- + Great for parties
- − No crust
- − Rice can soften past al dente
- − 6+ hour commitment
Method
- 01
Reduce pepper base on the stove first (this step is non-negotiable)
- 02
Transfer to crock with par-cooked rice and stock
- 03
Low for 4 hours OR high for 2
- 04
Stir once at hour 3 if low
- 05
Switch to warm and let it sit 30 min before serving
Frequently asked
Can you make Nigeria jollof in the slow cooker?
Set in the morning, eat at 6. The most forgiving way to make jollof.
How long does it take?
Approximately 240 minutes including prep and rest.
Does the slow cooker give you a smoky crust?
No crust