Broad Beans
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Broad Beans vary in shape and colour, the most commonly-sold ones being brown. They grow in large pods that hold around 5 beans per pod.
You can generally buy them fresh and still in the pod, or podded and dried. Young beans can be cooked in their pod and eaten pod and all, or you can pod them, and serve them uncooked in salads or antipasti. As the beans get older later in the season, each bean must be "shelled", plus have the skin removed on each bean. The beans are similar in shape and texture to Lima beans, without being as starchy.
Some people consider these the meatiest-tasting beans.
Cooking Tips for Broad Beans
Simmer on stove for two to three hours, or pre-soak for 12 hours and pressure cook for 25 minutes.
When you are cooking them with other items (stews or casseroles, for instance), allow a longer cooking time than you would for other beans. Never salt the water when boiling as it will toughen the skin.
Broadbeans do not mash easily; when mashing, use either a food processor or a mortar and pestle.
Nutrition for Broad Beans
Some people of Mediterranean descent are allergic to mature Broad Beans, so it would be wise to try just a few initially. Apparently people with Parkinson's Disease will want to consult a physician before adding Broad Beans to their diets.
1 pound (450g) of fresh, unpodded Broad Beans = 3 oz (90g) of podded, frozen Broad Beans
1 cup cooked = 170g = 6 oz
Storage Hints for Broad Beans
History Notes for Broad Beans
One account of the death of the Ancient Greek philosopher, Pythagoras, has him being caught by a mob at the edge of a Broad Bean field, which he was too terrified to enter to escape through. Some have theorized that he may have been allergic to the beans, and even have developed a pathological fear of them in general. This may have been why, they hypostulate, why he taught his followers to avoid all beans in general.
Literature & Lore
In Lac-Saint-Jean, Quebec, "soupe aux gourganes" (Broad Bean soup) is a local specialty.
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