Best 4 Ful Medames Egyptian Fava Bean Stew Recipes

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FOUL MUDAMMAS (EGYPTIAN FAVA BEANS)



Foul Mudammas (Egyptian Fava Beans) image

Foul mudammas recipe, made with hearty, creamy fava beans and loaded with flavor from ground cumin, fresh herbs, and a zippy lemon garlic sauce with hot peppers! Don't worry, the sauce is not spicy, but it adds just the right kick. I use a shortcut in this quick fava beans recipe. Serve it with warm pita bread and sliced veggies. Or turn it into a big vegan feast with falafel and sides like tahini, hummus, and roasted cauliflower!

Provided by Suzy Karadsheh

Categories     Vegan

Time 25m

Number Of Ingredients 15

2 cans plain fava beans (13 to 15 ounces each can) (see notes if using dry fava beans)
½ cup water
Kosher salt
½ to 1 tsp ground cumin
1 to 2 hot peppers, chopped (jalapenos will work here)
2 garlic cloves, chopped
1 large lemon juice of
Extra virgin olive oil (Early Harvest)
1 cup chopped parsley
1 tomato, diced
Warm pit bread
Sliced tomatoes
Sliced cucumbers
Green onions
Olives

Steps:

  • In a cast iron skillet or saucepan, add the fava beans and ½ cup water. Warm over medium-high heat. Season with kosher salt and cumin. Use a potato masher or fork to mash the fava beans.
  • In a morter and pestle, add the hot peppers and garlic. Smash. Add in juice of one lemon and stir to combine.
  • Pour the garlic and hot pepper sauce over the fava beans. Add a generous drizzle of extra virgin olive oil. Top with chopped parsley, diced tomatoes, and a few slices of hot peppers, if you like.
  • Serve with pita bread, sliced veggies and olives.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 154 calories, Sugar 9.6 g, Sodium 10.6 mg, Fat 3.5 g, SaturatedFat 0.4 g, TransFat 0 g, Carbohydrate 22.3 g, Fiber 9 g, Protein 0.9 g, Cholesterol 0 mg

FUL MEDAMES



Ful Medames image

The traditional Egyptian breakfast of dried fava beans is also the national dish, eaten at all times of the day, in the fields, in village mud-houses, and in the cities. Restaurants serve it as a mezze, and it is sold in the streets. Vendors put the beans in large, round, narrow-necked vessels, which they bury through the night in the dying embers of the public baths. Ful medames is pre-Ottoman and pre-Islamic.

Provided by Claudia Roden

Categories     Bread     Salad     Sauce     Garlic     Breakfast

Yield Makes 6 servings

Number Of Ingredients 9

2 cups small Egyptian fava beans (ful medames), soaked overnight (and left unpeeled)
Salt
1/3 cup chopped flat-leaf parsley
Extra-virgin olive oil
3 lemons, quartered
Salt and pepper
4-6 cloves garlic, crushed
Chili-pepper flakes
Cumin

Steps:

  • As the cooking time varies depending on the quality and age of the beans, it is good to cook them in advance and to reheat them when you are ready to serve. Cook the drained beans in a fresh portion of unsalted water in a large saucepan with the lid on until tender, adding water to keep them covered, and salt when the beans have softened. They take 2-2 1/2 hours of gentle simmering. When the beans are soft, let the liquid reduce. It is usual to take out a ladle or two of the beans and to mash them with some of the cooking liquid, then stir this back into the beans. This is to thicken the sauce.
  • Serve the beans in soup bowls sprinkled with chopped parsley and accompanied by Arab bread.
  • Pass round the dressing ingredients for everyone to help themselves: a bottle of extra-virgin olive oil, the quartered lemons, salt and pepper, a little saucer with the crushed garlic, one with chili-pepper flakes, and one with ground cumin.
  • The beans are eaten gently crushed with the fork, so that they absorb the dressing.
  • Optional Garnishes
  • Peel hard-boiled eggs-1 per person-to cut up in the bowl with the beans.
  • Top the beans with a chopped cucumber-and-tomato salad and thinly sliced mild onions or scallions. Otherwise, pass round a good bunch of scallions and quartered tomatoes and cucumbers cut into sticks.
  • Serve with tahina cream sauce (page 65) or salad (page 67), with pickles and sliced onions soaked in vinegar for 30 minutes.
  • Another way of serving ful medames is smothered in a garlicky tomato sauce (see page 464).
  • In Syria and Lebanon, they eat ful medames with yogurt or feta cheese, olives, and small cucumbers.
  • Variations
  • A traditional way of thickening the sauce is to throw a handful of red lentils (1/4 cup) into the water at the start of the cooking.
  • In Iraq, large brown beans are used instead of the small Egyptian ones, in a dish called badkila, which is also sold for breakfast in the street.

FUUL (SOMALI-STYLE FAVA BEAN STEW)



Fuul (Somali-Style Fava Bean Stew) image

Fuul is a beloved fava bean stew that has long been woven into the culinary fabric of East Africa, North Africa and the Middle East. It's also known as ful medames or foul mudammas. This comforting stew is served in a variety of ways: slow-simmered whole beans topped with juicy tomatoes and olive oil, or simply crushed and spritzed with lemon juice. This recipe is for Somali-style fuul, which consists of smashed fava beans and receives its intoxicating smell from the xawaash mix. Fuul is eaten for breakfast alongside eggs and fresh anjero, and is perfect for suhoor or iftar.

Provided by Ifrah F. Ahmed

Categories     dinner, soups and stews, main course

Time 30m

Yield 4 servings

Number Of Ingredients 14

2 tablespoons olive oil
1 medium onion, finely diced
5 garlic cloves, minced or crushed
4 large tomatoes, roughly chopped
1 teaspoon fine sea salt or to taste
4 teaspoons ground cumin
1 teaspoon ground coriander
1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
1/8 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/8 teaspoon ground cardamom
1 (14-ounce) can small fava beans, rinsed
1/4 cup tomato sauce
1 handful cilantro leaves, washed and roughly chopped
Anjero or other flatbread, for serving (optional)

Steps:

  • In a medium pot or deep skillet over medium heat, warm up the olive oil. Once the olive oil is hot, add the onion and stir. Let the onions cook, stirring occasionally, until they are soft and almost translucent, about 5 minutes.
  • Once the onions have cooked, add in the garlic and let it cook until it softens, about 2 minutes. Add the roughly chopped tomatoes and let them cook, stirring occasionally, for 7 to 8 minutes or until they start to break down. Add the salt.
  • While the tomato mixture cooks, prepare the xawaash mix: Add the cumin, coriander, black pepper, cinnamon and cardamom to a small nonstick pan. Toast over low heat, stirring continuously, for 1 minute or until the spice mix becomes fragrant.
  • Add the xawaash mix to the simmering tomato and onions. While the tomatoes finish cooking, add the rinsed fava beans to a medium bowl and use a pestle to mash them until there are almost no whole beans left. Stir the mashed beans into the tomatoes.
  • Stir in the tomato sauce, 1 cup of water and the chopped cilantro leaves into the bean and tomato mixture. Cover the pan and simmer on low heat for 15 minutes. Stir in up to an additional ⅓ cup of water if the stew gets too thick.
  • Serve the fuul with anjero, if desired. Leftovers keep for about a week in the refrigerator.

FUL MEDAMES



Ful medames image

Try this brilliant Egyptian recipe from the head chef of London restaurant Ombra. Made using fava beans, it's mashed into a chunky purée along with garlic, lemon and tahini

Provided by Mitshel Ibrahim

Time 40m

Yield Serves 2 as main or 4 as side

Number Of Ingredients 9

400g can fava beans (available online) or broad beans
1 small onion, finely chopped
2 garlic cloves, crushed
100ml olive oil
2 tsp ground cumin
1 tsp chilli flakes
2 large, ripe tomatoes, roughly chopped (or 200g can of chopped tomatoes, if tomatoes aren't in season)
½ lemon, juiced
2 tbsp tahini

Steps:

  • Drain the beans and rinse. Fill the empty, clean can with water and pour into a saucepan with the beans. Bring them to the boil to warm through, then take them off the heat.
  • Meanwhile, in a separate medium frying pan, gently fry the onion and garlic in all but a few tablespoons of the olive oil for 5 mins, then add 2 tsp sea salt flakes, the cumin, chilli flakes and tomatoes. Drain the beans, reserving some of the cooking liquid. Add to the onion mixture and cook over a low heat for 30 mins, stirring often and adding some of the cooking liquid if it looks dry.
  • Using a potato masher, mash the beans with the remaining olive oil, lemon juice and tahini. The final consistency should be a chunky, soft purée. If it splits slightly, mix in a drop of cold water.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 335 calories, Fat 30 grams fat, SaturatedFat 4 grams saturated fat, Carbohydrate 8 grams carbohydrates, Sugar 2 grams sugar, Fiber 4 grams fiber, Protein 6 grams protein, Sodium 3.1 milligram of sodium

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