![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhei4wFtP9jZKOVEGQGdyC2s7brp3lIOxu31lle_E1dXzrwyso7RQroWCKcQTFgwNY4I93Mb8qj54GlP4hxlGbdiLG8p01b_xZQEQWPhnILGfIby8s_1dMgOqVP-MrdhIoZEWxp9Yq9onfBvZZ0/s640/indian_mung_soup.jpg)
My regular readers may have noticed that posting has been light here at Lisa's Kitchen lately. I hope to be back to my regular cooking habits and hence blogging frequency too. In the meantime, I share this nourishing soup containing one of my very favorite legumes.
Widely cultivated in the Far East and Indian subcontinent, the sad neglect of the bright green mung bean deprives busy cooks elsewhere of a nourishing and time-saving friend. Soaked overnight, mung beans cook in as little as 20 minutes and provide an easily digestible source of protein, dietary fiber as well as thiamine, iron, magnesium, phosphorus, potassium and copper. Best of all, the mild and slightly astringent taste of mung beans pairs easily with almost any variety of vegetables and spices for simple, wholesome and delicious dishes that form a complete meal when served with rice or other grains.
Use this recipe as a simple template for quick and easy mung bean and vegetable soups, adjusting spices to suit your taste and incorporating your own favorite vegetables at intervals suited to their cooking times. In this case I used three carrots added with the beans at the beginning of boiling, and half a cup of fresh garden peas 5 minutes before finishing. Wholesome, warming and delicious, this mung bean and vegetable soup is thick enough to serve on a bed of rice or on its own in a bowl, and is a satisfying dinner solution when time is a cook's precious commodity.
Asafetida powder — the ground resin of a fennel-like plant found in Asia — is a pungent spice reminiscent of onions and garlic but far more digestible (many Indians avoid onions and garlic altogether in favor of asafetida). It is easily found in Indian and Asian grocers, and should be added to hot oil for only a few moments. If you don't have asafetida, add one clove of minced or crushed garlic with the other spices.
![]() |
Recipe by Lisa Turner Cuisine: Indian Published on September 27, 2019 Simple, quick and nourishing all-purpose midweek soup with mixed vegetables, creamy mung beans and gentle Indian spicing Preparation: 10 minutes Cooking time: 20 to 30 minutes ![]() Ingredients:
|
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi_oMh-nAXMNtqiHeuknTTYBIJPFIt3rFQDTCQAFl_zXGy4JpABtaFe0Y5IYXmEyTt2Upa8owdacgyeJ6cZYdaXRTy_31Z2BRX_JVw_w4ULV-omzTdkeY6FQBGskpmqpSbubePjKyydsly0c9br/s640/indian_mung_soup2.jpg)
Other mung bean dishes you may enjoy:
Indian Sour Mung Bean Soup
Mung Bean and Coconut Soup
Mung Bean and Tamarind Dal
West Bengali Mung Bean & Tomato Soup
On the top of the reading stack: Crime and Punishment
Audio Accompaniment: Vibrant Forms II
source : www.foodandspice.com , www.jogjacamps.blogspot.com , www.tutsdot.blogspot.com , www.ferdinblog.blogspot.com
0 Response to "Mung Bean and Vegetable Soup"
Post a Comment