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How to Cook Dried Beans

October 2, 2013 By Jessica DeMarra 2 Comments

I use to avoid cooking beans at all costs; the overnight soaking, the rinsing, the simmering, it all seemed like too much work for beans since I could just open a can. At a friends house, she served me a salad with chickpeas in it and I asked her what she did to the beans since they were firmer, meatier and fresher tasting that any other chickpeas I have had. She pointed to a Mason jar on top of her pantry containing dried chickpeas and said she would never buy canned beans again. Well, after tasting these chickpeas I knew I needed to make these for myself.

There is little active time when preparing these beans but they do take some planning ahead. I like to make a large batch for the week and these can be easily portioned out and frozen. Use wherever you would use canned beans but expect a more excellent flavour.

 Canned Beans verses Dried Beans

Once a week I made this large batch:

1 pound dry beans = 2 ½ cups dry beans = 7 ½ cups cooked beans

For a smaller batch:

1 cup dry beans= 3 cups cooked beans

1 15 ounce can of beans = 2 cups of canned beans

I freeze the beans in a 2-cup portion so I can use them wherever a recipe calls for a 15-ounce can.

 To Soak

1 pound dry beans+ 2 tablespoons kosher salt + 16 cups of water in a very large bowl

1 cup dry beans + 2 teaspoons kosher salt + 4 cups of water in a large bowl

Pick through beans and remove any shriveled or broken beans. Soak at room temperature overnight or up to 24 hours. After soaking, drain and rinse thoroughly.

DSC_0446

These are the kind of beans you don’t want in your batch 

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Though these beans take a long time to soak there is very little active time when preparing dried beans

To Cook

1 pound soaked beans + ½ teaspoon baking soda + 16 cups of water in a large stockpot.

1 cup soaked beans + 1/8 teaspoon baking + 4 cups of water in a large pot.

Bring beans, soda and water to boil over high heat. Reduce heat to low and simmer gently, stirring occasionally until beans are tender, about 1 hour. Drain beans and rinse thoroughly. Refrigerate until ready to use.

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To Freeze

Line a baking sheet with wax or parchment paper. Spread 2 cups of cooked beans evenly in a single layer on the sheet. Place in freezer for 30 minutes until the beans are semi frozen. Transfer to a Ziploc bag and mark the bag with the date.

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Filed Under: Dips + Spreads + Apps, Recipes Tagged With: chickpeas, dried beans, how to

Trackbacks

  1. Sprouts and Chocolate: Lemony Za'atar Hummus says:
    January 8, 2015 at 8:41 am

    […] Cooked dried beans make the best hummus. I don’t say this lightly but it is well worth the effort to soak and cook the beans for hummus. Cooked beans take the hummus to a freshness level that canned beans simply cannot and are way less expensive, even organic beans. I buy mine in bulk to make them even less costly and store them in large mason jars on my pantry. […]

    Reply
  2. Sprouts and Chocolate | Baked “Fish” Cakes with Lemon Herb Mayo says:
    October 2, 2013 at 4:20 pm

    […]  2 1/2 cups cooked chickpeas (Do not use canned chickpeas, they are too mushy. See How to Cook Dried Beans) […]

    Reply

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Hello! My name is Jessica DeMarra and I started Sprouts and Chocolate to combine my passions of writing, photography, and vegan food. Starting July 17, 2015, all new recipes on S&C are 12 ingredients or less! Get my free eBook, Sprouts & Chocolate: Uncooked, when you subscribe!

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Hello! My name is Jessica DeMarra and I started Sprouts and Chocolate to combine my passions of writing, photography, and vegan food. Starting July 17, 2015, all new recipes on S&C are 12 ingredients or less! Get my free eBook, Sprouts & Chocolate: Uncooked, when you subscribe!

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