Thai-Inspired Bean Soup
By: Bird's Eye View
Published: Tuesday, February 16, 2010 - 7:51am

Ingredients




1 cup White beans, soaked overnight and pressure cooked until soft
2 red onions, chopped
4 pods garlic, peeled and chopped
Handful fresh basil leaves

5 kaffir lime leaves
1 inch stalk lemon grass, chopped into 1  pieces
Handful fresh grated coconut

2 cups mixed vegetables, diced and boiled
1 tablespoon oil
Salt to taste

2 teaspoons chilli powder
1 tablespoon sugar
Handful coriander leaves, chopped finely

Lime juice to taste

1/2 tablespoon vegetable oil ( peanut)
1 teaspoon cumin seeds
1/2 liter veg stock/ water

Preparation

1 Heat the oil and put in the cumin seeds. When they get toasty, add the basil and lemon grass. Add the onions and garlic and cook, stirring occasionally until brown. Puree the beans and the onion-garlic-lemon grass mixture together with the coconut. 2 In a saucepan, pour in the bean puree, the mixed vegetables and half a litre of water/ veg stock. add the salt, chilli powder and sugar and bring to a boil, stirring occasionally. Blend with the whisk to ensure the bean puree hasn't clumped onto the bottom of the pan. 3 Serve hot, topped with coriander leaves and lime juice.

About


I love the bean family. I love the idea of cooking or experimenting with beans and am always looking for new ways to cook and enjoy them, so I was inspired to do some creative cooking over the weekend by the theme A Legume Love Affair. It has been really, really cold here for the past week ( about 2 degrees C at minimum, and probably lower with the wind-chill), so I wanted to brew up a hearty broth of a soup with beans.
I flipped through a couple of recipe books but nothing there appealed to me so I decided to whip up my own concoction. I wanted something with the essence of Thai flavour to it, but not necessarily a traditional Thai recipe, and wanted to use beans. We had bought these intriguing white beans from a trip last year to Himachal Pradesh, so I soaked a cupful overnight and then pressure-cooked them until soft the next morning.
I luckily had lemon-grass on hand, and have several flourishing basil plants in my roof garden as well as a lime tree so the basil and kaffir-lime flavours were taken care of. I didn't have galangal do decided to go ginger-free for the soup. I always like having lots of veggies in the soup, so I used whatever came to hand - a handful of podded peas, some broccoli, a carrot, one green pepper...The soup turned out brilliantly. It's one that I will definitely be repeating or ringing changes on. It was flavourful and aromatic, brothy yet light and a complete win with  A and my mom and the kids.