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Hi Again,

Ful Mudammas (Egypt)
Fava Bean Stew

The rich man's breakfast, the shopkeeper's lunch, the poor man's supper.
This Arabic saying captures what ful mudammas is. Ful (pronounced
"FOOL"), which means "fava bean," is often eaten for breakfast. Ful
mudammas, a kind of dried fava bean stew, is considered the Egyptian
national dish. For more on ful click here. (worth a read... murray)
http://www.cliffordawright.com/history/ful.html

Ingredients:

3 pounds small dried fava beans (about 6 cups), picked over
and soaked in water to cover 24 hours

1 large onion, chopped

2 large ripe tomatoes, chopped

3/4 cup dried red lentils, picked over and rinsed

2 1/2 quarts cold water

Salt to taste

1. Drain the fava beans. Bring a pot of water to a boil, add the fava
beans, and boil them until they are soft enough to have their peels
removed, about 10 to 15 minutes. Drain, then remove the peel by
gently squeezing each bean so the skin pops off or by using
a paring knife.

2. Place the peeled fava beans in a stewpot with the onion,
tomatoes, and lentils and cover with the water. Bring to a
gentle boil, skim the top of foam and reduce the heat to very low
or place on a heat diffuser. Cover and cook for 12 hours. Don't lift
the cover at all during the entire cooking time, otherwise the beans
will discolor.

3. The cooked fava beans can be eaten whole, slightly mashed,
or completely mashed. Season with salt. Serve with extra virgin
olive oil, corn oil, melted butter, samna (clarified butter), tomato
sauce (see below), garlic sauce (see below), basturma (sun-dried
spice-rubbed beef fillet available in Middle Eastern markets),
fried eggs, hard-boiled eggs, freshly squeezed lime juice,
or béchamel sauce.

Note 1: You need not halve this large yielding recipe because ful
keeps well in the refrigerator up to a week and is excellent reheated.

Note 2: Garlic sauce (or taqliyya) is made by pounding some garlic
with a little salt in a mortar and then adding some coriander seed
or chopped coriander leaves and turning this into the ful or
spooning it on top of a serving.

Note 3: Egyptian-style tomato sauce, dim'a musabika, is made by
cooking a chopped medium onion in 1/4 cup olive oil with six
crushed garlic cloves and then stirring in a six-ounce can of tomato
paste mixed with four cups of water, two teaspoons white wine
vinegar, two teaspoons salt, one teaspoon black pepper and 1ű2
teaspoon caynne pepper and cooking on low for 20 minutes.

Makes 10 servings

http://www.cliffordawright.com/recipes/ful_mudammas.html

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