Tuesday 7 August 2012

Vaal Bean Curry (Field bean Curry)


I have been trying to post this recipe for weeks and have been hesitating as I am not sure what the biological name for this bean is.  I did some research on Google and found that it is the field bean but then some people were calling it the hyacinth bean as well. 

It's sold in Indian shops as val, vaal or surti val.  Val curry is really popular in all Gujarati homes and served as a dish at most Gujarati weddings too.  

Val grows like any bean as a creeper.   It's green beans are called valor and they look like this:



Valor curry is really tasty too.

It's seeds (you can see them below) can be eaten green or are  dried and become the val bean.


And this is what they look like dried:


Now for the recipe:

Ingredients for 4 servings:

2 cups of Val I cup of Passata ( you can used fresh tomatoes too or tinned tomatoes too) Passata is made from ripe tomatoes that have been puried and sieved to remove the skin and seeds. It's sauce is a lot thicker and helps make the gravy in curry look richer and thicker. Passata is sold in bottles or cartons in most supermarkets and comes in various flavours such as garlic, basil etc. 
 tablespoons of oil (I used sunflower oil) 
2 teaspoons of tempering mix (it’s a mixture of cumin seeds, mustard seeds, 
2 dried red chillies and some ajwein seeds) 
1 teaspoon lo salt (It's healthier than normal salt) 
1 teaspoon turmeric 
1 teaspoon chilly powder 
1 teaspoon crushed garlic 
1 tablespoons lemon juice 
1 tablespoon sugar substitute like Splenda ( or you can used jaggery or brown sugar 
1 small bunch of coriander and some curry leaves. 2 fresh green chillies sliced into small pieces

Method:

1.  Wash and soak the val beans overnight (at least 6-7 hours).

2.  Once soaked, boil them in lots of water until soft.  Val beans do take a lot of time to cook so using a pressure cooker would make this a lot easier. My tip is to soak a large amount of val beans and cook them all and freeze them to use as required. 




3. Once cooked, strain the water and prepare the tempering.

4.  Add all the spices -salt, turmeric,chilly powder, crushed garlic, lemon juice, green chillies, curry leaves, coriander and sugar substitute  to the tomato mixture and mix it all together. If using fresh tomatoes, I suggest that you boil them in hot water to soften them first.

5. Heat the 2 tablespoons cooking oil  and add the tempering mix and allow them to cook until the cumin looks dark brown.  I am told that adding ajwein to the tempering helps to give val nice taste and also helps with digestion.

6.  Add the tomato and spices mixture to this hot oil and cook until the tomatoes go soft and homogenous.

7.  Add the boiled val  to the tomato mixture and allow to cook for 5-7 minutes.  



8. The sauce should all be nicely soaked up by the val. 

Tip: If the sauce looks too runny - you can 1 or 2 teaspoons of chick pea flour or corn flour to thicken it. If you like their gravy to be runny, you can add half a cup of water to the mixture.


9. Garnish with coriander and serve the val curry with rice and chappatis


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5 comments:

  1. Nutritious and irresistible curry.

    ReplyDelete
  2. New blog header is very nice, I love this tasty curry.

    ReplyDelete
  3. flavourful combination looks healthy I like the header too

    ReplyDelete
  4. This is a delicious & authentic curry!! Will try it out soon!!
    Prathima Rao
    Prats Corner

    ReplyDelete

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