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Traditional Greek baked Lima Beans in tomato
salsa
by
Dr Antigone Kouris-Blazos
serves 6-8
Ingredients
Beans
1.5
cups lima beans soaked in 3 cups water
2-3 litres of water for boiling
Tomato
Salsa
2
celery sticks + leaves, finely chopped
1 small carrot, chopped
1 small zucchini, chopped
1 x 400g can chopped tomatoes (e.g. La Gina)
1 small red capsicum, chopped
1/2 cup chopped parsley
1/3 cup olive oil
1 large onion, chopped
5 cloves garlic, crushed.
200-300 ml water
2 massel vegetable stock cubes and black
pepper
iodised salt (end of cooking, according
to taste)
1 teaspoon dried oregano (end of cooking)
Accompaniments:
bread, olives, fetta, sardines, wine
Method
- Soak beans overnight in 3 cups water.
Rinse beans after soaking (do not re-use
the soaking water)
- Place beans in 2-3 litres of cold water
and put on medium heat on stove and simmer
for about 45 minutes or until beans are
tender but not too soft (they will soften
further when they are cooked in the oven
with the tomato salsa).
- Chop all vegetables.
- In a shallow wide pot, lightly saute
onion and garlic in olive oil and add
parsley.
- Add tomato and water and simmer.
- Add the remaining vegetables, stock
cubes and oregano.
- Simmer salsa for about 60 minutes till
all vegetables are soft and it looks like
a thick sauce. If the sauce is too thick
add some more water e.g 1/2 cup. Avoid
adding to much water as this will make
dish too 'soupy'
- Place lima beans in a shallow oven
tray and mix through the tomato salsa.
- Bake in moderate oven for about 45 minutes
or more (the dish is ready when the salsa
looks like it has been partly absorbed
by the lima beans)
Serve with with olives, fetta (try reduced
fat fetta), sardines and a glass of wine.
How many times a week should I have
legume dishes?
At least one legume dish a week is desirable.
This recommendation is based on the frequency
of intake of long-lived populations in
the Mediterranean and in Asia. More than
this weekly frequency is recommended for
vegetarians or for people who avoid red
meat. Legumes/soy are a 'meat alternative'
- this means that when you have, for example,
baked beans on toast, it counts as a 'serving
of red meat'.
See also the
HEC Healthy Eating Pyramid
A
study publsihed in 2001 showed that eating
beans a few times a week can help to reduce
heart disease risk. The study showed that
the more beans you eat the less likely you
are to get heart disease.Read
more...
Last
Updated: November 22, 2001.
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