Soaking and Cooking Dried Legumes
Dried chickpeas, beans and lentils are far cheaper and often tastier than tinned - they just require planning ahead. Soaking reduces cooking time, improves digestibility by starting to break down oligosaccharides, and produces a more evenly cooked, better-textured result than pressure-cooking dry legumes.
Cooking in the UK?
View this guide for UK kitchens.
Why It Matters
Batch-cooking dried legumes produces a superior product at a fraction of the cost of tins. Once cooked, they freeze excellently and are available instantly.
Step-by-Step: Soaking and Cooking Dried Legumes
- Pick over dried legumes for any stones or damaged ones. Rinse well.
- Cover with at least triple their volume of cold water and leave to soak: chickpeas and kidney beans 8 - 12 hours; black beans 6 - 8 hours; lentils and split peas do not need soaking.
- Drain and rinse. Transfer to a large pot and cover with fresh cold water by at least 5cm.
- Bring to a rolling boil for 10 minutes (critical for kidney beans to neutralise lectins). Skim any foam.
- Reduce to a firm simmer and cook until completely tender: chickpeas 45 - 75 minutes, kidney beans 45 - 60 minutes, black beans 45 - 60 minutes.
- Do not add salt until the last 10 minutes of cooking - it toughens the skins if added early.
Chef's Tips
- Add a piece of kombu seaweed to the cooking water - it helps break down the oligosaccharides that cause gas.
- A pinch of bicarbonate of soda in the soaking water speeds up cooking but can make the skins slip off - use sparingly.
- Cool in their cooking liquid, then freeze in 400g portions (equivalent to one tin) for convenient use.
Related Techniques
Watch this technique on video
In our Cook Like A Pro course, chefs Rupert Worden and Lisa Hinze teaches vegan cooking techniques like soaking and cooking dried legumes with step-by-step video demonstrations tailored for American home cooks.
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