Haricot bean and lamb soup, with dill

by Dr Antigone Kouris-Blazos

Serves 6-8

Tips:

This recipe is very easy but it takes a couple of hours of simmering on the stove till it is cooked; try cooking it the night before - it keeps well in the fridge for 1-2 days, alternatively you can freeze it.
This soup is like the Greek bean soup 'fasolada' but the dill and tender lamb gives it a unique more delicious flavour and it looks more like a casserole - a great dish for a cold day.

Ingredients
4 lamb shanks
1 cup haricot beans soaked in 3 cups water (adding salt will toughen beans)
2 litres cold water
3 celery sticks + leaves, finely chopped
1 large carrot, chopped
1 large zucchini, finely chopped
400g can chopped tomatoes
2 tablespoons tomato paste
1/4 cup chopped dill
1 large onion, chopped
3 cloves garlic, crushed.
2 massel vegetable stock cubes and black pepper
iodised salt (end of cooking, according to taste)
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil (end of cooking)

Accompaniments: bread, olives, fetta, wine

Method
  1. Soak beans overnight in 3 cups water. Rinse beans after soaking (do not re-use the soaking water).
  2. Bring to the boil 2 litres of water, add lamb shanks and boil for about 1-1.5 hours.
    Take pot off heat and cool down. Place in fridge for several hours or overnight and
    remove fat from the surface. Remove shanks and place on a plate.
  3. Place lamb shank stock (it will appear like jelly if cold from fridge) on low heat and bring to a simmer. Add haricot beans.
  4. Chop onion, carrot, zucchini, celery and add to pot.
  5. Simmer soup for 30 minutes then add tomato, dill, garlic, pepper and stock
    cubes (tomato and stock cubes are added towards the end of cooking because these tend to 'toughen' the beans)
  6. Simmer for a further hour or until beans are tender.
  7. Remove meat from lamb shanks (should be very tender) and add meat to soup.
  8. Add olive oil at end of cooking to the pot (this will retain the antioxidants)
  9. Serve with wholegrain toasted bread. For an absolutely complete meal accompany soup with olives, fetta (try reduced fat fetta) 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...