Almost Turkish Recipes

Barbunya Beans (Barbunya Pilaki)



























Barbunya is a very common and popular olive oil dish (which is cooked always/only with olive oil and served cold) in Turkey. Delicious fresh barbunya beans appear in farmer's markets in midsummer. What people usually do is to buy large amounts of barbunyas, pod them, and then keep them in the freezer for the winter. Fresh barbunyas are always preferred to dried ones. However, since it's impossible to find fresh barbunyas here in the States, I learned to love dried barbunyas. After years of uncertainty and confusion I am finally positive that barbunyas are roman / red beans.


If you cannot find barbunya (roman) beans, you can try the same recipe with pinto beans, which look exactly like barbunyas. Pintos taste different than barbunyas, but still may surprise you with this recipe.


2 cups of dried barbunya beans
2 big fresh tomatoes diced or 1 can petite diced tomato
2 medium onions, diced
3 cloves of garlic, sliced
2 green (preferably banana) peppers, seeded and chopped
2 carrots, cut in rounds or half rounds
1/2 cup olive oil
1 tsp sugar
2 cups hot water
1/2 bunch parsley, leaves coarsely chopped.
salt


-Soak barbunyas in water over night and before cooking boil until soft, approximately for an hour. If you have a pressure cooker you don't need to soak them overnight; pressure-cook dried barbunyas for 35 minutes. Drain and rinse
-Heat oil in a big pot. Add onions, garlic, and green peppers. Stir for 4-5 minutes
-Add the carrots and cook until carrots get kind of soft.

-Add the tomatoes and cook until they turn darker red (basically until they're cooked).
-Add barbunyas and stir for 5 mins. Add salt, sugar, and water. Turn down the heat. Cover and cook for 30 minutes
-Garnish with parsley and lemon slices


















You can try it warm, but Barbunya like all Turkish olive oil dishes is served and best when it's cold.
Squeeze lemon juice on barbunyas before you eat.


PS: Most people use potato (one, peeled and diced added with carrots) when they cook barbunyas, but I prefer not to.

34 comments:

  1. Anonymous1:55 PM

    Yummy....this is my favorite dish ever! I love this in the summer where I can buy them fresh from the farm. Your recipe is exactly like mine. I tried this with olive oil and vegetable oil and it comes out the best with olive oil.

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  2. Krista, where do you buy them fresh? Which farm? I'd love to find fresh barbunyas here.

    Sher, I agree with Krista; barbunyas are great. If you love beans (I absolutely do), I'm sure you'll like barbunyas.

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  3. what about borlotti beans? Are they the same as roman beans, they look exactly like the ones on the pic! The recipe makes me hungry!

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    Replies
    1. Yes... borlotti beans go by a number of names... Roman beans, cranberry beans, and less commonly but regionally as Madeira beans, tongues of fire beans, wren’s egg beans, cacahuate (peanut) beans in Mexico and more... probably a testament to their adaptability to various climes and popularity as a staple. I discovered them at age 60 and they are probably my favorite bean (chickpeas have to be a close second, at least)

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  4. I love beans in cold salad. Your salad does look very attractive.
    In the area I live, it's hard (impossible) to see any fresh beans or peas, in season or not... don't know where they go?!

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  5. Burcu,
    I've just tagged you for the Butterful Effect Meme... hope you like to join :D

    ReplyDelete
  6. Anonymous6:38 AM

    I find them in the summer time at a farm they grow them there. They usually come out in August. In Boston they also have a hay market every weekend they have them there also.
    I can't find them in the winter but my sister sometimes finds them at the market.

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  7. Hey Ilva, I checked Cook's Thesaurus and it says borlottis and romans are the same :)

    Thanks Gattina! I'll do join as soon as I'm done reading papers and grading.

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  8. Beautiful photos and delicious ingredients - who could ask for more. Thanks for sharing.

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  9. I love your entry. I haven't heard of this type of bean before, or the idea of a dish with beans, olive oil, tomatoes, and herbs served cold either. I think it would taste great. To me learning new things ike this is what Weekend Herb Blogging is all about, so thanks for sharing this.

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  10. Thanks Ruth.
    Thanks Kalyn. I know it sounds weird, but it's really better when it's cold. I have more olive oil bean recipes to share :)
    I buy barbunya (or roman or red or borlotti)beans from a co-op here in Bloomington. I've never seen them in a pack, but it's easy to buy them in bulk.

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  11. Anonymous5:26 PM

    I don't have barbunyas, but I have pintos.

    I guess the pintos will have to do until I can find some roman beans.

    It looks great.

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  12. It looks great! Actually here in the Midwest I found these beans fresh at a local farmers market last summer. They were called shelly beans. Exactly like barbunya. But this year we were not so lucky :(

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  13. Buru,
    it's no hurry, please take your time. I'd love to see your meme (later). Thank you!

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  14. Anonymous3:10 AM

    This looks gorgeous! Yummmmmmy.

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  15. Burcucugum aylar gecti biliyorum. Fakat bugün tesadüfen merak ettigin birsey aklima geldi. Sen belki cevabini coktan aldin fakat bulmasi ne kadar basitmis diye yaziyorum;) Barbunin bahsi gecti bugün. Bu alacali fasulyegiller her dilde bir sorun;) Kimse o ismi kullanmasa da Borlotti-Bohnen (borlotti beans) oldugunu ögrendim EVIMDEKI kitapta. Ingilizcesi nedir ki derken zamaninda bu konularin en önemli kaynaklarindan olan bir yere bakmadigimizi fark ettimthesaurus'a! :) Belki isine yarar hala bir kararsizlik varsa barbunya ararken;)
    Sevgiler

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  16. Anonymous7:54 PM

    Coffeepot barbunya beans are exactly what you have. Barbunya means pinto beans in Turkish language.

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  17. Anonymous,
    "Barbunya" is a Turkish term. Dilek is right, barbunya beans are borlotti /roman beans in English. And although barbunya looks like pinto, they taste completely different.

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  18. Great recipe - I've spent half a day looking for roman/borlotti/cranberry/shelly beans, albeit with no success. I've cooked with dried pinto beans quite a bit in the past and there is a big difference IMHO...I did find a producer (Barry Farms on Amazon.com of all places) that apparently has cranberry beans - so I may give that a shot. Thanks again for the great recipe and the mouth watering photos.

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  19. Anonymous5:57 AM

    If your area happens to have a large Hispanic population, try those markets. I've seen large bags of roman beans by Goya.

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  20. Serdar10:11 PM

    Oh man, I'm like looking for "Borlotti" beans everywhere just to make this, one of my favorites, and finally! Yay for Roman beans, yay for this blog!

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  21. I happened to find this recipe on a google search to use the dried Roman beans I found at the store. It is delicious!! Thank you so much for posting.. can't wait to explore the rest of your site.

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  22. I think they are cranberry beans, you can find them for a few weeks a year in San Francisco and Los Angeles.

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  23. Anonymous5:55 PM

    Hello All,
    You can find fresh frozen cranberry beans at Walmart!

    ReplyDelete
  24. Anonymous7:40 PM

    Hi, just wanted to add that you can also add diced potatoes to this recipe. It brings slight starchiness to the dish, and most barbunya pilakis I ate had potatoes, so it is not an unusual addition.

    ReplyDelete
  25. I enjoy reading through your receipe post, I wanted to write a little comment to support you and wish you a good continuation All the best for all your blogging efforts. Appreciate the recommendation! Let me try it out. Keep working ,great job!

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  26. Thanks for sharing this amazing recipe!

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  27. Anonymous1:55 PM

    I just came across this recipe on another blog, which looks like copied even using the exact words and descriptions. Is it legal? (I'm actually turkish, typing in English, weird I know)

    http://lavitavegan.blogspot.com/2012/08/barbunya-stewed-roman-cranberry-beans.html

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you! It is word for word my recipe and the writer claims it a creation of his/her. Unbelievable!

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    2. Seems they've taken it down... I did a search on the site for « borlotti » and couldn't find anything

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  28. Anonymous2:21 PM

    Evet, ben de daha yeni başladım benzer bir blog yapmaya. Özellikle tırnak işaretine alıp bu ya da şu kullanacağım cümleler var mı diye google da arıyorum. Senin blog'un bir anlamda ilham kaynağım. (linkler kısmına geçtiğim zaman bu adresi de ekliyeceğim) elimden geldiğince yazı içeriğini de benzetmemeye çalışıyorum. Diğer İngilizce Türk yemek sitelerinden en güzel resimlendirilmiş ve açıklamalısı seninki. ps. yine böyle birşeyle karşılaşırsam haber veririm :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Kolay gelsin, Berfu ve tesekkurler guzel sozlerin icin. Siten acilinca linkini gonderirsen ben de eklerim.
      B

      Delete
  29. Anonymous2:36 PM

    Teşekkürler :) Aslında site açık ama daha üç beş tane tarif koydum. Zaten okullar açılıyor bir haftaya ve bu kadar detaylı uğraşıcak vakit de kalmıcak...

    yine de link i bu. Eğer çok benzeyen birşey görürsen çekinmeden söyleyebilirsin ben de değiştirmeye çalışırım.

    http://turkishfoodandrecipess.blogspot.com/

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  30. I bought fresh roman beans at an international store on clearance and had to come home to internet search to figure out what they are and for a recipe. Wonderful recipe. These beans are great. The flavor is so different than any bean I have ever tasted. Great, great, great. Thank you.

    ReplyDelete