Vicia faba, the
Broad
Bean,
Fava Bean,
Faba
Bean,
Field Bean,
Bell
Bean or
Tic Bean is a species of
bean (
Fabaceae) native to
north
Africa and southwest
Asia, and extensively cultivated elsewhere. A
variety is provisionally recognized:
- Vicia faba var. equina Pers. –
Horse Bean
Although usually classified in the same genus
Vicia as the
vetches, some
botanists treat it in a separate monotypic genus
Faba.
Composition

Broad beans in the pod
It is a rigid, erect plant 0.5-1.7 m tall, with stout stems with a
square cross-section. The
leaves are
10-25 cm long, pinnate with 2-7 leaflets, and of a distinct
glaucous grey-green color; unlike most other vetches, the leaves do
not have tendrils for climbing over other vegetation. The
flowers are 1-2.5 cm long, with five petals, the
standard petal white, the wing petals white with a black spot (true
black, not deep purple or blue as is the case in many "black"
colorings
[35357]), and the keel petals white. Crimson
flowered broad beans also exist which were recently saved from
extinction
[35358]. The
fruit is a broad
leathery pod, green maturing blackish-brown, with a densely downy
surface; in the wild species, the pods are 5-10 cm long and
1 cm diameter, but many modern
cultivars developed for food use have pods
15-25 cm long and 2-3 cm thick. Each pod contains 3-8
seeds; round to oval and 5-10 mm diameter
in the wild plant, usually flattened and up to 20-25 mm long,
15 mm broad and 5-10 mm thick in food cultivars. Vicia
faba has a diploid (2n) chromosome number of 12, meaning that each
cell in the plant has 12 chromosomes (6 homologous pairs). Five
pairs are
acrocentric
chromosomes and 1 pair is
metacentric.
Cultivation
Broad beans have a long tradition of cultivation in
Old World agriculture,
being among the most ancient plants in cultivation and also among
the easiest to grow.
It is believed that along with lentils, peas, and chickpeas, they became part of the eastern Mediterranean
diet in around 6000 BC or
earlier. They are still often grown as a
cover crop to prevent
erosion because they can over-winter and because as
a
legume, they fix
nitrogen in the soil. These commonly cultivated
plants can be attacked by fungal diseases, such as Rust
(
Uromyces
viciae-fabae) and Chocolate Spot (
Botrytis fabae).

Mature field bean pods
In much of the
Anglophone
world, the name
broad bean is used for the
large-seeded cultivars grown for human food, while
horse
bean and
field bean refer to cultivars
with smaller, harder seeds (more like the wild species) used for
animal feed, though their stronger flavour is preferred in some
human food recipes, such as
falafel. The
term
fava bean (from the
Italian fava, meaning "broad
bean") is sometimes used in English speaking countries, however the
term
broad bean is the most common name in the UK.
Culinary uses

Broad beans, shelled and lightly
steamed for 3 minutes
.jpg/180px-Fried_broad_beans_(china).jpg)
Fried broad beans as a snack
Broad beans are eaten while still young and tender, enabling
harvesting to begin as early as the middle of spring for plants
started under glass or over-wintered in a protected location, but
even the maincrop sown in early spring will be ready from mid to
late summer. Horse beans, left to mature fully, are usually
harvested in the late autumn.
The young leaves of the plant can also be eaten either raw or
cooked like spinach.
The beans can be fried, causing the skin to split open, and then
salted and/or spiced to produce a savory crunchy snack. These are
popular in China, Colombia, Peru (habas saladas), Mexico
(habas
con chile) and in Thailand (where their name means "open-mouth
nut").
Broad bean purée with wild chicory is a tipical Puglian dish.
In the
Sichuan cuisine of China
, broad beans
are combined with soybeans and chili peppers to produce a spicy fermented
bean paste called doubanjiang.
In most Arab countries the fava bean is used for a breakfast meal
called
ful medames. Ful medames is
usually crushed fava beans in a sauce although the Fava beans do
not have to be crushed.
Fava beans are common in Latin American cuisines as well. In
central Mexico, mashed fava beans are a common filling for many
corn flour-based
[antojito]] snacks such as
tlacoyos. In Colombia they are most often used
whole in vegetable soups. Dried and salted fava beans are a popular
snack in many Latin countries.
In Iran
Broad beans is cultivated mostly in the center of Iran.
The city
of Kashan
has the best
production of broad beans with the high quality in terms of the
taste, cooking periods and color. However the season of
broad bean is very short (roughly for two weeks). The season is
usually in the middle of Spring. When the people have access to the
fresh beans (in season) they cook it in the brine and then add-in
vinegar and
Heracleum persicum
depending on their tastes. They also make the extra amount dried to
be used all the year. The dried one can be cooked with the rice
which forms one of the most famous dishes in Iran so called
"Baghala Polo (
Persian : باقالی
پلو)" which means rice with broad bean. In Iran broad bean is
cooked, served with pepper and salt and sold on streets in the
winter. This food is also available in conserved format in metal
cans.
In Egypt
Fava beans are a common
staple food in
the
Egyptian diet, eaten by rich
and poor alike.
Egyptians eat fava beans
in various ways: they may be shelled and then dried, bought dried
and then cooked by adding water in very low heat for several hours,
etc. They are the primary ingredient in
Ta`meyyah
(
Egyptian Arabic for
falafel), and Egyptians have made deriding
Levantine felafel (made from
chickpeas) as inferior something of a national
sport. However, the most popular way of preparing fava beans in
Egypt is by taking the mashed, cooked beans and adding oil, garlic,
lemon, salt and
cumin to it. It is then eaten
with bread.
The dish, known as ful medames, is traditionally eaten with
onions (generally at breakfast) and is
considered the Egyptian
national dish.
In Greece
Broad beans (
Greek: κουκιά,
koukiá) are eaten in a stew combined with artichokes,
while they are still fresh in their pod.Dried broad beans are eaten
boiled, sometimes combined with garlic sauce (skordalia).In Crete
fresh broad beans are shelled and eaten as companion to tsikoudia,
the local alcoholic drink.
Favism is quite
common in Greece because of
malaria
endemicity in previous centuries, and people afflicted by it do not
eat broadbeans.
Note: The Greek word
fáva (φάβα) does
not refer to broadbeans, but to the yellow
split pea and also to the
legume Lathyrus
sativus, either of which are boiled with salt to the local
variety of
pease pudding, also called
fáva. This creamy
fáva is then served hot or
cold, sprinkled with olive oil and garnished with a variety of
condiments and seasonings such as diced onion, capers, parsley,
pepper, lemon juice, etc.
In Ethiopia
broad
beans( Amharic: 'baqueella') are one of the
most popular legumes in Ethiopia
.
Broad beans are tightly coupled with every Ethiopian life. They are
mainly used as an alternative with peas to prepare a flour called
'shiro' which is used to make 'shiro wot' (
a stew almost
ubiquitous in Ethiopian dishes). During a fasting period in
the
Ethiopian Orthodox
Church tradition called 'filliseta' (
which is in
August), two veggie uncooked spicy dishes are made using broad
beans. The first one is 'Elibet' which is a thin white paste of
broad beans flour mixed with pieces of onion, green paper, garlic,
and other spices based on personal choice. And, the other one is
'silijou' which is a fermented sour spicy thin yellow paste of
broad beans flour. Both are served with other stews and 'injera'(
a pancake like bread)- during lunch and dinner.
Also, 'baqueella nifro' (
boiled broad beans) are eaten
like a snack during some holidays and during a time of mourning
(
i.e. when some one dies). Interestingly, this tradition
goes well in to religeous holidays too. On the Thursday before
Good Friday-in the Ethiopian Orthodox
Church tradition 'tselote hamus'(The Prayer of Thursday): people
eat a different kind of 'nifro' called 'Gulban'. 'Gulban' is made
of peeled, half beans collected and well cooked with other grains
like wheat,peas and
chick peas. As usual,
this is done to mourn the crucification of
Jesus Christ.
'boq'ullit' (
boiled salted broad beans embryo) is one of
the most favorite snacks in the evening (
the common story
telling time in the north and central Ethiopia). It is
particularly a favorite for the story teller (
usually a society
elder) as it is delicious ,and easy to chew and swallow.
Last but not least, ripe broad beans from a broad beans crop are
eaten by passersbys. Besides that, they are one of the gift items
from a countryside relative in a period close to the Ethiopian
Epiphany.
Health issues
Broad beans are rich in
tyramine, and thus
should be avoided by those taking
monoamine oxidase
inhibitor.
Raw broad beans contain
vicine,
isouramil and
convicine,
which can induce
hemolytic anemia
in patients with the hereditary condition
glucose-6-phosphate
dehydrogenase deficiency (G6PD). This potentially fatal
condition is called "favism" after the fava bean.
Broad beans are rich in
L-dopa, a substance
used medically in the treatment of
Parkinson's disease. L-dopa is also a
natriuretic agent, which might help in controlling
hypertension. Some also use fava beans as a
natural alternative to drugs like
Viagra,
citing a link between L-dopa production and the human
libido.Broad beans are widely cultivated in district
Kech and Panjgur of Balochistan Province of Pakistan and eastern
province of Iran. In Balochi language, they are called Bakalaink,
and Baqala in Persian. The elders generally restrict the young
children from eating them raw (when unmatured) because they can
cause constipation and
jaundice-like
symptoms.
Areas of origin of the bean correspond to malarial areas. There are
epidemiological and in vitro studies which suggest that the
hemolysis resulting from favism acts as protection from malaria,
because certain species of malarial protozoa such as
Plasmodium
falcipacrum are very sensitive to oxidative damage due to
deficiency of Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase enzyme which would
otherwise protect from oxidative damage via production of
glutathione reductase
Other uses
Plate showing broad beans, from Thomé,
Flora von Deutschland,
Österreich und der Schweiz, 1885.
- In
ancient Greece
and Rome
, beans were
used in voting; a white bean being used to cast a yes
vote, and a black bean for no. Even today the word koukia
( κουκιά) is used unofficially, referring to the votes.
- In Ubykh culture, throwing beans on
the ground and interpreting the pattern in which they fall was a
common method of divination (favomancy), and the word for "bean-thrower" in
that language has become a generic term for seers and soothsayers
in general.
- In
Italy
, broad beans are traditionally sown on November 2, All Souls
Day. Small cakes made in the shape of broad beans
(though not out of them) are known as fave dei morti or
"beans of the dead". According to tradition, Sicily once experienced a failure of all crops other
than the beans; the beans kept the population from starvation, and
thanks were given to Saint Joseph.
Broad beans subsequently became traditional on Saint Joseph's Day altars in many Italian
communities. Some people carry a broad bean for good luck; some believe that if one carries a broad bean,
one will never be without the essentials of life. In Rome
, on the
first of May Roman families traditionally eat fresh fava beans with
Pecorino Romano cheese during a
daily excursion in the Campagna.
- In
Portugal
a Christmas
Cake called Bolo Rei ("King Cake") is baked
with a "Fava" bean inside. Whoever eats the slice containing
it, is supposed to buy next year's cake.
- In
ancient Greece
and Rome
, beans were
used as a food for the dead, such as during the annual Lemuria festival.
- In
some folk legends, such as in Estonia
and the common Jack and the Beanstalk story, magical
beans grow tall enough to bring the hero to the clouds.
- The Grimm Brothers collected a
story in which a bean splits its sides laughing at the failure of
others. Dreaming of a bean is sometimes said to be a sign of
impending conflict, though others said that they caused bad
dreams.
- Pliny claimed that they acted as
a laxative.
- European folklore also claims that planting beans on Good Friday or during the night brings good
luck.
Cultural references
Notes
- Vered Y, Grosskopf I, Palevitch D, Harsat A, Charach G,
Weintraub MS, Graff E. The influence of Vicia faba (broad bean)
seedlings on urinary sodium excretion. Planta Med
1997;63:237-40. PMID 9225606.
- Nelson L. David, Cox M. Michael .2005. “Chapter 14-
Glycolysis, Gluconeogenesis, and the Pentose Phosphate
Pathway” In Principles of Biochemistry. Freeman, New York. pp.
551.
References
- Dr. D. G. Hessayon
(2003). The Vegetable & Herb Expert. Expert Books.
ISBN 0-903505-46-0
External links