Ann Fisher wrote:It starts, of course, with me screwing up. I made my ham broth over the weekend and thought I was going to start the soup then, so I put my peas in a bowl to soak. What with the usual one thing and another they were still sitting out on the counter soaking two days later and I was afraid they'd start spouting. So I rinsed them off and left them in the strainer to dry out. The next day I finally started the soup.
So by now the soup's probably had at least six hours on the stove (and a couple of nights in the fridge between simmers) and the peas are still hard. I must have somehow managed to petrify them. Anyone know how I did that?
I could be wrong but don't they tell you not to add salt to beans before they soften?
Pie Lady wrote:I could be wrong but don't they tell you not to add salt to beans before they soften? Was there too much salt in the ham broth maybe?
Pie Lady wrote:I could be wrong but don't they tell you not to add salt to beans before they soften? Was there too much salt in the ham broth maybe?
After testing a variety of soaking times, we settled on soaking the beans overnight, a method that consistently produced the most tender and evenly cooked beans. But none of the methods we tested properly softened the skins. The answer was to soak the beans in salted water. Brining the beans, rather than the conventional approach of soaking them in plain water and then cooking them in saltwater, allowed the salt to soften the skins but kept it from penetrating inside, where it could make the beans mealy. Tests showed that gently cooking the beans in a 250-degree oven produced perfectly cooked beans that stayed intact.