Serves 4 as a main dish; 8 as a first course
15 minutes prep time; 30 minutes stove time
The soup holds for 4 days in the refrigerator and freezes for up to 3 months
Cuban black bean soup ranks with France’s steak frites and Italy’s
spaghetti with red sauce as a national obsession. It is a touchstone
dish of the Caribbean. Usually made with dried beans (and
de;nitely worth the extra time when you have it), the dish can
nonetheless be adapted to a streamlined model with canned beans.
One way to make up for the lack of long simmering is to blend
the beans and some liquid into a highly Favored sauté and give
everything a short time on the stove.
The soup blossoms with a rest o9 the heat, and an overnight stay
in the refrigerator gives it even fuller flavor.
This soup demands a ;nish of onion and lime juice or vinegar
(sherry vinegar is our pick).
1 or 2 meaty smoked ham hocks (about 1½ pounds)
Good-tasting extra-virgin olive oil
3 whole cloves
2 medium to large onions, chopped into ½-inch dice
1 small to medium green bell pepper, cut into ½-inch
pieces
1 small to medium red bell pepper, cut into ½-inch
pieces
2 teaspoons kosher salt2 14-ounce cans chicken or vegetable broth
6 large garlic cloves, coarse chopped
3 bay leaves, broken
2 teaspoons ground cumin
1½ teaspoons dried oregano
¾ to 1 teaspoon fresh-ground black pepper
3 generous tablespoons tomato paste
Three 15-ounce cans black beans, drained and rinsed
3 limes, halved or about ½ cup sherry, wine, cider, or
palm vinegar
GARNISHES
1 cup chopped mild onion
½ cup chopped fresh coriander leaves
Hot sauce
1. Trim the meat away from the ham hock bone, cutting it into
small pieces. Don’t be too fussy; leaving some on the bone is ;ne.
Film the bottom of a 10-quart stockpot with olive oil and heat over medium-high heat. Stir in the meat, bone, cloves, onions, bell
peppers, and salt. Sauté for 8 minutes, stirring occasionally, or until
the vegetables are sizzling and there’s a brown glaze on the bottom
of the pan (the vegetables need not brown, and take care not to let
that glaze blacken).
2. Add a little of the broth along with the garlic, bay leaves,
cumin, oregano, black pepper, and tomato paste. With a wooden
spatula, scrape up the glaze as you simmer the mix on mediumhigh heat for 3 minutes. Then add the beans and the remaining
broth. Adjust the heat so the soup bubbles gently. Cover the pot
tightly, and cook for 20 minutes.
3. Stir in the juice from 2½ limes or ⅓ cup of the vinegar. Taste3. Stir in the juice from 2½ limes or ⅓ cup of the vinegar. Taste
the soup for seasoning. Adjust salt, pepper, and lime juice or
vinegar to taste.
4. Ladle the soup into bowls, topping each serving with a
heaping tablespoon of chopped onion and a little fresh coriander.
Have the hot sauce on the table. In Cuban style, you could ladle the
stew over
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