Fuul (Somali-Style Fava Bean Stew)
Updated April 13, 2022

- Total Time
- 30 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 2tablespoons olive oil
- 1medium onion, finely diced
- 5garlic cloves, minced or crushed
- 4large tomatoes, roughly chopped
- 1teaspoon fine sea salt or to taste
- 4teaspoons ground cumin
- 1teaspoon ground coriander
- ½teaspoon ground black pepper
- ⅛teaspoon ground cinnamon
- ⅛teaspoon ground cardamom
- 1(14-ounce) can small fava beans, rinsed
- ¼cup tomato sauce
- 1handful cilantro leaves, washed and roughly chopped
- Anjero or other flatbread, for serving (optional)
Preparation
- Step 1
In a medium pot or deep skillet over medium heat, warm up the olive oil. Once the olive oil is hot, add the onion and stir. Let the onions cook, stirring occasionally, until they are soft and almost translucent, about 5 minutes.
- Step 2
Once the onions have cooked, add in the garlic and let it cook until it softens, about 2 minutes. Add the roughly chopped tomatoes and let them cook, stirring occasionally, for 7 to 8 minutes or until they start to break down. Add the salt.
- Step 3
While the tomato mixture cooks, prepare the xawaash mix: Add the cumin, coriander, black pepper, cinnamon and cardamom to a small nonstick pan. Toast over low heat, stirring continuously, for 1 minute or until the spice mix becomes fragrant.
- Step 4
Add the xawaash mix to the simmering tomato and onions. While the tomatoes finish cooking, add the rinsed fava beans to a medium bowl and use a pestle to mash them until there are almost no whole beans left. Stir the mashed beans into the tomatoes.
- Step 5
Stir in the tomato sauce, 1 cup of water and the chopped cilantro leaves into the bean and tomato mixture. Cover the pan and simmer on low heat for 15 minutes. Stir in up to an additional ⅓ cup of water if the stew gets too thick.
- Step 6
Serve the fuul with anjero, if desired. Leftovers keep for about a week in the refrigerator.
Private Notes
Comments
I am not clear why there is so much confusion regarding “tomato sauce”. The recipe does not call for Marinara or pasta sauce. It is tomato sauce, plain, in a can, easily sourced.
The "sauce" in the name does suggest pasta sauce. But it's tomatoes that have been cooked into a sauce with some spices. It comes in a can labeled, helpfully, "Tomato Sauce". It's shelved with all the other canned tomatoes. Recently companies have been adding extras to the label like basil or garlic. Unless the recipe is very simple, you won't notice the difference. So if the store is out of plain Tomato Sauce you can use one of the others.
Nyt is in my brain!! Made this for the first time last week modeled after the ful served at my favorite Ethiopian restaurant, and following a youtube recipe. Used kidney beans and berbere spice blend. The spice was delish but not quite what I remembered so I will try this. Will also try favas. I serve with toast from good bread, with toppings of minced red onions (lemon juice to cut sharpness,) jalapeños/serranos sliced thin, and hard cooked egg. Truly the breakfast of CHAMPIONS.
I used fresh fava beans from the farmers market and the flavor was incredible! My wife and I loved this dish—so hearty and comforting. The leftovers the next day were even better. This one’s going into our regular rotation!
Loved this! We made it with Kidney beans because the stores near us are weirdly bean-less??? Also used cinnamon instead of cardamom because it was $16. Satisfying and vegan! Caution: if you make a big pot for the whole week it is a LOT of beans!
@John Yearwood, Austin Tx I have, it works! I used white meat (turkey, chicken. Pork and cinnamon would be bizarre) but would happily use beef or lamb too. I don't consider it sacrilegious, I'm Italian descendant and pasta sauce always contained meat (even though you ate the two separately, to stretch the food out - pasta with sauce. Meat with salad and bread).
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