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- Recipe for Chulibu’ul (Mayan Succotash)
Recipe for Chulibu’ul (Mayan Succotash)
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July 3, 2017 -
Peg Kern
This ancient Mayan recipe comes to us from Chef Mario and the late Chef David Sterling of Culinary Yucatan cooking vacation. It’s a great option for a 4th of July cookout if you want an alternative to baked beans! Or, serve it as a side for a Mexican feast.
The name, by the way, comes from the words “bu’ul” (bean) and “chul” (the process of scooping out the last bits of a meal with your fingers) – so you know it has to be good! You can also learn it in Mexico during our cooking vacation in the Yucatan.
Recipe for Chulibu'ul (Mayan Succotash)
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10 minutes -
10 servings -
Simmer -
65 minutes
Ingredients
- 1 lb of espelĂłn beans (or black eyed peas), rinsed and picked over
- 4 c. water
- 2 tsp salt
- 2 sprigs epazote (or 1 tsp dried epazote)
- 1/2 c. lard (or vegetable oil)
- 4 c. fresh corn kernels
- 1 c. white onion, finely chopped
- 1/2 c. green bell pepper, seeded and finely chopped
- 10 oz. tomatoes, seeded and finely chopped
- black pepper (to taste)
- 1 Tbsp dried Mexican oregano (preferably Yucateco)
Instructions
- Place the beans, water, salt, and epazote in a pot and simmer for 30 minutes until the beans are tender but not full cooked. Remove from heat and set aside, removing epazote sprigs.
- Heat the oil/lard until hot but not smoking, and saute 1 c. of the corn kernels until golden, about 4 minutes. Add the onion and pepper, cooking until soft (about 5 minutes). Add the tomatoes and cook about 5 minutes until most of the liquid has evaporated. Add to the beans.
- Pure the other 3 cups of corn kernels in a blender, along with a few ladles of the bean cooking liquid. Puree until smooth, then add to the beans. Simmer over low, stirring frequently.
- Heat the oregano in a dry pan to lightly toast, then pass it through a sieve and add to the beans along with the pepper. Salt to taste.
- Serve accompanied with chopped hard boiled egg, pepita molida (ground pumpkin seeds), tomate frito (tomato salsa), and Kut bi’Ik salsa.
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