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Ingredients Jump to Instructions ↓

  1. 2 1/2 c Dried black beans, soaked

  2. 1 lg Or 2 small ham hocks

  3. 3 To 3 1/2 quarts water

  4. 3 tb Olive oil

  5. 2 To 3 large onions

  6. 4 Cloves garlic

  7. 3 sm Fresh green peppers

  8. -(jalapeanos if preferred) 8 Berries allspice coarsely

  9. 2 ts Brown sugar

  10. 1 t of

  11. 3 tb Tomato paste

  12. 3/4 c Creme fraiche or sour cream

  13. 2 hours, by which time the beans should be tender. At this point add the sugar, lemon juice, and tomato puree. Cook for another

  14. 30 minutes. Add salt if necessary. Remove the hock, and pick off any meat. If you would like a smooth soup, as mine (the author) was, process the mixture in batches and return with the meat to the pan. Otherwise, for a rougher texture crush with a potato masher. If the mixture seems too thick at this stage, add more water and bring back to the boil for a minute or two. Ladle the soup into bowls, with a spoonful or two of cream stirred in, and serve with a crusty bread. If you are feeling lavish, a couple of spoons of dark rum added towards the end give a Bajan fillip. INFO TEXT: Arriving stiff and crumpled inside and out after an eleven hour flight, this was my first taste of Bajan Cooking, and I ate it late at night trying to imagine the sea beyond a dark frieze of langourous palms. Dense but smooth, with a snap of chili, the soup was both homely and exotic, and very restoring. Barbados produces splendid ham and bacon, and a ham stock is what makes this different from other Carribean variants. Or, as here, use a hock, soaked first to remove some salt. From a book called FOOD MAGIC by Jocasta Innes. Posted by Troy Wade. Courtesy of Fred Peters.

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