Just do some of them at a time and play a little game like guessing how many beans will be in the pod or what colour they'll be! That's what I do (when I have beans). Its like opening a present every time.
The Moneyless Chicken says:- Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without.
09-10-2022, 02:27 PM (This post was last modified: 09-10-2022, 02:28 PM by JJB.)
I do mine sitting on the shed step in the sunshine, conning myself I'm doing something productive rather than just soaking up the sunshine. I find it rather therapeutic, like sorting buttons or lego pieces used to be.
I find it depends on the variety how easy they are to shell. Soissons climbing and the dwarf variety I grow specifically for dried beans are easy. While the french bean I grow for eating fresh are far harder to shell though possibly I could wait till the shells were bone dry and then crush the pods.
If you have something you like to listen to/watch it doesn't really matter how long it takes.
I have had a glut of broad beans so after eating a few, and having no room in freezer.I am drying some on the windowsill on kitchen roll. I personally like broad beans fresh and I eat the whole bean. Others in the family prefer to take outer 'husk' off the beans (Helen liked them that way as well) It's such a chew on to do and I prefer them as they come out the pod.
Following on from this, when they are fully dried and wrinkled I presume I just soak them overnight before cooking? If this is the case will they still have a husk once cooked?
"The problem with retirement is that you never get a day off"- Abe Lemons
I only grow broad beans to dry and then use for hummus instead of chickpeas. They generally take a couple of days to fully rehydrate and then I slice them lengthwise to remove the husk. They take about 10minuted to cook. One problem with them is the holes made in several of them by a weevil. I cut these out as I slice them.