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Hajar's Harira (moroccan Soup)
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32 Servings
100% would make this recipe for Hajar's Harira (moroccan Soup) again.
The National Soup of Morocco. Served each night at sundown to break the Ramadan Fast.
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Hajar's Harira (moroccan Soup) Ingredients
1 cup whole dried
fava bean
s
3/4 cup
tomato paste
1 cup dried
garbanzo bean
s
1 large
lemon
2 quarts water
1/2 cup
flour
2 tablespoons
Vegetable oil
1/2 cup flat leaf
parsley
chopped
3 cups onions
minced
1/4 cup
coriander
leaves chopped
1/2 pound
lamb
cut in small pieces
1 cup
lentil
s soaked for 1 hour 1 in cold water and drained
2 teaspoons ground
turmeric
1 teaspoon fresh
ground pepper
2 teaspoons ground
ginger
2 teaspoons
kosher salt
2 teaspoons sweet
paprika
(the best most vibrant you can find)
2 cups vermicelli broken into 1/4-inch pieces
1/2 teaspoon
nutmeg
- finely ground
4 medium
Lemon
wedges
1/2 teaspoon
caraway seed
s - finely ground
Instructions for Hajar's Harira (moroccan Soup)
Rinse and pick over fava beans if you can't get these then use dried broad/lima/butter beans and chickpeas. Soak overnight in water to cover. Quick soak method; place beans in large soup pot and add 2 litres hot water. Bring water to a rolling boil for 5 minutes. Turn off heat and soak beans for 1 1/2 to 2 hours. Squeeze each fava bean and chickpea between your thumb and first two fingers to remove skins. Set aside.
In large soup pot over medium heat, cook the onions and meat (chicken can be used as well as beef or no meat at all though NEVER pork) stirring occasionally, until onions are soft and transluscent.
Add turmeric, ginger, paprika and 2 litres water. Cover and bring to rolling boil. Reduce heat to medium-low, add fava beans, chickpeas and cook, covered, until beans are tender. 1 to 1 1/2 hours epending on your beans. Finely chop together tomatoes, parsley and cilantro. Add this mixture along with the tomato paste, the lentils, pepper, juice of the lemon and drop in 1/2 of the squeezed lemon and salt to taste. Cover and cook until lentils are tender 20 to 25 minutes.
Bring back to the boil and make a fairly thick slurry (flour and water) with the 1/2 cup of flour. Add this to the boiling soup stirring very briskly to avoid lumps. Boil one minute stirring constantly. Add nutmeg and caraway. Bring the soup to medium heat, you just want a nice slow bubbling.
Add pasta (orzo or small soup pasta can be used as well though I always prefer vermecelli) and cook until soft. Taste and add salt to taste and adjust pepper. When soup is heated through, ladle harira into individual soup bowls. Serve immediately with lemon wedges, Moroccan flat bread or crusty french baquette. This soup should be velvety, not overly thick.
HAJAR's NOTES: There are as many recipes for harira as there are people who eat it though there are essentials. The beans and lentils, cilantro, tomato and pasta of some sort. This is my own recipe based on ingredients and flavors which I enjoyed from other hariras. Harira is eaten all year, not only at Ramadan though it would not be Ramadan without it! This soup along with others is used traditionally for breakfast at sunset. This would be a first course served with accompaniments and bread before moving on to heavier foods. Many break fast with milk and dates; a very old tradition and I doubt that they knew way back when that the combination of natural sugar and the milk protein were a near perfect combination. Some find this a bit too rough for the first thing in the stomach. While harira is the national soup of Morocco, history tells that this is not a Moroccan invention but an invention of the Maghreb of which Morocco is a part. This recipe may look truly daunting though it really isn't. In our house the first course on the table is always either harira, chorba, or one of my stews; usually chicken, dates, pistachios and fruit. Then after that settles we move on to a normal main course without the use of garlic as it is forbidden during Ramadan. Before bed we will usually have a pot of tea and a rice pudding, dessert couscous or just the tea. Shebakia, the very honey sweet Ramadan sesame cookies are always here though we prefer to have them with coffee and not necessarily daily. Harira is eaten all year, not only at Ramadan. In Morocco the nutmeg is ground to a powder which is darker and very pungent. If you cannot find or do your nutmeg this way, purchase the freshest nutmeg that you can find.
Original Recipe By Hajar Ayaou
Each (app 1 cup) serving contains an estimated:
Cals: 163, FatCals: 25, TotFat: 3g
SatFat: 1g, PolyFat: 1g, MonoFat: 1g
Chol: 5mg, Na: 193mg, K: 297mg
TotCarbs: 28g, Fiber: 6g, Sugars: 3g
NetCarbs: 22g, Protein: 7g
Main Ingredient:
Legumes
Cuisine:
Moroccan
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Ingredient Insight - look inside this recipe
Caraway Seed
Coriander
Fava Bean
Flour
Ginger
Ground Pepper
Kosher Salt
Lamb
Lemon
Lentil
Nutmeg
Paprika
Parsley
Tomato Paste
Turmeric
Vegetable oil
Low Sugar
Diabetic
Slow cook
Soup
Snacks
Brunch
Appetizers
North African
autumn
Winter
Spring
Pressure Cook Legumes
Moroccan
Lunch
for
flavor
and
categorization
promfh
[I made edits to this recipe.]
Active Time: 1 hr 30 min; Start-to-Finish: 12 hr
posted Aug 09, 2007 by
promfh
promfh
We first experienced harira in Delhi, India and enjoyed it so much I hunted down recipes to make it at home. This is one of the best recipes for harira I could find. [I made edits to this recipe.]
Active Time: 1 hr 30 min; Start-to-Finish: 12 hr
posted Aug 09, 2007 by
promfh
Hajar
Thank You Steve! For everyone, the photos show coriander seed, but the recipe clearly says coriander leaves which is also known as cilantro. I just wanted to make sure nobody used the seed for this recipe. Hajar
Active Time:; Start-to-Finish:
posted Aug 06, 2007 by
Hajar
admin
[I made edits to this recipe.]
Active Time: 1 hr 30 min; Start-to-Finish: 12 hr
posted Aug 06, 2007 by
admin
Hajar
I am the Hajar who owns the copyright to this recipe. Yes, it is my own recipe and I found this by accident on google. I have no problem with it being reproduced as credit is given to me. One thing I must correct though is that this recipe is NOT Middle Eastern; it is North African nor is it actually a chick pea (hummus) soup. I do have a recipe though for Moroccan hummus soup. I am happy to have joined! Hajar Ayaou
YES, I would make this recipe again.
Active Time:; Start-to-Finish:
posted Aug 06, 2007 by
Hajar
promfh
Harira is eaten all year, not only at Ramadan. Egyptian members of our extended family told us that this recipe is quite authentic. It certainly is delicious in any case. [I posted this recipe.]
YES, I would make this recipe again.
Active Time: 1 hr 30 min; Start-to-Finish: 12 hr
posted Sep 06, 2006 by
promfh
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