Literature DB >> 3154300

Culinary practices and consumption characteristics of common beans at the rural home level.

R Bressani1, D A Navarrete, A García Soto, L G Elías.   

Abstract

A survey was carried out on housewives of rural bean-producing areas for the purpose of collecting information on bean selection procedures, culinary practices and bean consumption in rural homes from four departments of northeastern Guatemala. The study sample consisted of 10 families selected at random from each of 19 municipalities. The questionnaire used had been pretested in two rural communities not included in the study sample. As already shown by other INCAP surveys of this nature, it was found that all families consumed common black beans, and on rare occasions beans of different color or species. With respect to cooking practices, it was found that beans are not usually soaked prior to cooking, and that few housewives add salt at the beginning of cooking. Two fractions are usually obtained, the cooked beans and the cooking broth. Another finding was that beans are consumed in four preparations: cooked whole, strained and fried, ground and fried, and cooked and fried. Bean broth is consumed by both adults and children, and a thick broth is preferred since it is considered to be more nutritious and better tasting. Children begin to consume bean broth as early as two months of age, and beans at 14 months. The average amount of broth ingested was 62 g, and whole cooked beans, 70 g. Mothers surveyed indicated that broth was administered to children because: it was nutritious (56% of the mothers); in order to teach children how to eat (15%); or because of its taste (9%). Regarding the hard-to-cook phenomenon, 32% of the housewives indicated that storage time was responsible for it, while 17% attributed this condition to bad seeds, and 18% to sun-drying or inadequate postharvest practices and to their preparation for consumption. Although the survey confirmed the importance that common beans have in rural diets, the main finding was that the first bean food product fed to children is the bean-cooking liquor or broth, which on the average contains 8.52% of total solids and 1.48% protein.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 3154300

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Latinoam Nutr        ISSN: 0004-0622


  2 in total

1.  Positive attitudes toward legumes are associated with legume intake among adults in Puerto Rico.

Authors:  Elena C Hemler; Martha Tamez; José F Rodríguez Orengo; Josiemer Mattei
Journal:  Nutr Res       Date:  2022-03-25       Impact factor: 3.876

2.  Preliminary study of the factors that determine nutrient composition of bean-cooking broth.

Authors:  R Bressani; A García-Soto; L Estrada Ligorría; J L Sosa
Journal:  Plant Foods Hum Nutr       Date:  1988       Impact factor: 3.921

  2 in total

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