FUL MEDAMES

Ful Medames served with sliced eggs and vegetables.

'Ful medames' (Arabic: 'فول مدمس') is one of the national dishes of Egypt, often eaten at breakfast. It consists of fava beans slow-cooked in a copper pot that have been partially or completely mashed. Olive oil is often an ingredient, and garlic is sometimes added. Ful medames is served with plenty of olive oil, chopped parsley, onion, garlic, and lemon juice, and typically eaten with Egyptian (''baladi'') bread. Though originally a peasant food, it has long been part of the daily Egyptians' diet. It is particularly renowned for being a very filling dish, with many describing it as being 'like a stone in the stomach'. This has led to it being consumed by many in the Middle East in the early morning meal to prepare for a day of fasting during Ramadan.
The dish's name derives from the Egyptian language: ''ful'' is derived from the Egyptian word for fava beans, and ''medames'' is a Coptic word meaning "buried." The second word hints at the original cooking method, which involved burying a sealed pot of water and beans under hot coals. This cooking method for fava beans is mentioned in the Jerusalem Talmud, indicating that it has been used in the Middle East at least since the 4th century.

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Ful medames worldwide
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Ful medames worldwide


Ful medames was exported from Egypt to the Arab World (particularly, the Levant and parts of East Africa (mainly in Somaliland and Somalia). Ful medames came to the Horn of Africa when the Egyptians captured Zeila in the beginning of the 19th century. From that city the ful extended across the region, spread by Somalis and Egyptians. In Somaliland, ful is eaten with a bread called ''laxoox'', which is highly popular across the region. ''Ful'' is also eaten in Ethiopia, where it is served with flatbread and ''mitmita'' powder. The recipe also spread to parts of Europe, United States of America, Middle East and United Kingdom, brought by travelling Egyptians.

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Recipe and information

Recipe and photos

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