Turkish Main

Kuru Fasulye

Turkish white bean stew cooked with tomato, onion and optional meat.

15 minsPrep time
1 hr 40 minsCook time
Serves 2Servings
EasyDifficulty
Kuru Fasulye
About this dish

Kuru Fasulye: the story on the plate

Kuru fasulye is one of Turkey’s great everyday dishes, especially loved with rice pilaf and pickles.

Historical background

Kuru fasulye is one of Turkey’s great everyday dishes, especially loved with rice pilaf and pickles.

Why it is famous

Kuru Fasulye is included because it adds a recognisable but still specific part of Turkish food culture, helping the country collection feel broader than only generic kebabs and baklava.

Cultural significance

Turkish cooking sits between Anatolia, the Ottoman court, Istanbul street food, the Black Sea, the Aegean and neighbouring food traditions. It values bread, grains, yoghurt, herbs, lamb, fish, vegetables, rice, pastry and carefully balanced sweets.

Nutrition

Estimated nutrition per serving

Useful for meal planning and calorie-aware recipe browsing.

560Calories
34gProtein
38gCarbs
28gFat

Estimated from recipe quantities and typical ingredients; review before publishing formal nutritional claims.

Ingredients

What you need

  • 200 dried white beans, soaked
  • 125 diced beef or lamb, optional
  • 0.5 onion, chopped
  • 1 butter
  • 0.5 tomato paste
  • 0.5 paprika
  • 0.5 dried chilli, optional
  • 450 water or stock
  • fine sea salt, Season to taste.
Method

Step-by-step method

Follow the recipe in order, tasting and adjusting seasoning where needed.

  1. Cook soaked beans until nearly tender, then drain.
  2. Brown meat if using, then soften onion in butter.
  3. Add tomato paste and paprika and cook until darkened.
  4. Add beans and water or stock, then simmer until creamy and tender.
  5. Serve with rice, pickles and raw onion.
Cook smarter

Tips, storage and serving advice

Shopping tips

Prioritise the defining ingredient first: good lamb, fresh fish, thick yoghurt, ripe tomatoes, proper filo or kadayıf, quality rice, fragrant herbs or fresh spices.

Ingredient quality

Use thick yoghurt, fresh herbs, real butter or olive oil, and spices that still smell alive. Drain wet vegetables, fish or dairy before cooking where firmness matters.

Common mistakes

Common mistakes are rushing onion bases, adding too much liquid, under-seasoning grains, using watery yoghurt, burning butter or serving pastry after it has gone soft.

Chef’s tips

Let the main ingredient lead. Turkish food often works through contrast: yoghurt and chilli butter, lemon and herbs, smoke and soft aubergine, syrup and crisp pastry.

How to know it is cooked

Follow the visual cues: tender meat, glossy sauce, soft rice, crisp pastry, bubbling cheese, creamy soup or a pudding that holds its shape.

Plating advice

Serve simply and generously. Use warm plates for kebabs and stews, shallow bowls for soups, and small plates for mezze and desserts.

Make ahead

Prepare doughs, fillings, stews, syrups, rice mixtures and yoghurt sauces ahead where possible; finish frying, grilling or dressing close to serving.

Storage and reheating

Store covered in the fridge for up to 2 days where suitable. Seafood, fried foods and delicate pastries are best eaten the same day. Reheat stews, rice and soups gently with a splash of liquid. Re-crisp pastry in an oven. Do not aggressively reheat yoghurt sauces or delicate fish.