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Edible Legumes

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Baby limas mature more rapidly and are better grown in Illinois. Soils ... beans to shed their blooms without setting pods. Include both bush and pole types ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Edible Legumes


1
Edible Legumes
  • Introduction
  • Legume
  • Refers to plants that produce edible seeds in
    pods
  • Members of Family Fabaceae
  • Are in more than 600 genus and 13,000 species
  • Many also have a symbiotic relationship with
    rhizobium bacteria
  • Form nodules on their roots that can convert
    atmospheric nitrogen into a form that plants can
    use

2
Root nodules
Pea root nodules
Soybean nodules
3
Legumes
  • Only 22 species are widely grown for human
    consumption
  • Includes
  • Lentils (Lens)
  • Beans (Phaseolus)
  • Broad beans (Vicia)
  • Soybeans (Glycine)
  • Peanuts (Arachis)

4
Legumes
  • Important part of human diet
  • Excellent source of protein when meat is not
    available, preferred, or allowed
  • Characteristics
  • Annual plants
  • Seeds are contained in pods
  • Fix nitrogen
  • Some species are cool season, others are warm
    season plants

5
Peas (Pisum sativum var. sativum)
  • Native to eastern Mediterranean from Turkey
    eastwards to Syria, Iraq, Iran
  • Probably first cultivated in Turkey
  • Were grown as early as 5700 BC
  • One of the most ancient crops
  • Fresh peas first consumed in China

6
Pea Plant characteristics
  • Cool season
  • Cold hardy
  • Plant when temperatures are above 45 F
  • Annual
  • Soil
  • Well-drained
  • Moderately fertile because excess nitrogen causes
    large vines and few pods
  • Also poor nodulation

7
Peas
  • Have hypogeal emergence
  • when the shoot breaks through the soil and the
    cotyledons stay below ground

8
Types of peas
  • Dried peas
  • Not commonly grown in gardens
  • English pea (garden pea or sweet pea)
  • Grown for fresh (non-dry) seed
  • Pods harvested when seeds fully form but before
    they harden and fade in color

9
Types of peas
  • Edible-pod pea (snow peas, sugar peas, Chinese
    peas)
  • Grown for pod instead of seed. Pods are
  • Brittle, succulent, tender, fiber-free
  • Picked when pods are long and peas just
    developing

10
Types of Peas
  • Snap pea
  • Both the seed and pod are eaten
  • Pick when seed and pods fully developed but seed
    not hard or pod not faded

11
Haricot Beans (Phaseolus vulgaris)
  • History
  • Plant native to Central and South America
  • Were cultivated over 7,000 years ago
  • Spread throughout the Americas by time Columbus
    arrived
  • Spanish and Portuguese explorers spread
    throughout the world
  • Both pod and seed can be consumed

12
Haricot Beans
  • Have epigeal emergence
  • Emerges in the form of a hook with cotyledons
    pulled above the soil surface

13
Emergence Strategies
14
Haricot Beans
  • Characteristics
  • Most versatile of all legumes in respect to shape
    of plant, color and shape of pod, and color and
    shape of bean
  • Can be classified according to use

15
Haricot Beans
  • Fresh (snap) beans
  • Pods of most varieties can be eaten fresh before
    they reach maturity
  • Also called green beans or waxed beans
  • When buying fresh pods, look for
  • Firm, crisp pods
  • Healthy green or yellow color
  • Free of blemishes
  • Moisture from around the break when pod is
    snapped in two

16
Haricot Beans
  • Fresh (snap) beans
  • Temperature
  • Love warmth
  • Weeding
  • Need to keep weeds down because snap beans have
    shallow root systems
  • Two types
  • Bush
  • Pole or climbing
  • Must be trellised

17
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18
Haricot Beans
  • Fresh (Snap) beans
  • Soil and fertility
  • Respond to well-drained, friable loam soils
  • Loam is a very balanced soil texture class
  • Respond to fertile soils
  • Are not efficient at N fixation
  • Harvesting
  • Pick when pods and their seeds are immature

19
Haricot Beans
  • Mature (Dry bean)
  • Are harvested after the pods are mature and dried
  • They are shelled and the dry seed are cooked and
    consumed

20
Haricot Beans
  • Mature (dry beans)
  • Are a wide range of different types
  • Examples white beans, pinto beans, kidney beans,
    black beans, Navy beans
  • Harvesting
  • Harvest seed when fully mature and hard
  • Bite test to determine proper hardness
  • Should barely be able to dent the seed

21
Fava Beans
  • Broad bean or fava bean (Vicia faba)
  • Only bean in diet of old world until 16th century
  • Characteristics
  • Named because of its broad, plump shape
  • Pods 7 inches long
  • Contain 5 or 6 large beans

22
Fava Beans
  • Culture
  • Conditions favoring growth
  • Cool weather
  • Pinch back growing tips when first pods form for
    higher yield
  • Harvesting
  • Harvested as green shell or dry beans

23
Lima Beans (Phaseolus limensis)
  • Native to Americas
  • Name came from the seed of the large type found
    by a sea captain in Lima Peru
  • Hard to digest
  • Types
  • Large seeded
  • called Fordhook types
  • Originated in Peru
  • Small seeded
  • called baby limas
  • Cultivated by Native Americans in North America

24
Lima Beans
  • Environmental conditions
  • Warm-season crop
  • Requires 3 to 4 months of warm days and nights
  • Baby limas mature more rapidly and are better
    grown in Illinois
  • Soils
  • Avoid soils too rich in nitrogen
  • Can cause lima beans to shed their blooms without
    setting pods
  • Include both bush and pole types
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