Lidia Bastianich's Mussels with Farro, Cannellini, and Chickpeas
Recipe information
Recipe Icon - Master recipes
Cooking:
-
Recipe Icon - Master recipes
Servings per container:
6
Recipe Icon - Master recipes
Source:

Ingredients for - Lidia Bastianich's Mussels with Farro, Cannellini, and Chickpeas

1. 1 c. dried chickpeas -
2. 1 c. dried cannellini beans -
3. 1/2 c. chopped carrot -
4. 1/2 c. chopped celery -
5. 1 c. chopped onion -
6. 1 1/2 c. cherry tomatoes -
7. 1/2 c. extra-virgin olive oil -
8. 1 c. farro or pearled barley -
9. 1 1/2 tsp. coarse sea salt or kosher salt -
10. 1/2 tsp. pepperoncino flakes -
11. 4 clove garlic -
12. 2 lb. mussels -
13. 4 tbsp. chopped fresh Italian parsley -

How to cook deliciously - Lidia Bastianich's Mussels with Farro, Cannellini, and Chickpeas

1. Stage

Rinse the chickpeas, and place in a bowl with cold water covering them by 4 inches. Do the same with the cannellini, in a separate bowl. Soak both for 12 to 24 hours.

2. Stage

Drain and rinse the chickpeas, and put them in a big saucepan with about 7 cups of fresh cold water. Set the pot over medium-high heat, and drop in the chopped carrot, celery, and onion, the halved cherry tomatoes, and 4 tablespoons of the olive oil. Bring the water to a boil, partially cover the pan, and adjust the heat to maintain a steady, bubbling simmer. Stir occasionally.

3. Stage

After the chickpeas have cooked for an hour, drain and rinse the cannellini and stir into the pot. There should be at least an inch of liquid covering the beans; add more water if necessary. Return to the boil, partially cover, and simmer for 45 minutes, stirring now and then.

4. Stage

Rinse the farro grains in a sieve, and stir in with the beans, along with the 1 1/2 teaspoons salt and 1/4 teaspoon of the pepperoncino. There should be about 1/2 inch of liquid covering the beans and grain; add more water if necessary. Return to the boil, partially cover, and simmer for about 30 minutes or longer, until the beans and the farro are tender — add water if needed to keep the beans and grains barely covered with liquid as they finish cooking. When they are done, most of the surface water should have been absorbed or evaporated, but the stew should be slightly soupy.

5. Stage

While the farro cooks, prepare the mussels. Pour the remaining 4 tablespoons olive oil into the sauté pan, and scatter in the garlic cloves and remaining 1/4 teaspoon pepperoncino. Cook for 3 minutes or so over medium-high heat, until the garlic is lightly colored, then add all the rinsed mussels at once. Tumble them around the pan quickly, to coat with oil, and put on the cover. Cook over high heat for about 2 minutes, shaking the covered pan a couple of times, just until the mussels are open, and take the pan off the stove.

6. Stage

Shuck the mussels right over the pan, letting the juices and meat drop in. Discard the shells (and any mussels that did not open). If you like, leave a dozen or so mussels in the shell for a garnish.

7. Stage

When the farro and beans are cooked, pour the shucked mussels and their juices into the pot and stir well — the consistency should be rather brothy. Heat to a boil, and cook for just a minute, to make sure everything is nice and hot. Taste, and adjust salt. Stir in the chopped parsley, and spoon portions into warm pasta bowls; garnish with unshucked mussels if you saved them. Drizzle good olive oil over each, and serve immediately.

8. Stage

To prepare in advance: Cook the beans and farro until tender, following recipe, and remove from the heat. Let them sit in the saucepan up to 3 hours (they will absorb liquid and thicken). Shortly before serving, cook and shuck the mussels. Stir the mussel juices into the beans and farro and heat slowly to a simmer. Stir in the mussels and finish as above.