The Sourdough School

BALM – Proven as one of the healthiest approaches to bread in the world.

Based in the walled gardens of Dr. Vanessa Kimbell's beautiful Victorian home in rural Northamptonshire, UK, we tutor individuals and train bakers and healthcare professionals in Baking as Lifestyle Medicine (BALM). Personalising bread to your lifestyle, gut microbiome, and unique genetics for optimal health—tailoring fermentation, fibre, and diversity so that your daily bread becomes the foundation of your health.

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List of Legumes for Botanical Blends

beans in sourdough

Legumes, including peas, beans and lentils, are present in all of our Botanical Blends. Why? It’s simple: when you look at a meadow, you instantly see that there are legumes growing naturally everywhere within it. For example, vetch is a wild pea that grows widely in meadows in the UK and provides little edible peas that are extremely nutritious. Not only are most legumes high in protein as a plant-based option, but they are also great sources of fibre, which is important for digestion. Legumes really must be either cooked or fermented over time and then baked, because eating them raw can actually be toxic. This list of legumes for Botanical Blends is an example of the variety and diversity I prefer to incorporate into my breads.

One of the benefits of including legumes in our blends is that, because they take longer to break down, the carbohydrates present in them release more slowly, which is great for blood sugar levels. One of the things we want to avoid when consuming bread is a spike in our blood sugar. Fermenting legumes also actually changes the structure of the insoluble fibre present. Insoluble fibre can cause problems for people who have IBS, but the long, slow fermentation essentially breaks down the insoluble fibre and allows for easier digestion (as seen in this study and this one, both by Marco Gobbetti). Legumes also provide an increased diversity of fibre. Beans, such as red kidney beans, have high levels of polyphenols that are extremely beneficial to our gut microbiome. Studies show that fermentation with legumes can help to increase the bioavailability of these polyphenols, especially when lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are present, such as when baking with sourdough. Lentils, meanwhile, are high in both protein and fibre, and they also contain high levels of iron.

When we talk about eating a rainbow, nothing brings this rainbow to life quite like the variety of legumes on offer to us, including yellow split peas, red kidney beans, blue peas and black lentils. Together they provide an incredible array of colours that are visually stunning.

I am not the first person to think about including legumes in breads. Friedrich Accum, a 19th-century chemist, discussed the use of legumes in bread in his 1821 book A Treatise on the Art of Making Good Wholesome Bread of Wheat, Oats, Rye, Barley and other Farinaceous Grain, writing: ‘Their ripe seeds afford the greatest quantity of alimentary matter. Their meal has a sweetish taste, but they cannot be made into light porous bread without the addition of a portion of wheaten flour. Their meal, however, though it forms a coarse and indifferent bread, neither very palatable nor very digestible, except by the most robust stomachs, is yet highly nutritive.’ The historical significance of this is clear: even in the early 1800s, bakers were using legumes in their bread.

When purchasing legumes for your botanical blends, I suggest checking any Asian grocery shops nearby, as they typically have a wide range and variety of legumes, often sold in larger quantities. My best piece of advice for incorporating legumes into your blends is to make a mixture of them in a large jar: then you can just add a small scoop of them to your blends as needed. I have a ten- or twelve-bean mix at the Sourdough School, stored in a lovely jar that people are always drawn to because it is visually beautiful.

It’s important to note that legumes are very high in nitrogen, which hugely speeds up the fermentation process. Do keep this in mind as you increase the proportion of legumes in your blends. Most of our Botanical Blends include 3–5 per cent legumes. Some of our blends do have higher proportions, even up to 100% legumes. There are many recipes featuring these blends in The Sourdough School: Sweet Baking. Just remember, the more legumes you add in, the faster the fermentation – but at least it is the bread fermenting, and not you!

 

List of Legumes:

Adzuki beans
Alfalfa
Anasazi beans
Appaloosa beans
Asparagus beans
Azufrado beans
Badger peas/Carlin peas
Black beans
Black-eyed beans
Black kidney beans
Black lentils
Black nightfall beans
Blue peas
Borlotti beans (cranberry beans)
Broad beans (lima beans)
Brown lentils
Butter beans
Calypso beans
Cannellini beans (white kidney beans)
Carob
Chickpeas (garbanzo beans)
Dwarf peas
Edamame beans
Garden peas (English peas)
Green beans
Green lentils
Guar beans
Haricot beans (navy beans)
Hyacinth beans
Lupin seeds
Mangetout (snow peas)
Mung beans
Peanuts
Pigeon peas
Pink beans
Pink lentils
Pink peas
Pinto beans
Red kidney beans
Red lentils
Soy beans
Sugar snap peas
Tamarind
Wattleseed (Acacia)
Wax beans
Yellow lentils
Yellow peas
There are legumes growing naturally everywhere in a meadow

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All reasonable care is taken when advising about health aspects of bread, but the information that we share is not intended to take the place of treatment by a qualified medical practitioner. You must seek professional advice if you are in any doubt about any medical condition. Any application of the ideas and information contained on this website is at the reader's sole discretion and risk.

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