Deborah Madison does it again. That’s what a recipe tester said after tasting this soup. We couldn’t agree more. While there are trendier bloggers and food websites, we keep coming back to this cookbook author for her exquisitely balanced and comforting recipes that are homey yet haute at the same time.-David Leite
Yellow Pea and Coconut Milk Soup
Ingredients
- 2 cups yellow split peas, rinsed and soaked in water for at least 1 hour if possible
- 2 bay leaves
- 3 cloves
- Sea salt and coarsely ground pepper
- 2 to 4 tablespoons (1 to 2 oz) butter, light sesame oil, or a mixture
- 1 large onion, diced
- 1/4 cup minced cilantro stems*
- 1 1/2 teaspoons ground turmeric
- 1 teaspoon ground cardamom
- 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- Pinch of hot red pepper flakes
- 1 (15-ounce) can coconut milk
- Juice of 1 large lime, or to taste
- 3 tablespoons chopped cilantro
- 1/2 cup uncooked white rice
- 1/2 teaspoon each ground turmeric and paprika
- 1/4 teaspoon each cumin seeds and freshly ground pepper
- 1/2 cup yogurt
- Large bunch spinach, stems removed, well rinsed, water still clinging to its leaves
Instructions
- After you’ve soaked the yellow peas, drain them and place them in a pot with 2 quarts water, the bay leaves, cloves, and 1 1/2 teaspoons salt. Bring to a boil, then lower the heat to a simmer, cover partially, and begin to cook.
- Meanwhile, in a medium skillet over medium heat, melt the butter. And then add the onion and cilantro stems. Cook, stirring frequently, until the onion softens, about 10 minutes. Add the spices and 1/2 cup water from the simmering peas, and cook until the water has cooked away. Add the onion to the simmering peas and continue cooking until both are very soft, about an hour in all. Remove the bay leaves and cloves and then purée. Return the soup to the stove and stir in the coconut milk. Add the lime juice, then taste for salt and season with pepper. Stir in the chopped cilantro.
- Bring 1 cup water to a boil and then add 1/4 teaspoon salt and the rice. Give it a stir, lower the heat, and cover the pan. Cook until the rice has absorbed the water and is done, about 15 minutes.
- In a small bowl, combine the spices with the yogurt. In a separate skillet over medium heat, wilt the spinach in the water clinging to its leaves and then chop it coarsely.
- To serve, ladle the soup into bowls, divide the spinach leaves among them, then add cooked rice to each bowl and serve with a spoonful of the spiced yogurt.
Notes
*Do you include the stems when you chop cilantro?
Who can afford to mindlessly toss good ingredients in the garbage? Yet that’s what many of us do each time we carelessly chop off cilantro stems and bid them a hasty adieu. The fragrant little stems are edible and carry just as much aroma as their leafy counterparts. They lend oomph to this simple, pocketbook-friendly lentil soup, as well as just about any other recipe that calls for cilantro, including the fragrant Peppercorn Cilantro Root Flavor Paste. Including them depends on your preference but they will add extra flavor and texture to your recipes. Thank us later.Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
Recipe Testers’ Reviews
Deborah Madison does it again! This is an excellent split pea soup that’s richer than would be expected if you simply examined the ingredients. The soup alone is delectable; adding the spinach, rice, and yogurt brings out a whole additional level of complexity to the flavor that just makes it even better.
This yellow pea and coconut milk soup also reheats very well, though the color will not be as vibrant as the original.
Fabulous! This yellow pea and coconut milk soup has everything that you could ever desire in a dish—great flavors, great textures, and great appearance. The soup itself is reminiscent of an Indian dal, but ever so creamy, with a slightly sweet undertone.
The rice and spinach add a wonderful dimension, a wonderful tooth feel, juxtaposed with the soup and the smooth, spicy yogurt topping. And don’t omit the spicy yogurt topping—it complements everything else perfectly.
After I selected this recipe I began to have second thoughts. All those ingredients, all those steps, all those pans, and the blender too. When the soup was simmering and the smells began to fill my kitchen, I returned to my original thought that all those spices could blend into some really great flavor.
Blooming the spices by cooking them in the butter and onions eliminated any raw overtones and they had, as anticipated, evolved into a fantastically aromatic seasoning.
Thanks to a beautiful bunch of spinach from the farmers market and some leftover coconut milk, I had enough of the non-standard pantry items for this yellow pea and coconut milk soup to convince me to try it. That left me needing only the yellow split peas and a bunch of cilantro, which is easy enough considering the long-ish list of ingredients.
I soaked my yellow split peas for 5 hours and they cooked until softened in the 1 hour total mentioned in the recipe. This occurred despite the addition of salt to the beans right from the start of the cooking process. (I’d always been taught not to salt beans until they had softened, or else they would perhaps never soften. Because I trust Deborah Madison, I went ahead and salted, and I had no difficulty with the beans whatsoever. This makes me wonder if the no salting beans rule is an old wives tale, and it’s good to know it’s possible to cook beans in salted water without completely dooming your dish.)
I cooked the onions, along with the yellow split peas, until they were very soft in the hour’s total cooking time. Because the yellow split peas were very soft and because the onions had started as a small dice and were also very soft, I didn’t “puree” the mixture with anything other than a potato masher. I mashed everything right in the soup pot.
I stirred in the (full-fat) coconut milk, added the lime juice, salt, pepper, and chopped cilantro as directed, and found myself with a very substantial stewy soup, not at all a soup that I would describe as something that “starts out thin,” the words used in introducing this recipe. My soup started out very thick, and I thinned it down to bring it to a soupier texture and consistency. There would have been nothing wrong with a stewy concoction, but I had envisioned (and seen in the photo) something that definitely looked like soup. I was actually glad I did thin it out, because the addition of rice (I used white basmati) and spinach does have a thickening effect, though both also add texture and some different colored elements to the yellow of the soup.
Because this is quite a few steps (peas, onions, rice spinach), you may start to think it could be okay to skip the spiced yogurt—do not yield to this thought! Making this spiced yogurt takes just a few minutes, and again adds color, plus a fresh burst of flavor, to the soup. I served this with lime wedges on the side and accompanied it with a nice warm whole-wheat naan. It was a fantastic layering of flavors, both in taste and visually. The photo looks soupier than mine did, even with the addition of more water, and my spinach was more visible when the bowl was served.
Because this is essentially a bean soup, I’m not sure if it could ever be considered a “lighter,” dish, but it would surely lighten up a bit with the omission of the rice. I’d caution that this trade-off wouldn’t be wise, since part of the magic of this soup is in the layering of flavors and textures. The rice was tasty, the texture a positive addition, and the white next to the golden yellow of the peas and the green of the spinach a visual delight. The serving size of 6 to 8 was accurate in my house.
Lastly, I love the idea of using the cilantro stems, and will be seeking out additional ways of using them, ways that help to reduce the waste of buying a nice big bunch of cilantro, using just what the recipe calls for, nearly always just a very little bit, and then discovering some time later that the rest—the majority—of the bunch has become inedible from neglect.
I was happy to make this for Sunday dinner–a few tiny substitutions: I used kale instead of spinach. And I actually set it on top of the rice (in a rice cooker) and it wilted perfectly.
Added a full teaspoon of chili flakes because we like spice.
The split pea soup was so rich and full of flavour–those spices really give it so much depth and the aroma filled the house all afternoon.
My guy, who is vegan, had some tahini instead of the yogurt sauce, and we served it with naan, and all so good! Leftovers to boot!
Nice, Kathy! It sounds like you had the perfect meal. Thanks so much for letting us know.
This soup, while time-consuming, is rich and spicy, yet fresh and sprightly in taste. Dishes that are East Indian-spiced tend to go for depth of flavour; but this soup, with the addition of just-cooked spinach and rice, has a fresh verve, while the coconut milk, spiced yoghurt, and blend of spices in the soup give it a wonderful mouthfeel and a tingle of heat.
Wonderful, Matilda!
This yellow pea and coconut milk soup came together beautifully, easily, and deliciously. The proportions of the spices and the coconut milk created a perfectly nuanced fusion of flavors with no one overpowering note. The spinach and rice provided satisfying textural contrast, making it appealing to the tongue as well as the eye. And the spiced yogurt—its seasonings as balanced as the soup’s—imparted a tangy counterpoint to the creamy base.
Although the combination of spices might seem exotic to some, the resulting dish is so approachable that my guinea pigs, whose taste buds vary in levels of adventurousness, unanimously declared it a keeper of a recipe.
Valerie, I love everything about what you wrote. Everything. Thank you for taking the time to let us know!