Southern Black Eyed Peas
Nothing says Happy New Years’ better than a pot of soulful black-eyed-eyed peas & soul food collard greens! Whether you buy into the hype that eating these dishes will bring wealth & a slew of other good things, just enjoying them with family and being thankful that I’ve made it into another year is MORE THAN ENOUGH for me!
This is my grandmother’s soul food recipe (that I’ve tweaked a bit). It’s a basic recipe for a pot of good ol, southern black-eyed peas. Â She blesses us with these throughout the year but on New Years’ they tend to taste a bit better. Â Talk about flavorful!!! Forget the bland, mushy black-eyed peas you may have tasted in the past. This recipe always gets a “wow, these are some good black-eyed peas!” from newbies that have never tasted hers before. Â Like always my grandmother just smiles and says “well…it could be better” lol (she’s adorable!)
This recipe could easily be turned into vegetarian-friendly black-eyed peas by omitting the meat and using vegetable broth instead of chicken broth. You can even get all fancy-schmancy and throw in some chopped tomatoes, celery, and all that other jazz.
Either way, they taste fabulous! Pour on some hot sauce and give me a fat piece of cornbread on the side and I’m a happy gal!
Watch me make these black-eyed peas from start to finish!
- 4-5 green onions, chopped (or 1 medium
- white onion, chopped)
- 3 cloves garlic, chopped
- 1 (16 oz) bag dry black-eyed peas
- Smoked Turkey (as much as you
- desire. I used half of a fully cooked, smoked turkey leg. Just chopped the meat up into bits. You can leave it whole if you do not like meat in your black-eyed peas but like the flavor)
- 6-8 cups of chicken broth (or enough to cover the beans)
- Red pepper flakes,
- black pepper (optional)
- Sort & wash the black-eyed peas. Set aside.
- Chop onions & garlic.
- In a large pot, add in 2 Tablespoons of olive oil and saute the onions and garlic until tender.
- Add in the chopped meat, black-eye peas, & chicken broth
- Cover and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer for 1 hour or until black-eyed peas are tender.
- Remove from heat and let sit covered for about 10-15 minutes.
- Season with red pepper & black pepper if desired.
You can soak them overnight or boiling them for 3 minutes then dump that water out and then start the cooking process
Per instructions you do not have to presoak the peas.
Sorry but I’m still confused. Do you soak the peas prior to cooking?
Rey.
Yes you do, prewash
Yes, overnight is best.
Yes you do or they will take longer to cook
Yes
Wonderful recipe! Thank you. Glad to have found your page!
I used this recipe in my Instapot (30 minutes/high pressure, did not presoak the black eyed peas) and it came out wonderfully! This recipe is another hit in my house!
Thank you! Gonna try this