MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

     Title: Balatong (Mung Bean Stew)
Categories: Filipino, Stews
     Yield: 4 Servings

   1/2 lb Bacon (250 g); finely
          -chopped
     1 lg Onion; chopped
     4 cl Garlic; minced
     1 c  Dried mung beans (250 g);
          -rinsed
14 1/2 oz Can Diced tomatoes
     6 c  Water (1.5 l)
     2 tb Fish sauce; plus more; to
          -taste
          Salt; to taste
          Freshly ground black pepper;
          -to taste
     1 bn Fresh spinach; washed and
          -stems trimmed

 Preparaton time: 15 minutes
 Cooking time: 1 hour, 45 minutes

 Cook the bacon in a large, deep pot or Dutch oven over medium heat
 until the bacon is brown and crisp, 5-7 minutes. Using a slotted
 spoon, transfer the bacon bits to a small plate lined with a paper
 towel. Set the bacon bits aside. Pour off all but 1 tb of bacon fat
 from the pot and return to medium heat.

 Add the onion and garlic to the pot and cook until the onion becomes
 soft and translucent, 5-7 minutes. Add the mung beans and stir to
 combine, cooking for 1-2 minutes more so that the mung beans absorb
 some of the oil in the pot. Pour in the tomatoes, water, and fish
 sauce, stirring to scrape up any browned bits from the bottom of the
 pot.

 Increase the heat to high and bring the pot to a boil. Cover the pot,
 reduce the heat to low and simmer until the mung beans are soft and
 tender, 1 to 1-1/2 hours. If the stew becomes too thick before the
 mung beans have softened, add more water as needed.

 Taste the stew and season with salt and pepper and additional fish
 sauce if desired. Stir in the spinach--depending on the size of your
 pot, you may have to add the spinach in baches. Continue to cook over
 low heat until all the spinach softens and wilts down.

 Serve the stew in individual bowls and garnish with the reserved bacon
 bits.

 Notes:
 * For a more traditional balatong, omit the bacon and saute the
   onion and garlic in vegetable oil. Then stir in some chopped
   lechon kawali and simmer the stew as directed.
 * You can also use shrimp stock instead of water, as well as add
   peeled and deveined raw shrimp to the stew.
 * For a thicker balatong, uncover the stew as it simmers. Allow it
   to simmer until the mung beans become tender and the stew becomes
   as thick as you would like.

 Recipe by The Adobo Road Cookbook by Marvin Gapultos, 2013

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