Cookbook:Cowpea

The cowpea, also called field pea, is a legume usually cultivated for its seeds.

Characteristics
The bean mutates easily, giving rise to a number of varieties with different sizes, textures, colors, and flavors. The black-eyed pea is one of the most common, with a tan base and little black splotch. Red peas also have a little "eye", but their base color is red or orange. They have a more robust flavor and are firmer, holding up better to prolonged cooking. Pink-eyed/purple-hulled peas have purple pods, and the beans have a pinkish splotch on a light green background. Their flavor is slightly grassier. Cream peas are light tan, with a creamy texture that makes them good for mashing. Crowder peas have a wide range of colors, from solid black to splotched to speckled, and they are rounded and meaty. The honey bean or oloyin bean is a brown variety with a slightly sweet taste.

Seasonality
The fresh cowpeas are harvested from summer to mid-fall, which is when they will be available to purchase. When dried or canned, they are typically available year-round.

Selection and storage
Cowpeas are available fresh, dried, or canned. Fresh cowpeas can be stored in the fridge for several days in a perforated container. They can also be blanched and frozen. Dried and canned peas can be stored for extended periods of time at room temperature.

Preparation
Fresh cowpeas cook quickly, requiring a simmer for only 20–30 minutes to become tender. The dried beans will take a little longer.

Use
The heartier varieties of cowpea make an excellent flavorful broth, that can be used for sauces and gravies.

Rice and peas is a popular dish in Jamaica and other Caribbean Islands. In the American South, a variation of this dish is called "Hoppin' John", made of black-eyed or red peas cooked with rice and pork. Texas caviar, another traditional dish in the American South, is a salad made from black-eyed peas marinated in Italian salad dressing and chopped garlic. In Portugal, black-eyed peas are served with boiled cod and potatoes, with tuna, and in salads. In Vietnam, black-eyed peas are used in a sweet dessert called chè đậu trắng (black-eyed peas and sticky rice with coconut milk). In Greece and Cyprus, black-eyed peas are eaten with vegetables, oil, salt, and lemon. In the northern part of Colombia, black-eyed peas are used to prepare a fritter called "buñuelo". The beans are immersed in water for a few hours to loosen their skin and soften the bean. The skins are then removed either by hand or with the help of a manual grinder. Once the skins are removed, the bean is ground or blended, and eggs are added which produces a soft mix. The mix is fried in hot oil. It makes a nutritious breakfast meal.