Mung Bean Yoga Bowl

The kind of power bowl that keeps you strong - herb-packed yogurt dolloped over a hearty bowl of mung beans and quinoa, finished with toasted nuts and a simple paprika oil.

Mung Bean Yoga Bowl

I thought I'd show you how I take a favorite component of a recent recipe, make a minor tweak, and turn it into something completely different. Do you remember the herb-packed coconut milk from this green curry porridge? Well, it's good. Good in its own right. And if you have some on hand, it's a nice jumping off point for a meal. It has a luxe, cilantro-ginger creaminess that makes for a brilliant component in dressings, drizzles, and sandwich spreads. Add some eggs and you have an easy tart filling. Big bowl filled with mung beans, quinoa, yogurt dressing and paprika oil For today's recipe I made a version with yogurt in place of the coconut milk, and it did not disappoint. Lobbing dollops over a simple bowl of mung beans and quinoa made for the sort of easy, nutritious lunch I aim for. Some toasted nuts and a drizzle of paprika oil bring a bit of flair and textural contrast. It'll keep you strong for whatever you afternoon has in store - yoga class, a bike ride, work meetings, or whatever. mung beans draining above a large cast iron pot and a jar of quinoa to the side

This is the sort of thing that you can pack in layers in a wide-mouthed mason jar as a portable lunch or picnic go-to. It's good at room temperature and doesn't require much fuss at all once you have the components prepared. And really, don't get too hung up on the base ingredients - like I mentioned, I used mung beans and black quinoa, but if you have lentils and/or brown rice on hand, you're set. Try to work in a substantial protein component though like some sort of bean or lentil. It'll keep you strong and less hungry compared to, say, a rice-only version. xo Enjoy! -htofu scramble with skillet potatoes in a bowl

More lunch ideas:

101 Cookbooks Membership

Premium Ad-Free membership includes:
-Ad-free content
-Print-friendly recipes
-Spice / Herb / Flower / Zest recipe collection PDF
-Weeknight Express recipe collection PDF
-Surprise bonuses throughout the year

spice herb flower zest
weeknight express

Mung Bean Yoga Bowl

0 from 0 votes

To cook mung beans, cover with a couple inches of water, cook until tender, drain and season with salt.

Ingredients
  • 1 cup Greek yogurt
  • 1/2 tablespoon minced ginger
  • 1/2 small serrano chile, seeded
  • 1/2 cup cilantro, plus more for serving
  • 1/4 cup green onion tops
  • 1/2 cup spinach
  • scant 1 teaspoon fine grain sea salt
  • 5-6 cups cooked mung beans
  • 1 cup cooked quinoa
  • 1/3 cup toasted almonds and/or pepitas
  • 3 tablespoons warmed olive oil
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons smoked paprika
  • lots of freshly squeezed lime juice
Instructions
  1. Combine the yogurt, ginger, chile, cilantro, green onion tops, spinach, and salt in a blender. Alternately, you can use a hand blender here. Blend until smooth, taste and adjust, if needed.
  2. Just before serving, combine the mung beans, and quinoa in a large bowl, and sprinkle with the nuts. Dollop generously with the yogurt, and then whisk together the warmed olive oil and paprika. Drizzle this across the bowl. Finish with a good amount of lime juice, and mort salt, if needed. The lime juice really pulls this whole bowl together, so do your best not to skimp.
Notes

Serves 4-6.

Serves
6
Prep Time
10 mins
Cook Time
5 mins
Total Time
15 mins
 
If you make this recipe, I'd love to see it - tag it #101cookbooks on Instagram!

Post Your Comment

Recipe Rating




Comments

This looks absolutely delish!! I love mung beans.

Liesl

Thank you! Your recipes are different and so much fun!

Olga

I have seen mung beans at my local farmers market. I have never used them before so I was wondering if you have to cook them before or do you eat them raw?

HS: those are likely sprouted mung beans - which you eat raw. And you could absolutely substitute those here.

Michelle

Love this yoga bowl and will be trying it soon! The paprika oil is a great idea. I'm really glad you mentioned the green curry porridge because I made it last night with rice and mung beans, and it was a hit. Thank you!!

Katie @ Whole Nourishment

Interesting! Your mung doesn't looked cooked...how do you keep it so well-formed? It's like your spin on kitchari ;) HS: I love kitchari Adena :)....re: cooking strategy, I'm just careful to not overcook?...In this case I soaked them first, then treated them like a vegetable that I wanted to cook until bright.

Adena

My gosh this looks rather fab. Jus what I need right now especially as I want to cook more with quinoa.

Bintu @ Recipes From A Pantry

I love your philosophy when it comes to food. So clean, so simple, so appreciative of natural foods. It's inspiring!

Lisa @ Simple Pairings

just about to start an ayurvedic cleanse for spring- this will be perfect.

marci

This looks really tasty, definitely not something I'd have thought of myself, will be bookmarking this and trying it out :) Sophie xxx

Sophie

Saw it this morning so I made it for lunch. Used puy lentils and quinoa with almonds. Loved the paprika oil on top and the cilantro in it. I personally did not care for the sauce, but found that I liked it with just the plain Greek yogurt instead. Thanks for the recipe.

Anne

Looks delicious. One question... Do you have a suggestion for a mung bean substitute? It's the one thing I don't have on hand.

HS: Hi Danette - you can substitute cooked yellow split peas, or green split peas, Umbrian/Beluga/or French Lentils...essentially, a pulse that holds its shape when cooked.

Danette

The recipe sounds lovely, but I'm super curious about the actual bowl in the photo. Can you tell us where it came from and/or what it's made from? I'm loving the handles and the texture of it.

HS: Hi Anne! I bought it at the Rancho Gordo shop at the Ferry Building in SF. They come in other sizes too.

Anne

This looks fabulous! Loving all the earthy colours, and I can only imagine it tastes absolutely amazing! I love "salads" that are different ^ ^ So many lovely flavours! x

Jules @ WolfItDown

This reminds me of an Indian dish I grew up eating and loving-- makes me want to run to the grocery store right now to pick up ingredients! The only thing I would consider adding is some cumin powder. (and maybe some tamarind chutney) Can't wait to make this! Thanks, Heidi!

Manisha

Am very taken with the idea of a healthy portable picnic. All that goodness in one jar. Gorgeous.

Skye

This dish looks amazing! I have cooked with quinoa for quite some time now, but never tried the black one. I think it is time now! :)

Tina

Very interesting and healthy combination.. thanks for the recipe! :)

Hari Chandana

Mung beans and black quinoa are an interesting combination. This looks very healthy and I will give it a try! thanks!

Vegan Woman

This dinner is fabulously unique and totally lovely!! Yum!

Katrina @ Warm Vanilla Sugar

I made nearly the same thing for dinner tonight, thinking I was being very 101 Cookbooksesque! I served it up in corn tortillas, skipped the quinoa/grain, and made the green sauce with homemade cashew cream. I even tossed toasted almonds in olive oil and smoked paprika... It was yum. Threw a layer of the leftover cream in a jar with a splash of olive oil, greens, red bell pepper, and the leftover beans and nuts for lunch tomorrow, too. I guess all the cooking over done from this site has gone to my head!

Susan

More Recipes

101cookbooks social icon
Join my newsletter!
Weekly recipes and inspirations.

Popular Ingredients

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of its User Agreement and Privacy Policy.

101 Cookbooks is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com. Any clickable link to amazon.com on the site is an affiliate link.