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Grains & LegumesVicia faba

Broad Beans โ€” Nutrition Facts & Health Guide

Vicia faba ยท Evidence-based nutritional information for Australians

341
kcal / 100g
58.3g
Carbs
26.1g
Protein
25.0g
Fibre
40
GI (low)
Full calculator โ†—
Broad beans (also known as fava beans) are one of the oldest cultivated legumes โ€” grown by humans for at least 10,000 years โ€” and among the most nutritionally impressive: providing exceptional protein (26.1g/100g), extraordinary dietary fibre (25g/100g โ€” 89% RDI, the highest of any common legume), outstanding folate, iron, zinc and B vitamins. Fresh broad beans in their green pods are a seasonal spring vegetable; dried broad beans are available year-round. They are staples of Middle Eastern (foul medames), Italian (fave e cicorie), Egyptian and North African cuisines, and are enjoyed fresh in Australian gardens and farmers' markets. Adjust the slider for your serving size.
๐Ÿงฎ
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Serving size:100g
341Calories (kcal)
58.3Carbs (g)
26.1Protein (g)
25.0Fibre (g)
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๐Ÿ“Š Full nutrition facts โ€” per 100g (raw)

NutrientAmount% Daily valueLevel
Calories341 kcal17%
Carbohydrates58.3g19%
Dietary fibre25.0g89%
Protein26.1g52%
GI~40 โ€” Lowโ€”
Folate423ยตg106%
Iron6.7mg37%
Zinc3.1mg26%
Potassium1062mg23%
Magnesium192mg48%
Phosphorus421mg42%
Thiamine B10.56mg37%

Based on Australian NRV. Source: FSANZ and USDA Food Composition Databases.

๐Ÿ“ˆ Glycaemic index (GI)

40
Glycaemic IndexLow GIBroad beans have a GI of approximately 40 โ€” low. The combination of high protein, substantial fibre and resistant starch significantly slows digestion and glucose absorption. Fresh broad beans have a lower GI than dried. Canned broad beans (fava beans) have a slightly higher GI than home-cooked due to processing.
0 ยท Low (<55)Medium (56โ€“69)High (70+) ยท 100

๐Ÿ’Š Key vitamins & minerals

Fibre
25.0g
89% RDI โ€” highest legume
Protein
26.1g
52% RDI
Folate
423ยตg
106% RDI
Magnesium
192mg
48% RDI
Iron
6.7mg
37% RDI
Potassium
1062mg
23% RDI

โœ… Health benefits

๐ŸŒพ
Extraordinary fibre โ€” 25g/100g (89% RDI), highest of common legumes

Dried broad beans provide 25g of dietary fibre per 100g โ€” the highest fibre content of any common legume, exceeding lentils (10.7g), chickpeas (12.2g) and black-eyed peas (10.6g). This extraordinary fibre density provides comprehensive gut health benefits: soluble fibre (prebiotic, cholesterol-lowering), insoluble fibre (bowel regularity, cancer protection) and resistant starch (colon fermentation producing butyrate โ€” the preferred energy source of colonocytes and a key anti-colorectal cancer compound). Regular broad bean consumption is associated with the lowest colorectal cancer risk of any legume in population studies.

๐Ÿ’ช
Exceptional plant protein โ€” 26.1g/100g with good digestibility

Broad beans provide 26.1g of protein per 100g of dried beans โ€” among the highest of any legume. The protein digestibility-corrected amino acid score (PDCAAS) of broad bean protein is moderate to high, particularly after cooking which reduces anti-nutritional factors. Broad beans are rich in lysine (the limiting amino acid in most grains) and therefore combine excellently with grain proteins. The foul medames tradition โ€” broad beans with bread โ€” is a nutritionally complete combination that has sustained populations across North Africa and the Middle East for millennia.

๐Ÿงฌ
Folate and L-DOPA โ€” unique neurological significance

Broad beans provide 106% of the daily folate requirement per 100g โ€” exceptional for neurological health, pregnancy and cardiovascular homocysteine management. More remarkably, broad beans are one of the richest dietary sources of L-DOPA (levodopa) โ€” the dopamine precursor used as a pharmaceutical treatment for Parkinson's disease. People with Parkinson's disease on levodopa medications should be aware that broad beans can significantly affect medication levels. For healthy adults, the L-DOPA content is below therapeutic doses but may contribute to mood and motivation via dopaminergic pathways.

โค๏ธ
Cardiovascular health โ€” potassium, folate and fibre

Broad beans deliver a comprehensive cardiovascular nutritional package: 1062mg of potassium per 100g (blood pressure regulation โ€” more than 2ร— a banana), 106% daily folate (homocysteine reduction), 25g fibre (LDL reduction via bile acid binding) and 48% magnesium (cardiac rhythm regulation). Multiple population studies show regular legume consumption โ€” particularly high-fibre legumes like broad beans โ€” associated with 20โ€“25% reduced cardiovascular disease risk.

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โš ๏ธ Who should limit or avoid

๐Ÿงฌ
G6PD deficiency โ€” FAVISM โ€” potentially life-threatening haemolysis

Broad beans (fava beans) are the classic trigger of favism โ€” a serious haemolytic anaemia reaction in people with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency. G6PD deficiency affects approximately 400 million people globally, predominantly those of Mediterranean, African, Middle Eastern and South Asian ancestry โ€” populations where broad beans are dietary staples. Even small amounts of broad beans (including broad bean flour) can trigger acute haemolytic episodes in G6PD-deficient individuals, requiring hospitalisation. If you have G6PD deficiency or are of high-prevalence ancestry and unsure of your status, consult a doctor before consuming broad beans. This is the reason fava beans are sometimes called favism beans.

๐Ÿ’Š
MAO inhibitor (MAOI) drug interaction โ€” tyramine and L-DOPA

Broad beans contain both tyramine and L-DOPA, which have serious interactions with monoamine oxidase inhibitor (MAOI) antidepressants. Consuming broad beans while on MAOIs can trigger hypertensive crisis โ€” a sudden, dangerous spike in blood pressure. People on MAOI antidepressants (phenelzine, tranylcypromine) must avoid broad beans entirely. This interaction is well-documented and clinically serious.

๐Ÿ’จ
Flatulence and FODMAP content

Dried broad beans are high in oligosaccharides and resistant starch, making them a high-FODMAP food that can cause significant bloating and gas, particularly in people with IBS. Soaking, discarding water and thorough cooking reduces but does not eliminate FODMAP content. Fresh broad beans are better tolerated than dried. Gradually increasing consumption allows gut bacteria adaptation over 3โ€“4 weeks.

โœ… For most healthy adults without G6PD deficiency and not on MAOI medications, broad beans are one of the most nutritionally exceptional legumes available โ€” particularly for fibre, folate and plant protein. The G6PD and MAOI warnings are serious and non-negotiable, but do not affect the majority of the Australian population.
โš•๏ธ General nutritional information only โ€” not a substitute for professional medical or dietary advice.

๐Ÿ›’ How to source & use broad beans

1
Fresh vs dried โ€” two completely different products

Fresh broad beans (in the pod, available springโ€“early summer): plump, firm pods with no brown spots or wilting. The beans inside should be bright green, firm and tightly fill the pod. Fresh broad beans are eaten young (before the inner skin toughens) by blanching 2 minutes and removing the greyish-white outer skin to reveal the vivid green inner bean. Double-podded fresh broad beans are one of spring's finest vegetables. Dried broad beans: cream-beige flat oval dried seeds โ€” use for foul medames, dal and slow-cooked dishes. Dried require soaking 12โ€“24 hours.

2
Double-podding fresh broad beans โ€” the essential technique

Fresh broad beans have two skins: the outer pod (removed by shelling) and a greyish-white inner skin around each bean. Young beans (smaller than thumbnail): the inner skin is tender and can be eaten. Larger beans: the inner skin becomes thick and bitter โ€” ALWAYS remove it. Method: blanch shelled beans 2 minutes, immediately cool in ice water, then pinch the skin open at the pale scar end and squeeze out the vivid bright green inner bean. The difference in flavour between double-podded and single-podded broad beans is enormous.

3
Foul medames โ€” the world's oldest continuously eaten dish

Foul medames (Egyptian slow-cooked broad beans with lemon, olive oil, garlic and cumin) may be the oldest continuously prepared dish in human culinary history โ€” with archaeological evidence of its consumption in ancient Egypt and first written documentation in a 9th-century CE Egyptian text. The recipe is almost unchanged from its ancient form. Modern preparation: soak dried broad beans 12โ€“24h, simmer 2โ€“3 hours until completely tender, dress generously with olive oil, lemon juice, cumin, salt and garlic. Serve with flatbread, hard-boiled eggs, tahini and fresh herbs.

๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ Australian tip: Fresh broad beans are a traditional Australian home garden and farmers' market vegetable, available in late winter and spring (Augustโ€“November) when the broad bean plants that were sown in autumn produce their harvest. Victorian and NSW farmers' markets carry excellent fresh broad beans in their season. Coles and Woolworths occasionally stock fresh broad beans in season, though availability is unreliable โ€” farmers' markets and greengrocers are more reliable sources. Dried broad beans (both split and whole) are available year-round at Middle Eastern and Mediterranean grocery stores, Indian grocery stores (as dried fava beans), and some health food stores. Egyptian, Lebanese, Turkish and Greek grocery stores in Sydney and Melbourne carry high-quality dried broad beans at good prices. Canned broad beans (fava beans) are stocked at most supermarkets โ€” Edgell and Ceres Organics brands are common.

๐ŸงŠ Storage tips & shelf life

Refrigerator (fresh)
Fresh in pod: 3โ€“5 days / Shelled: 2 days
In pod in vegetable crisper

Fresh broad beans in their pods keep 3โ€“5 days in the crisper. Once shelled, use within 2 days โ€” the beans begin to toughen rapidly. Double-podded (inner skin removed) fresh beans: use immediately or store in water in the fridge for up to 24 hours. Do not freeze fresh uncooked broad beans โ€” blanch first (2 minutes) then freeze.

๐ŸงŠ
Freezer (fresh, blanched)
Up to 12 months
Blanch 2 min, cool, double-pod, freeze in bag

Blanched and double-podded broad beans freeze beautifully โ€” the best way to preserve the spring harvest. Blanch 2 minutes, immediately cool in ice water, double-pod (remove inner skin), dry and freeze in a single layer on a tray first, then bag. Use directly from frozen in pasta, risotto and soups.

๐Ÿซ˜
Pantry (dried)
1โ€“2 years
Sealed airtight container, cool dark

Dried broad beans store excellently โ€” the dried form is shelf-stable for 1โ€“2 years in a sealed container. After 2 years, beans become very hard and take much longer to cook. Soak 12โ€“24 hours before cooking, discard soaking water, cook in fresh water 2โ€“3 hours until completely tender. Canned: use within best-before date.

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๐Ÿ“– About broad beans โ€” complete guide

The broad bean (Vicia faba) is among the earliest domesticated food plants โ€” archaeological evidence from the Pre-Pottery Neolithic B site of Yiftahel in northern Israel dates cultivation to approximately 10,000 BCE, making it one of humanity's first intentionally grown crops. It spread rapidly across the ancient Near East and Mediterranean, becoming a dietary staple across ancient Egypt (foul medames โ€” a preparation largely unchanged from its ancient form โ€” may be the world's oldest continuously prepared dish), ancient Greece and Rome, and then across Europe and Asia. The bean arrived in Britain with Neolithic farmers over 5,000 years ago. Its names across languages reflect millennia of cultural embedding: faba (Latin/Italian), fรจve (French), haba (Spanish), ful (Arabic), bakla (Tagalog), baakla (Armenian).

The G6PD deficiencyโ€“broad bean interaction (favism) represents one of the most historically and clinically significant food-disease interactions known. G6PD deficiency is the world's most common genetic enzyme deficiency, affecting an estimated 400 million people globally and conferring partial malaria resistance โ€” which explains why it has remained in the population at high frequency in malaria-endemic regions of Africa, the Mediterranean, Middle East and South Asia. Ironically, these are precisely the regions where broad beans are dietary staples, creating a nutritional paradox that has caused favism crises throughout history. The condition was documented in ancient Egypt and Greece (Pythagoras's famous prohibition against eating beans is believed to relate to his Mediterranean heritage and G6PD knowledge), and was formally described medically in the 1950s. Modern genetic screening for G6PD status before prescribing several common medications (including the antimalarial primaquine and some antibiotics) is now standard in many countries โ€” the same screening would identify individuals for whom broad beans should be avoided.

โš–๏ธ Compare broad beans to similar foods

Broad Beans
341 kcal
VS
Lentils
VS
Chickpeas
VS
Black-Eyed Peas
Compare in full tool โ†’

๐Ÿ’ก Interesting facts about broad beans

๐Ÿบ
1
Foul medames โ€” Egyptian broad bean stew โ€” may be the oldest continuously prepared dish in culinary history
Foul medames (slow-cooked broad beans with olive oil, lemon and cumin) is documented in writing from 9th-century CE Egypt, but the preparation almost certainly predates this by millennia โ€” broad bean cultivation in Egypt dates to at least 4,000 BCE, and the dish's simplicity suggests ancient origins. The slow-cooking tradition (originally cooked overnight in communal clay pots in baker's ovens using residual heat) has continued largely unchanged for thousands of years. Foul medames is today Egypt's national dish, consumed for breakfast by millions daily, and is sold at street stalls across the Arab world from Morocco to Iraq.
๐Ÿงซ
2
Pythagoras's prohibition against beans โ€” the world's most famous dietary taboo โ€” likely related to G6PD deficiency
The Pythagorean prohibition against eating beans (documented by multiple ancient sources) has fascinated scholars for 2,500 years. While mystical explanations (beans contain the souls of the dead) and social explanations (beans were used in democratic voting) have been proposed, the most compelling modern hypothesis is medical: Pythagoras was of Greek heritage, G6PD deficiency affects approximately 11% of Greek males, and Pythagoras or people in his community may have observed the sometimes-fatal haemolytic reactions to fava beans in affected individuals. This would make Pythagoras's prohibition one of the earliest recorded evidence-based dietary safety guidelines in history โ€” even if the mechanism was not understood.
๐ŸŒฑ
3
Broad beans are one of the best nitrogen-fixing cover crops for Australian home gardens โ€” they actively fertilise the soil
Like all legumes, broad beans fix atmospheric nitrogen through root nodule bacteria (Rhizobium), effectively fertilising the soil. But broad beans are particularly effective nitrogen fixers and cold-tolerant, making them ideal for winter cover cropping in Australian temperate gardens. Sowing broad beans in autumn in cool-temperate gardens (Melbourne, Canberra, Adelaide, Southern NSW, Tasmania) produces a winter green manure that can be dug in before spring planting, supplying the nitrogen equivalent of a commercial fertiliser application. The beans harvested before the plants are turned in provide food; the incorporated plants provide soil fertility โ€” zero-waste gardening.
๐ŸŽญ
4
L-DOPA in broad beans โ€” the Parkinson's connection and the ancient practice of eating beans before exercise
L-DOPA (levodopa) is the primary pharmaceutical treatment for Parkinson's disease, replacing the dopamine that Parkinson's patients cannot produce. Broad beans contain meaningful L-DOPA concentrations (0.5โ€“2.5g per 100g of dried beans, with young fresh pods having even higher levels). Case reports exist of Parkinson's patients achieving significant symptom relief from broad bean consumption โ€” and of patients on levodopa medications experiencing toxic L-DOPA levels after eating broad beans. In healthy people, the L-DOPA from dietary broad beans is below therapeutic doses but may contribute to the mood-enhancing and motivation-improving effects some people report after eating them. Ancient Greek athletes reportedly ate broad beans before athletic competitions โ€” possibly exploiting this dopaminergic effect.
๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ
5
The broad bean is one of Australia's most successful winter garden vegetables โ€” it thrives in southern Australia's cool, wet winters
Broad beans are among the easiest vegetables to grow in southern Australian gardens: sow direct from seed in Aprilโ€“June in Victoria, SA, Tasmania and southern NSW; plants grow vigorously through winter; harvest pods Novemberโ€“December before the weather gets too hot. They require no special treatment, tolerate frost, improve the soil as they grow, and produce abundantly. The Royal Horticultural Society of Victoria and the Australian Organic Gardening community consistently list broad beans as a top-five winter vegetable for beginner gardeners. The double-podding technique reveals brilliantly green beans that are far superior to any purchased product.
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