(Part 2) Best dried beans, lentils & peas according to redditors

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We found 155 Reddit comments discussing the best dried beans, lentils & peas. We ranked the 80 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top Reddit comments about Dried Beans, Lentils & Peas:

u/mrguykloss · 7 pointsr/EatCheapAndHealthy

Mapo Tofu - an authentic Szechuan Chinese dish. Hot and delicious AF! Recipe can be made without the minced beef/pork. Only issue some may have is to order Doubanjiang, Douchi, and Szechuan peppercorn. They are really must-haves for this.

u/muslimmmm · 5 pointsr/HuntsvilleAlabama

Hey - I am connected with a lot of the farmers in North/Middle Alabama as I use to organize a few events - I don’t know of anyone growing organic soybeans. Everything I am aware of is traditionally grown (acres and acres of pesticides, fertilizers, and herbicides all of the no good variety.) Best bet is buying in bulk. 5lbs

I’ve found that people in Huntsville are not willing to take the time to make awesome products at home and also aren’t willing to shell out for real, artisan products in the market so we are pretty dry for good ingredients and even good, organic, local foods. Everything comes from afar and isn’t high quality.

I bet your miso will turn out to be dank!! Nothing better than doing it yourself. Good luck!

u/Mustang_Rising · 5 pointsr/PlantBasedDiet

365 Everyday Value, Organic Refried Pinto Beans, Fat Free, 16 oz
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B074MFQH34/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_gLE0DbC4FHNF3

u/yongcooking · 3 pointsr/15minutefood

I would like to recommend Morinaga's Ogura An. I tried it once and it was good. Here is a link to it.

Ogura An on Amazon Hope you will like it too :)

u/Mad_Maps · 3 pointsr/mealprep

I’m heading into a similar situation soon. I have a big backpack cooler from the Polar Bear brand that keeps food cold all day in my car:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00EHA83E4/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_z4aGDbZ8TFBNT

There’s many brands of microwave rice and lentils that can be stored in room temp:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0722PCR2Y/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_16aGDbEPKHJPC

Since I use the microwave a lot I’m considering buying one of these:
Tomorrow's Kitchen Single Serve Steamer - Grey https://www.amazon.com/dp/B06XY2QBLP/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_R0aGDb8RPCQVV

Glass and silicone is a bit more resilient in the microwave and easier to clean.

u/fireduck · 2 pointsr/worldnews

Dried peas. Good enough for her majesty's navy, good enough for you.

Just ordered this, fear me pheasants:
https://www.amazon.com/Food-Live-Organic-Green-Pounds/dp/B00L0MG8IA

u/Anikando · 2 pointsr/OnlineGroceryDeals

And a few "bonus deals" for those who read this far down in the comments! (Tomorrow I'll start putting everything in the original post.)

21) Shirakiku Rice - $12 for (5) lbs
5 lb rice for $2.30/lb. Including since it's a lower-priced item that is shippable, even though it's not as good a deal as you'd get in stores.

22) Wheat Thins Salsa Flavor - $11 for (6) boxes
Wheat Thins for $1.80/box for 9 oz. size is pretty good! Cheaper than Wal-Mart.

23) Ravarino bowtie pasta - $11 for (12) lbs
12 lbs of bowtie pasta for under $1/lb is grocery-sale-price good!

24) ~~Organic coconut oil - $10 for (1.5) lbs
I get coconut oil (organic) on sale for $6/lb, so $10 for 1.5 lbs is spot-on as a great deal.~~ Deal is over, now up to $16.

25) Sandwich-sliced kosher pickles - $12 for (12) lbs
$1/lb for kosher sandwich flats (pickles), awesome - store some up; also great for chopping into potato salad, pasta salad, etc.

26) Chipotle-flavored pinto beans - $13 for (12) cans
Just over $1/can for chipotle-seasoned pinto beans, probably one of the best prices on the site for canned beans.

27) Tesori Capellini Pasta - $16 for (20) lbs!
Hard to beat at 75c/lb! Usually there are around 9 servings per pound, so this will last a very long time.

28) ~~Goya Sweet Peas - $16 for (24) cans
This deal may be gone before I type it, because that works out to about 66c/can. Go quickly, only 2 left at this price!~~ Called it! The price is now $44 for the 24 cans. Congratulations if you got in on it before they wised up!

29) Organic White Bean Chili - $18 for (12) cans
A little something for our legume-based chili lovers - low sodium, too!

30) Quaker Quick Oats - $14 for (5) lbs.
It's difficult to find a good deal on oats, at the site. This is one of the better ones I saw, at around $2.80/lb.

31) Quaker Instant Oats - Peaches and Cream - $10 for (40) pouches
Quaker peaches & cream instant oatmeal - 40 pouches for $10 (25c/pouch). Incredible! Most of their pouches are going for around $1 each. For the 25c/pouch price, if you don't like Peaches and Cream, you can also get Raisin Spice flavor:
Quaker Instant Oats - Raisin Spice - $10 for (40) pouches

32) Chef Boyardee Whole Grain ABCs-123s - $18 for (12) cans
At $1.50/can for more nutrition than the original style, these are a nice buy.

u/quarkibus · 2 pointsr/IndianFood

Chana dal. Urad dal is white and smaller. Will alter the profile somewhat and make it less thick.

Dals in India are like chilis in Mexico: there are way too many to keep track of at first.

EDIT: Here it is on Amazon.

u/Qwerty_Resident · 2 pointsr/theydidthemath

I'm going to assume you mean "green lentils".

Luckily this is easier than you might think: A company's value takes both their bank balance, and their non-liquid assets (contracts, rings, belts, etc), and since WWE is a publicly-traded company, its value is public information, and is currently at about 2.760 billion dollars.

A quick amazon search shows me that green lentils can be sold for between $4.00 and $6.00 per pound, so I'm going to say $5 per lb of lentils, means that you need to sell 552 million pounds of lentils.

Unfortunately I don't have a direct conversion anywhere I can find for how many lentils are in a pound, but I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that it's at least 100, probably more, so at least 552 billion lentils need to be sold, probably a lot more.

If you want to estimate costs of items in pound-of-lentil increments, you just need to divide their price in USD by 5. So a fully custom title belt is going to run you a good $200 when it's not on sale, so because you want 5 belts, and we're dividing that by 5, you need to sell 200 pounds of lentils to get all 5 belts, or 40 pounds of lentils per belt (probably a few more pounds of lentils for shipping as well).

A 20' x 20' ring is going to run you a good $8-10 thousand, so 1600-2000 pounds of lentils for your ring.

Paying John Cena is gonna cost you $10 million per year, so in that year you need to sell 2 million pounds of lentils.

u/mr_bacon_pants · 2 pointsr/veganfitness

That's kind of ironic :) I would expect Italy to have every kind of pasta ever! Though maybe Italian standards for pasta are higher and aren't welcome to this non-wheat pasta?

I found it on amazon.it though. And like /u/CatEarsAndButtPlugs said, they make other products, too

u/ShoddyDiscussion · 2 pointsr/Cooking

Whole Foods definitely has them in the chain, but if your whole foods doesn't amazon does

u/Dragon_Small_Z · 1 pointr/ketorecipes

Soymerica Non-GMO Black Soybeans - 7 Lbs (Newest Crop). Identity Preserved (IP). Great for Soy Milk and Tofu. 100% Product of USA https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07R8HQ3RP/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_Jk5xDbBGM52T0

u/cypranius · 1 pointr/entp

organic chickpeas, $2.99 for 1620 calories

Thats 540 calories per 60 cents, already beat your bean beef burrito with healthier nutrition.

You know that diets around the world (not inherently USA) tend to be more vegetarian in comparison because they're cheaper........ (I'm talking India, Asia, Latin America, Africa)

Just because you have a person that has difficulty doing it doesn't mean you shouldn't consider it yourself

u/Marcbouwer · 1 pointr/Cooking

You may want to use Kabuli Chana Dal in the future. This is an Indian product that is pre-skinned and can be used directly. Note: the Kabuli part is important, as it is a different variety of chick pea than is commonly used for the more common Chana Dal. It can be found here - https://www.amazon.com/Pride-India-Indian-Garbanzo-Protein/dp/B01N347PRM/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=kabuli%2Bchana%2Bdal&qid=1567435196&s=gateway&sr=8-3&th=1

u/coolblue123 · 1 pointr/chinesefood

just make it yourself. it has better shelf life, sodium & spiciness you can control.

Pearl River Bridge Yang Jiang Flavor Preserved Beans with Ginger 454 g/16 oz./1 lb. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01MUB4W8K/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_mtHAzbNRQWJWP

wow that's ungodly expensive. Its like only $2 at a asian grocery store.

chop garlic, ginger, chili and the black bean. Or just throw everything in a mini food processor and just need to pulse till u have it finely minced. i like chopping bcz by the time i finish taking the food processor out and clean all the parts, I am long done with a knife and chopping board.

i used to be hooked on the LKK brand black bean sauce till I made it fresh. it brings your steam and stired fry dishes to another level.

u/nysujan · 1 pointr/EatCheapAndHealthy

Try in Nepali, Indian, Bangladesh, Pakistan Grocery Store. You might find there or try online. Online from amazon might be expensive.

u/tigereyeearth · 1 pointr/4hourbodyslowcarb

I get beans in boxes, don't know if it's actually safer but hope so.
https://www.amazon.com/Jacks-Quality-Bean-Black-Sodium/dp/B01FRQPZ3I

u/PancakeInvaders · 1 pointr/bodyweightfitness

No you can't eat them raw, you're supposed to soak them overnight and then cook it for an hour or two (it's hands off cooking though, active time is maybe 3 minutes). You can also prep in bulk and freeze it. It's also tastier than canned, but yeah, jars are more convenient and still quite cheap

For reference of how cheap dry is

https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B01FIKV3PM/ref=mp_s_a_1_4_a_it?ie=UTF8&qid=1483792319&sr=8-4&keywords=pinto+beans+dry

38$ for 25 lbs dry, that's maybe 40 lbs once rehydrated and cooked, I doubt there are cheaper sources of protein

u/bellynips · 1 pointr/Homebrewing