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Creamy, earthy Mexican beauties with a rich cocoa‑brown sheen, velvety texture and deep, savoury sweetness: the missing link between pinto and black beans.

The Heirloom Bean Co sources these Phaseolus beans from Mexican bean and authentic food specialist La Comandanta, working to revitalise traditional Mexican agriculture by preventing the loss of native seeds, as well as ancestral cooking and cultivation processes.

Moro beans have long been grown in central and southern Mexico, prized for the dense, creamy flesh that enriches stews, soups and rice dishes. These small but mighty marvels pack an earthy depth that stands up beautifully to tomatoes, chillies and slow simmering, and they shine in rustic casseroles, refried-style mashes and warm salads.

Working with La Comandanta

The Heirloom Bean Co has forged a new partnership with Mexico City’s La Comandanta, a business working to identify, rescue and promote authentic Mexican foods grown and made by rural producers using traditional farming and culinary methods. Through this partnership The Heirloom Bean Company is now fairly trading heirloom beans grown by smallholder farmers and processed and packed in Mexico.

La Comandanta’s motto Cocina una Revolución ("Cook a Revolution") describes their ethos that eating authentic food is an act of cultural and agricultural resistance to mainstream agrifood corporations. They’re committed to fair and transparent trade, and supporting social and economic development.

A key concern is the seed diversity and agricultural heritage of Mexico, with Bolivia one of two centres of genetic diversity of the Phaseolus bean species. La Comandanta aims to revive traditional Mexican farming and save heirloom varieties from extinction. Many farmers have stopped growing these varieties for lack of access to fair markets and fear of crop failure. To encourage and support them La Comandanta pays a fair price for crops and offers advance loans at the time of sowing.
 
The Heirloom Bean Co has visited many of the farmers growing beans to understand the challenges they face and pays an additional 15% premium over the farmgate price into a fund to cover the loans in case of any crop failure. As beans fall outside the usual commodities covered by fair trade labelling schemes the Heirloom Bean Co has introduced its own Fairly Traded emblem to communicate their partnership of trading fairly.

  • Kitchen Suggestions

    Slow-cooked stews and casseroles, soups, salads, dips… and peerless refried beans.

    Cooking these beans

    Look over the beans to remove any stray bits, then rinse well. In a heavy pot, gently cook your base vegetables - onion, garlic, celery, carrot - in a little olive oil until fragrant. Add the beans and pour in enough water to cover them by roughly 5 cm. Bring to a strong boil for 10–15 minutes. Lower the heat to maintain a slow, steady simmer, partially covering the pot to keep the temperature even, and cook until the beans are fully tender, usually 1–3 hours. Add salt once the beans begin to soften. A short soak of 2–6 hours will help reduce the total cooking time.

  • Ingredients

    Moro Beans

    Further info

    Tasting notes: Smooth, lightly rich taste with subtle chestnut hints

    Similar to: Pinto, Rio Zape, Zaragoza

    Latin name: Phaseolus vulgaris

    Country of origin: Mexico

    Sold in resealable 500g bags

  • Typical values Per 100g
    Energy 1420kJ (337kcal)
    Fat 0.9g
    of which saturates 0.2g
    Carbohydrate 63g
    of which sugars 0.6g
    Fibre 16g
    Protein 21g
    Salt 0.01g

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