LABLAB
Description
Lablab purpureus is capable of growing in a wide range of climatic conditions and soil types, depending upon the variety chosen. It is widely cultivated throughout the tropics and subtropics and occurs wild in tropical Africa (including Madagascar) and India. The palatability of lablab surpasses that of velvet beans or jack beans.
Uses
This bean may be grown as a vegetable or pulse for human consumption, or as animal forage or feed. The young pods, leaves and flowers are eaten as a cooked vegetable. The cooked, dried seeds, a good source of protein, are processed into bean cakes, fermented as tempeh or before cooking, sprouted and eaten fresh. Seed sprouts can be eaten like those from mung beans. Pants may be grazed by cattle, sheep, pigs, and goats. Young dried plant material may be used as animal feed. The foliage also can be made into silage. L. purpureus varieties such as Highworth, Rongai, and White have been used successfully as cover crops to suppress weed growth and retard soil erosion and as a green manure. L. purpureus retains some green growth during droughts, providing farmers with a source of fodder during dry seasons. L. purpureus is intercropped with cereals such as maize and sorghum.
Cultivation
- Elevation- 0-2400 m
- Rainfall- 750–2500 mm/year; once established, is quite drought tolerant
- Soil Types- grows in a variety of soils
- Temperature: 22–35°C; light frost damages the leaves but does not kill the plants.
- Light: partial to full sun
If interplanted with cereals or other crops, adjust the spacing or planting time of L. purpureus to minimize competition between crops. In pure stands, plant seeds 30-50 cm apart with 80-120 cm between rows to allow space for the spreading vines to grow. L. purpureus can also be grown on a trellis, planted closer together.
As a green manure/cover crop, lablab is interplanted with field or orchard crops or grown in rotation (or relay cropped) with field crops, as well as grazed after the primary crop is harvested. It is effective for erosion control and soil protection during heavy rainfall,and offers good annual undercropping for tree crops (if areas are not too shady).
Field lablab can be planted at the start of the rainy season; however, it responds very well to late-rainy season establishment (two months prior to the end of the rains). Flowers appear after the rains stop and pods are produced during the dry season. As an annual field crop, lablab is drought-resistant and maintains luxurious growth into the dry season.
Harvesting and Seed Production
When planted early in the growing season, L. purpureus starts bearing pods in 60-70 days and continue for 90-100 days. For use as a pulse or to save seed for the following year, the L. purpureus seed should be allowed to mature approximately 150-210 days after planting.
Pests and Diseases
The effects of a bacterial blight disease (Xanthomonas phaseoli) that in humid weather conditions cause severe defoliation is lessened by growing L. purpureus intermixed with another bean species, Phaseolus trilobus. The agent of anthracnose, Colletotrichum lindemuthianum, may cause crop damage in India. Pod boring larvae are reported pests in India. Strain HE-111 of Bacillus cereus var. thuringensis has been reported as an effective agent against some of the pod-boring larvae. In Puerto Rico, the bean leaf beetle, Ceratoma ruficornis, is reported as a serious pest. Bruchid beetle larvae, Callosobruchus spp. attack seeds in storage and in the field.
Cooking and Nutrition
Although the ‘Red’ and ‘White’ varieties reportedly are safely eaten as green pods, the mature seeds of lablabs generally are sources of trypsin inhibitor and cyanogenic glucoside toxins and these seeds need to be cooked thoroughly before eating them. Dry lablab beans generally can be substituted for other dry beans in recipes. Lablab beans are good sources of the amino acid, lysine, and as such complement the generally low lysine content of maize (corn) diets. The beans contain 20-28% crude protein. The green pods likewise are a good protein source as well as a valuable source of fiber.
References
Ecocrop. 1993-2007. Lablab purpureus. Food and Agriculture Organization, Rome, Italy. ecocrop.fao.org/ecocrop/srv/en/dataSheet?id=1311. Accessed 26 June 2019.
Heuzé V., Tran G., 2015. Lablab (Lablab purpureus). Feedipedia, a programme by INRA, CIRAD, AFZ and FAO. https://www.feedipedia.org/node/297 Last updated on February 19, 2016
Collections
Common Names
- English
- Lablab Bean
- Bonavist
- Egyptian Kidney Bean
- Hyacinth Bean
- Dolique
- Dolique D'Égypte
- French
- lablab
- pois boucoussou
- pois antaque
- pois indien
- Spanish
- Frijol Lablab
- Judía
- Habichuela
- Poroto De Egipto
- Judía de Egipto
- zarandaja
- Frijol de Egipto
- Thai
- ถั่วเเปะยี