15 bean soup – a packaged dry bean soup mix produced by the N.K. Hurst Co. in the United States[1]
Amish preaching soup – in American cuisine, it was typically served preceding or following Amish church services.[2][3] Some versions are prepared with beans and ham hocks.[4]
Bob chorba – a national Bulgarian dish, the name translates to "bean soup".[9] It is prepared using dried beans, onions, tomatoes, chubritza or dzhodzhen (spearmint) and carrots.[9][10]
Fasolada – a Greek, Levantine, and Cypriot soup of dry white beans, olive oil, and vegetables, sometimes called the "national food of the Greeks".[13]
Frejon – a bean and coconut milk soup, it is consumed by some Christians on Good Friday in various areas of the world[14]
Hong dou tang – or red bean soup is a popular Chinese dish[15] served in Mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan. It is categorized as a tang shui (literally translated as sugar water), or sweet soup.
Kwati – a mixed soup prepared using nine types of sprouted beans,[a] it is a traditional Nepalese dish consumed on the festival of Gun Punhi, the full moon day of Gunlā which is the tenth month in the Nepal Era lunar calendar.
Pasulj – a bean soup made of usually white beans, cranberry beans or pinto beans, and more rarely kidney beans, that is common in Serbian, Montenegrin, Bosnian, Croatian and Slovenian cuisines. It is a common winter dish, and is typically prepared with meat, particularly smoked meat such as smoked bacon, sausage, and ham hock.[17]
Senate bean soup – served in the dining room of the United States Senate every day,[18] in a tradition that dates back to the early 20th century, it is prepared using navy beans, ham hocks, and onion.
Stew peas – a Jamaican stew prepared using coconut milk, beans and salted meat,[19] it is a common in Jamaica and elsewhere in the Caribbean.
^"Kwati is prepared by making beans sprout. Generally, it is said that there should be nine types of beans in the kwati. However, I found that the villagers in Sunakothi would only put four or five varieties in ..."[16]
^Sheehan, P. (2017). Luxembourg. Cultures of the World (Third Edition). Cavendish Square Publishing. p. 130. ISBN978-1-5026-2738-4. Retrieved November 26, 2018.