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​Boiled Black Chana Soup with pepper: 5 ways it can upgrade health and nutrition​

etimes.in | Last updated on - Nov 20, 2025, 13:23 IST
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Boiled Black Chana Soup with pepper: 5 ways it can upgrade health and nutrition

Black chana has a way of making even the simplest meal feel grounding. Earthy, nutty, and quietly powerful, it’s the kind of ingredient that doesn’t shout its worth, it proves it. In Indian homes, it turns into many things, but nothing feels quite as healing as a slow, peppery black chana soup. Just chana, water, salt, a touch of garlic, and crushed pepper, yet it carries generations of nourishment. Rich in plant protein, fibre, and iron, black chana builds stamina, steadies energy, and supports digestion naturally. It’s nutrition dressed as comfort, the kind of bowl your body understands without instruction. Scroll down to know more..

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The quiet strength in every cup

Most protein-rich foods demand attention: eggs, powders, bars. Black chana doesn’t. It sits humble in the pantry, offering the same strength with quiet confidence. Each small bead carries around 8–9 grams of protein per 100 grams, along with iron, folate, and fibre that help the body use that protein efficiently. When boiled into a simple soup, it nourishes without heaviness, perfect for late dinners, fasting days, or recovery meals. The pepper sharpens more than flavour - it boosts circulation and absorption, turning a modest bowl into slow, sustaining power.

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Warmth that begins in the gut

There’s a reason Ayurveda swears by this combination. Chana grounds you; pepper stokes your agni, the inner fire that governs digestion. Together, they build the kind of warmth that doesn’t just sit on the tongue but spreads through the body, unclenching everything winter tends to tighten. One small bowl after lunch can ease bloating, soothe sluggish digestion, and leave you feeling light but nourished, not the kind of fullness that makes you slow, but the kind that makes you steady.

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Iron, stamina, and quiet power

Black chana’s colour gives away its nature, dark foods in Indian wisdom often build strength and blood. It’s loaded with iron, zinc, and B vitamins, making it especially good for anyone who feels drained or low on energy. The pepper’s piperine quietly amplifies this, helping your body absorb iron more efficiently. Add a squeeze of lemon before serving, and the soup suddenly brightens - not just in flavour, but in function. Vitamin C helps your body take in every bit of that iron, turning a humble broth into an energy booster.

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The anti-inflammatory calm

It’s easy to forget that food can also be medicine, not the harsh, immediate kind, but the steady, rebuilding kind. Kala chana and pepper both work that way. Their natural antioxidants help the body fight low-grade inflammation that creeps up with modern living, sleepless nights, stress, processed food, city air. Sip it hot on cold evenings, and you’ll notice the subtle clearing effect - sinuses open, breath deepens, warmth spreads.

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The simplicity that never fails

What makes this soup special isn’t its complexity - it’s its restraint. There’s no cream, no thickeners, no garnish drama. Just time, heat, and patience. To make it, take soaked black chana, boil till tender, season with salt, crushed pepper, and a spoon of ghee. That’s it. It’s the kind of dish that asks for nothing but gives everything: strength, warmth, balance, calm. Proof that real nourishment doesn’t need a recipe card or a nutrition chart. Just a pot, a flame, and a little attention.

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