How to Cook Edamame: 4 Easy Ways

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The Spruce Eats

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Edamames are quick and easy, protein-packed, tasty snacks or appetizers. Whether you buy these soybeans fresh or frozen, you can cook them up in a snap and flavor them to your taste. If you can't find fresh edamame, don't worry—frozen is just fine. It is actually difficult to tell the difference between the two.

When cooking fresh in-shell soybeans, you have a few choices: boiling, steaming, microwaving, and pan-searing. All take about the same amount of time; the difference comes down to what kind of equipment you want to use. No matter how you cook them up, season them to taste with flaky sea salt, red pepper flakes, togarashi, and/or sesame seeds.

The Spruce Eats / Alison Czinkota

Boiling Edamame

A simple method that only requires a pot and some water, boiling edamame is a popular cooking choice. Bring a pot of water to a boil and add enough salt so the water tastes as salty as seawater. Add in-shell edamame and cook until the beans inside the pods are tender about 5 minutes. Drain, rinse with cold water to cool, and season to taste before serving.

Steaming Edamame

Steaming the soybeans is also done on the stovetop and requires the addition of a steamer basket (or bamboo steamer if you own one and want that authentic look). First, boil about an inch of water in a pot. Put the edamame in a colander, steam basket, or bamboo steam tray. Once the water is boiling, add the vessel to the pot, cover, and steam the edamame until they are heated through and tender, 5 to 10 minutes. Remove the insert from the pot. Serve the edamame warm or rinse it with cold water to cool it off first. Season to taste and serve.

Microwaving Edamame

If you are looking for a slightly quicker method, or don't have any more room on the stovetop, microwaving the edamame is a good option. Start with the edamame in a microwave-safe bowl. If cooking fresh edamame, splash the soybeans with a few drops of water—use wet hands and flick your fingers at the bowl to splatter a few drops of water here and there on the pods. Cover the bowl with a paper towel and microwave on high in 1-minute increments until the edamame is tender, about 3 minutes total in most microwaves. Let sit until cooled off enough to handle. Season to taste and serve.

Pan-Searing Edamame

Pan-searing is a less common method, but a decidedly tasty one. Heat a large frying pan (cast iron is ideal if you have it) over high heat until it's nice and hot. Wet your fingertips and flick drops of water onto the surface; the droplets should "dance" and sizzle immediately. Add the edamame to the pan, reduce the heat to medium-high, and cook, undisturbed, until the pods are lightly charred on the bottom. Turn the pods over and cook, shaking the pan a bit but not stirring them around too much, until both sides are charred and the edamame beans inside are tender. Season to taste and serve hot or at least warm. This method doesn't lend itself as well as the others to cooling and serving at room temperature or cold.