Schmetterling:
My husband and I split beets. He likes the roots and I like the greens. ;)
Are the peas served in the egg and lemon sauce but called stew?
First of all, Greek derbiye is flour & lemon, not egg & lemon, as I explained.
We stew the peas (water, olive oil, along with basically what one would expect with peas, like carrots, onions, and potatoes) and then, when they're ready and cooked thoroughly, we mix the juice of about 2 lemons with a tea spoon of flour in a bowl, pour it in the pot, and let it come to boil for max 5 minutes more, stirring carefully, until it thickens. Fresh dill green goes well with peas for flavour, if available.
It's basically the same way we usually cook chick-pea soup here in Greece - minus the carrots and potatoes.
Derbiye is also great with fish, and some vegetables!
If you want to make egg & lemon sauce (it goes well with any meat, and also with some vegetable dishes), it's similar with derbiye, meaning you add it at the end of cooking, before serving the food.
You whip 1-2 eggs, then stir them with lemon juice in a bowl (amount of lemon juice depends on how thick you want the sauce to be). But you need to make sure to pour some of the hot liquor/broth/juice that's already on the pot to your bowl with the eggs-lemon mix, to stir thoroughly to warm up, keep stirring madly until you pour it in the pot, and keep stirring after you put it in the pot, until it thickens - otherwise you'll basically have a soupy scramble eggs sauce instead of egg-lemon (avgolemono) sauce, lol!
If that sounds complicated, it's because it is, but it becomes incredibly simpler if 2 people make it together! :D
Happy cooking!! :)