More beans. Are you KIDDING me? You know how I feel about the "musical fruit", but it summer, this is America and we all know, no summer bbq or picnic is complete without them! I have succumbed to the pressure of my family to learn to make them. I can recall my dad eating them out of the can, cold, and oh, yuck. My memories were validated when I was at my parents a couple of weeks ago and my dad wanted cold pork and beans and hot dogs for dinner.
I have said it before... Even though there are foods I don't particularly care to eat, I love knowing how to make everything I can. While I can down a couple spoonful's, just to be polite, I don't like actual onion in mine, so I go with onion powder. Get the flavor, but none of the sliminess. I also like my bacon not real crispy in baked beans, that is my preference, you go with yours! These are awesome to make ahead, I mix mine up sometimes a day or 2 in advance, put the bacon in before baking and there ya go!
*omit the bacon for a great vegetarian side*
3- 15oz. cans pork and beans (I use the cheapo brand, use your favorite)
1/2 cup brown sugar
2T ketchup
1T yellow mustard
1T molasses
1/2 tsp. onion powder
4 strips of bacon, diced.
Preheat your oven to 350. In a skillet, fry up your diced bacon. It doesn't need to be super crispy, but if it is, that is fine too. Get it fried up and drained on a paper towel. In a large bowl combine all ingredients and mix to combine. Add in bacon and pour into a casserole dish that will hold your mixture, I used about a 3 quart and it was obviously plenty big. Pour the mixture in and bake uncovered 50-75 minutes. It will thicken a bit as it cools.
I hope you enjoy this simple recipe, that just gets better the longer it sits! Warm, cold, steaming hot, I have seen these eaten every which way!
ENJOY!
Showing posts with label beans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beans. Show all posts
Monday, August 11, 2014
Thursday, July 17, 2014
Crockpot O' Pintos
Ahh, so we meet again. Me....and the bean. I mean, you and I as well, but that is a beautiful meeting. Me and the bean have not had a relationship for 40 years. I want to love the bean, my health wants to love the bean, and always having to pick beans out of chili at the parties of friends and family gets tedious. This recipe, didn't make me love the bean any better.
Let me clarify. This is a great recipe. It is especially great for someone who loathes beans, but wanted to learn to make a good pot of beans and has no idea what a good pot of beans tastes like. Phew, did you get all that? I listened to a lot of your comments and advice. I even attempted this "method" that would make the room smell nice even after consuming the beans.
Let's just cut to the chase. I hope you give you these a try. They are crockpot friendly for all of you crocky lovers out there and I hope you enjoy them as much as the beans lovers in my family did!
This is a bit of a process at first, but, well not really. Ok for some of you it might be but just do it. Trust me.
First off you will need:
4 cups dried pinto beans
Rinse these in a strainer. Pick out any rocks, odd pieces, I even have heard of there being sticks in them. Just clean them up and rinse a couple of times. Now place in a pot, and cover with water. Make sure the water comes up a few inches higher than the beans. Place on high heat and bring to a boil. Let boil for 5 minutes. Immediately drain the water. It will be brown and gross looking. This is "supposedly" all the toxins that will keep your house from blowing up with gas from whoever eats these! Now, rinse the beans again. Place back in the pot, cover with water. Again, make the water a few inches higher, cover and let sit for at least 8 hours. Overnight is awesome, 12ish hours is even better.
Now get up, get yourself going and get your crockpot out. Here is what you will need for the rest:
1 ham bone (ham hock or bacon will work too)
2 medium onions, peeled and quartered
2 cups beef stock (use veggie or chicken if you choose)
2 cups water
1 tsp. minced garlic
1 tbsp. chili powder
1 tbsp. cumin
2 tsp. oregano
1 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. black pepper
Place beans in your slow cooker. Add stock, water, and all seasonings. Stir it up and then nestle your onions and ham bone down in the beanie bed of love. Put the lid on, set on high and let it rip for 8 hours. If you need to add water as it cooks, please do so. (or stock). Serve as you wish. With cornbread, with cheese, with cilantro, with anything you please!
You can feel free to smoosh the life outta these babies, toss them in a skillet with a bit of oil, and make some homemade refried beans!
ENJOY!
PS. What I failed to tell you when I wrote this post was that I actually used a CORNED BEEF for the first 2 hours. I had leftover corned beef in the freezer sitting right next to the ham bone. I saw pink and tossed it in. When I went to stir it, I was like...hmm, this is NOT ham. Holy cow, it was in fact, corned beef! Of course this was after I forgot to turn the crockpot ON for an hour. UGH! See, everyone makes mistakes, especially in a hurry. Moral of the story, MARK YOUR ZIPLOC BAGS! HAHA!
Let me clarify. This is a great recipe. It is especially great for someone who loathes beans, but wanted to learn to make a good pot of beans and has no idea what a good pot of beans tastes like. Phew, did you get all that? I listened to a lot of your comments and advice. I even attempted this "method" that would make the room smell nice even after consuming the beans.
Let's just cut to the chase. I hope you give you these a try. They are crockpot friendly for all of you crocky lovers out there and I hope you enjoy them as much as the beans lovers in my family did!
This is a bit of a process at first, but, well not really. Ok for some of you it might be but just do it. Trust me.
First off you will need:
4 cups dried pinto beans
Rinse these in a strainer. Pick out any rocks, odd pieces, I even have heard of there being sticks in them. Just clean them up and rinse a couple of times. Now place in a pot, and cover with water. Make sure the water comes up a few inches higher than the beans. Place on high heat and bring to a boil. Let boil for 5 minutes. Immediately drain the water. It will be brown and gross looking. This is "supposedly" all the toxins that will keep your house from blowing up with gas from whoever eats these! Now, rinse the beans again. Place back in the pot, cover with water. Again, make the water a few inches higher, cover and let sit for at least 8 hours. Overnight is awesome, 12ish hours is even better.
Now get up, get yourself going and get your crockpot out. Here is what you will need for the rest:
1 ham bone (ham hock or bacon will work too)
2 medium onions, peeled and quartered
2 cups beef stock (use veggie or chicken if you choose)
2 cups water
1 tsp. minced garlic
1 tbsp. chili powder
1 tbsp. cumin
2 tsp. oregano
1 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. black pepper
Place beans in your slow cooker. Add stock, water, and all seasonings. Stir it up and then nestle your onions and ham bone down in the beanie bed of love. Put the lid on, set on high and let it rip for 8 hours. If you need to add water as it cooks, please do so. (or stock). Serve as you wish. With cornbread, with cheese, with cilantro, with anything you please!
You can feel free to smoosh the life outta these babies, toss them in a skillet with a bit of oil, and make some homemade refried beans!
ENJOY!
PS. What I failed to tell you when I wrote this post was that I actually used a CORNED BEEF for the first 2 hours. I had leftover corned beef in the freezer sitting right next to the ham bone. I saw pink and tossed it in. When I went to stir it, I was like...hmm, this is NOT ham. Holy cow, it was in fact, corned beef! Of course this was after I forgot to turn the crockpot ON for an hour. UGH! See, everyone makes mistakes, especially in a hurry. Moral of the story, MARK YOUR ZIPLOC BAGS! HAHA!
Monday, October 28, 2013
Hearty Ham and Bean Soup
Haven't we discussed this before? Me, enjoying cooking things I don't care to eat? Is anyone else that way? I love cooking everything even if I don't always feel like I would put it in my mouth for love nor money! I love this way this smells cooking, just LOVE it. I don't do beans, we all know this from Chefwannabe secret #3044 or something. Maybe I am odd. But I don't think I can be the only one!
This is a dish that was an old standby growing up. If we had ham, which was afforded only on holidays, my mom never threw the ham bone out. She always made a huge pot of ham and bean soup. Yuck! My mom was never big on lots of seasoning, and this is one dish, I agree with her on. Basics my friends, just the basics. Let the ham and chicken stock do the work. My mom of course used all water, but I decided to add that little extra element of flavor by trading out half with chicken stock. I tasted the broth, and it was awesome!
Some of you are wondering if you can do this with canned beans, and the answer is yes. You can. But if you have the time, do dried. Do not salt your soup, your ham and stock should take care of that. Let anyone who wants to raise their blood pressure a couple of hundred points add their own! (btw that comment comes from a salt fanatic working hard to not use AS much) Anyway if you use canned beans, you don't need to cook it as long, just long enough to infuse beautiful ham flavor into them. I would say an hour, on a low simmer.
Enjoy this dish friends! Good old home cookin'!
1 lb ham bone or ham hocks
2 cups chicken stock
2 cups water
1 small onion diced fine
1 small carrot grated
1 cup dice ham (optional)
The night before.....
In a large bowl, add in dried beans. Add water, until they are covered plus about 3 inches. DO NOT SALT. Let sit overnight.
After a long rest......
In a large pot, add in onions, carrot, ham bone, beans, water, ham (if using) and stock. Give a good stir and simmer for 2 hours, or until beans are tender, stirring every 30 minutes or so. The more you stir, the thicker your soup will be. Roughing up the beans will smoosh them and allow the soup to thicken more. Simmer with the lid off the last 30 minutes. I served up a bowl that was more soupy and then thickened up the rest!
Slow Cooker Method:
Add all ingredients to slow cooker and cook on low for 8 hours. You will have a more soup like consistency so using an immersion blender, blend your soup slightly. You can do this by adding about 1/3 of your soup into a food processor or blender and adding it back in as well!
Your "me no likey beans" Chefwannabe
Labels:
beans,
budget friendly,
carrots,
chicken stock,
comfort food,
dinner,
easy,
foodthoughtsofachefwannabe,
ham,
ham and bean soup,
ham and beans,
hearty,
lunch,
one pot,
soup,
supper
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Touchdown Corn Salsa
I live in the Cornhusker State. I moved away, and returned in recent years, and it is still a state where the word "corn" must be the most used word among its residents. Cornhuskers, (though we won't discuss them right now), cornfields, corn trucks, corn pickers, popcorn, corncorncorncorncorn!
It was only natural, in light of it being football season, that I made a game day snack that contained corn, right? You know, you make all that game food and just make an entire, day long meal out of them? Do you all do that too? We are a picky loving' family, we just would rather "picky" to the Philadelphia Eagles! Yes I admitted it, a Nebraskan who isn't a huge Husker fan. You all know I am going to have to into hiding now, right?
Anyway, this is a fairly healthy dish for me. I mean, this is no diet blog for sure, but I also love healthy things too! Yes I DO! Mind you, I ate this salsa between the beans. I don't groove on beans, not even in this salsa. The flavor is great, and though I did not use cilantro, I think it might be a tasty addition if you groove on it. Such a split world when it comes to cilantro eaters and cilantro free'ers! How do you exactly spell that, really? I like my way, so it is staying. Enjoy this for game day, your next FIESTA, or just for healthy snacking anytime! This makes a fairly large batch. OK, it makes a huge batch.
1 large tomato, diced (approx 1 1/2 cups)
1 15 oz can black beans (rinsed and drained)
1/2 small jalapeno FINELY diced (more or less to suit your tastes)
1/2 cup onion
1 16oz bag of frozen corn
1 TBSP minced garlic
1 tsp salt
1 tsp pepper
3/4 cup apple cider vinegar
1/2 cup vegetable oil (or oil of your choice)
1/2 tsp hot sauce (optional)
2 tbsp. cilantro (optional)
Combine all ingredients. Cover and refrigerate at least 1 hour before serving. The longer it sits, the better. Stir occasionally if you like while it is chilling! Serve with chips and you have a TOUCHDOWN!
It was only natural, in light of it being football season, that I made a game day snack that contained corn, right? You know, you make all that game food and just make an entire, day long meal out of them? Do you all do that too? We are a picky loving' family, we just would rather "picky" to the Philadelphia Eagles! Yes I admitted it, a Nebraskan who isn't a huge Husker fan. You all know I am going to have to into hiding now, right?
Anyway, this is a fairly healthy dish for me. I mean, this is no diet blog for sure, but I also love healthy things too! Yes I DO! Mind you, I ate this salsa between the beans. I don't groove on beans, not even in this salsa. The flavor is great, and though I did not use cilantro, I think it might be a tasty addition if you groove on it. Such a split world when it comes to cilantro eaters and cilantro free'ers! How do you exactly spell that, really? I like my way, so it is staying. Enjoy this for game day, your next FIESTA, or just for healthy snacking anytime! This makes a fairly large batch. OK, it makes a huge batch.
1 large tomato, diced (approx 1 1/2 cups)
1 15 oz can black beans (rinsed and drained)
1/2 small jalapeno FINELY diced (more or less to suit your tastes)
1/2 cup onion
1 16oz bag of frozen corn
1 TBSP minced garlic
1 tsp salt
1 tsp pepper
3/4 cup apple cider vinegar
1/2 cup vegetable oil (or oil of your choice)
1/2 tsp hot sauce (optional)
2 tbsp. cilantro (optional)
Combine all ingredients. Cover and refrigerate at least 1 hour before serving. The longer it sits, the better. Stir occasionally if you like while it is chilling! Serve with chips and you have a TOUCHDOWN!
Your "GO BIG RED" Chefwannabe
Labels:
appetizer,
beans,
black beans,
corn,
corn salsa,
dip,
easy,
foodthoughtsofachefwannabe,
garlic,
mexican,
onion,
party,
salsa,
spicy,
tex mex,
tomatoes,
touchdown corn salsa,
vinegar
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)