Posts tagged beans

Through the door

Posted by Sheila

I feel a little silly showing up back here.  It has almost been a year since I last posted on what began as a shared blog, and after so much time, I can’t help but wonder if there is a way back through the door.  There are, in fact, so many more reasons to not continue being a part of this blog than to start trying to contribute again, that it has made it doubly hard to get back at it.   There is the ever present busyness of life, the really boring (in a blog world kind of way) food we eat, the lack of recipes used or created to share, the willy-nilly-free-for-all that cooking is for me; I have had too much time to reflect on all this in the year since I last posted that I can’t help but feel that I was naive to think I would have anything worthwhile to write on a food blog.

No one that reads this blog now probably even remembers that when we started this project, it was going to be a collaboration.  I have felt a lot of guilt about asking Lisa to start this and then leaving all the work to her.  But life happens, and I happened to lose both my parents within days of each other in the worst week of my life last June.  When I got home, I didn’t want to write anything at all.  And although I had to keep up with things a bit more on our farm blog, my heart wasn’t in it. The same was true for cooking.  We all ate of course, and ate healthy, local, tasty food; but I was surprised to find that I was going to go through a grief process no matter how reasonable I tried to feel about death in my mind, and that part of this process meant feeling pretty lackluster about most things, especially food and farming.  Luckily, I felt a renewed and very intense joy in that which is most important of all, my children and our family.  That made for happiness in the midst of sadness, and that focused energy towards them has found us all in a more joyful place than ever as we start a new year.

Now that time has healed, I have been trying to find a way to start posting here again.  And although I can’t say I am convinced that my cooking in the kitchen is anything spectacular, it is homey, healthy, and a good picture of what eating locally looks like in a simple, down to earth style.  And that, coupled with the fact that I still have that nagging guilt about my absence from here and because Lisa surprisingly still wants me to contribute and because I really do love to write, has gotten me here.  I am going to try to find ways to share our farm and home’s little bit of mindful eating again.

And for all my worry about what I will write about, I have at least started to try my hand at meal planning.  This winter was lean in our fields and freezers, and planning things for the week really helped me figure out what we were going to eat.  Right now, our fields are in transition.  We have tilled in most of our over-wintered produce, that we could still be harvesting from, in order to fill the space up for a big spring since we are not going to be harvesting for our CSA or Farmer’s Markets until the last week of this month.  We are excited for the farm business, but it has left less to harvest from for the family right now.  We normally don’t buy vegetables, but because we have had so little and because we are nourishing so many, I have been buying potatoes from a local farm and mushrooms grown in the county to round things out.  Here is what this week’s menu looked like, a picture of how we eat when we don’t have much new spring produce yet and have exhausted most of our preserved produce.  We normally eat, and encourage folks to eat, so many more vegetables than we are eating right now; but sometimes, we have found, that we have to give a little from our ideals, with both vegetable and meat amounts, in our effort to live off our land or our neighbors’.

Monday:

Breakfast–Fried Eggs and Rye Toast

Lunch–White Bean Soup with Spring Onion, Kale, and Sausage

Dinner–Polenta (made with chicken stock) with Sauteed Spring Onions and Kale

Tuesday:

Breakfast–Oatmeal and Sausage

Lunch–Leftover Polenta with Leftover White Bean Soup

Dinner–Gluten-Free Chicken, Mushroom, Onion, and Sage Pot Pie

Wednesday:

Breakfast–Egg Scramble with Chives and Kale

Lunch–Eating somewhere in Portland (suggestions accepted!)

Dinner–Lamb Sausages with White Bean and Savory Puree and Sauteed Kale

Thursday:

Breakfast–Poached Eggs with Hollandaise and Gluten-Free English Muffins, topped with Chive Blossoms

Lunch–Chicken, Mushroom, Onion, and  Mung Bean Noodle Soup

Dinner–Meatloaf with Mashed Potatoes and Spring Lettuce Salad

Friday–

Breakfast–Buckwheat Pancakes with Sunflower Seed Butter

Lunch–Salmon Cakes with Spring Lettuce Salad

Dinner–Taco Night (which has sadly replaced Pizza Night due to food allergies) with Sprouted Corn Tortillas, Refried Pinto Beans, and Sauteed Onion and Kale

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This week from the farm table…

Posted by  Sheila

spring rapini

Ok, things have been cooking pretty slowly for me and this blog.  As my about info relates, we are not usually meal planners so can’t share a weekly meal plan.   However things are heating up now that we are back to harvesting for the CSA.  Now we begin to just  harvest for ourselves on the same day, and either suggest recipes for that week that we have tried, or often find new ones that we then try that week.  This will make it easier for me to serve up tasty blog posts to complement Lisa’s hard work here!  The second ingredient that has been missing for me here has been taking decent pictures of the food we make.  I have come to have a great appreciation for the well taken pictures on food blogs.  Like Lisa mentioned to me, it is hard when everyone is ready to eat and you are trying to get a picture in, and then add in a dash of poor lighting in the kitchen and it just becomes a fiasco.  So I have decided, photo or not, words can go a long way (pictures do help) with wetting your appetites!  Here’s some of what we ate from our fields last week.

  • Goat and Barley Soup with Leek Tops (cut leek tops into 1 inch pieces and used as their own veggie–these were soft and delicious by the time the soup was finished!)
  • Salad Mix of baby lettuces, crisp baby Russian kale, blood red beet leaves, borage flowers, perpetual spinach, and wild sorrel tossed with nettle pesto, italian-style homemade vinaigrette, and coarsly chopped Oregon hazelnuts
  • Braised Rack of Goat with Sauteed Rapini
  • Pizza Night:  Nettle Pesto w/ sheep’s Feta AND Carmelized Leeks and Rapini, w/ Parmesan and Olive Oil
  • Coconut Red Beans and Rice w/ baby perpetual spinach leaf salad with oil, vinegar, feta
  • Falafel and Chard Cakes (ours somewhere between these and these )
  • Rice Noodles with with sautéed Kale, locally fished Tuna, and Buttery Leeks

lettuce heads

Things we plan to try this week:

And lots of different salads:

  • Baby Perpetual Spinach with warm dressing of some sort (maybe we will splurge for some bacon…our piggies had none) and poached egg.
  • Baby Perpetual Spinach w/ balsamic vinegar/olive oil, walnuts, and Oregonzola (Rogue Creamery blue cheeses-yum!!)
  • Ceasar-inspired Lettuce Salad with our Rogue D’Hiver lettuce (a Romaine type)
  • And maybe this Butter Lettuce and Pumpkin Seed Salad with our Winter Density lettuce (a butter/romaine style)

Otherwise it might be more of our old stand-bys: kale and eggs in the morning, greens smoothies, collards and rice and buttery leeks and white beans, more slow cooked goat (it is the only meat in our freezer right now), and probably another rapini pizza on pizza night!  Who knows, maybe this week a great picture will come out of a great meal and it will grace this table here!

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New Mexican Style Enchiladas

Posted by Lisa
New Mexican Style Enchiladas

New Mexican Style Enchiladas

In New Mexico, enchiladas can be rolled or stacked.  I’ve never seen stacked enchiladas outside of New Mexico, but then I’m not well-traveled either, so I it could be that it’s not a style that is unique to New Mexico.  Another thing that sets these enchiladas apart is the fact that I serve them with a fried egg on top.  Does that sound repulsive?  It does to my husband, which is why he never has an egg on his.  But, if you’ve ever tried and liked Huevos Rancheros, you will realize that chili, beans, and chili with an egg on top is good.  The enchiladas that I made this week don’t have meat, but I generally add ground beef (though my freezer is pretty empty right now).  They are tasty both ways.

Chili Bean Mixture

Chili Bean Mixture

New Mexican Style Enchiladas

  • 1 pound dried pinto beans, cooked* and drained
  • 1 1/2 pounds ground beef, optional
  • 5 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 onion, finely chopped
  • 2 tablespoons flour
  • 4 tablespoons chili powder
  • 2 teaspoons sea salt
  • 1 teaspoon cumin
  • 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  • Water or beef stock
  • Coconut or olive oil or beef tallow
  • Eggs
  • Corn tortillas (I usually use 10-12)
  • Grated cheddar cheese
  • Sour cream

Possible toppings (I only use these when they are in season, if they are in season locally.  Avocados are never in season in OR, but I splurge on occasion.)

  • Chopped lettuce
  • Chopped tomatoes
  • Sliced green onions
  • Sliced avocados
  • Sliced black olives

If you are using ground beef, brown it with the garlic and onions.  If you are not using ground beef, sauté the garlic and onions in oil or tallow until they are soft.  Add flour, chili powder, salt, cumin and oregano.  Cook for a minute or two, until fragrant.  Add about 1 1/2 cups of water or beef stock and cooked and drained pinto beans.  Bring it to a simmer.  Simmer on low  for 15-20 minutes to allow it to thicken.  If necessary, add more water or stock.

Toward the end of the cooking time, start to warm and soften your tortillas.  You can do this in one of two ways:  warm for several minutes in a moderate oven or fry each tortilla in a small amount of oil on a griddle.  I usually use the latter method, since I already have a griddle out to cook the eggs.  Keep tortillas warmed and fry enough eggs to top each plate of enchiladas.  I like mine cooked over medium, so the yolk is still somewhat runny.

To assemble the enchiladas, place a warmed tortilla on a plate, spoon and spread enough meat, bean and chili mixture onto the tortilla to cover it.  Sprinkle cheese on top of this and then top with another tortilla and repeat until you have as many layers as you like, ending with beans and cheese.  Top with an egg,  sour cream and any toppings you are using.

*I always soak my beans overnight in filter water and whey and then cook in the afternoon before preparing my meal.

Soaking pinto beans

Soaking pinto beans

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Baked Beans, Ma Style

Posted by Lisa

Beans are an inexpensive pantry staple.  They are full of fiber and very filling and most people like them.  My girls and I have been reading books from the Little House series for the past year or so and have wanted to make an authentic recipe from one of the books for awhile.  I finally got around to trying the recipe for Baked Beans.  I calculated that a whole pot, which was enough for a main dish meal for our family of two adults, one tween and two younger children to be less than $3.00.  I was hoping that the dish would be tasty or at least edible, but we were all very surprised at the richness and depth of flavor in these beans.  Humble, modest food, but so delicious and hearty.  The bacon was almost buttery and the beans were so smoky and tender.  This dish takes a long time to cook*, but it is very hands off, so it can be in your oven while you are cleaning your house, weeding your garden or browsing your blog roll.

Baked Beans

adapted from The Little House Cookbook

  • Navy, pea or “little white” beans, 3 cups (I used navy beans)
  • 1 tablespoon whey or lemon juice
  • baking soda, 1 teaspoon
  • salt pork or bacon, 1/4 to 1/2 pound (I used bacon)
  • sea salt
  • molasses, 1/4 cup
  • optional:  onions, cut into small chunks; additional molasses

The night before cooking, put sorted beans into a large pot or stainless steel bowl with whey or lemon juice, cover with filtered water.

Soaked beans, before simmering.

Soaked beans, before simmering.

Next morning, change the water and bring to a simmer.  Simmer for 5 minutes and skim foam off the top of the water.  Stir in baking soda and watch it fizz.  Continue to simmer.  After about 40 minutes they should be tender.

Pour the cloudy yellowish liquid off of the tender beans and cover with 5 cups of fresh water and return to a simmer; add salt pork or bacon.  Add salt to taste; I used about two teaspoons of sea salt.  In 30 minutes this liquid will be ready to pour off.

Beans simmering with bacon

Beans simmering with bacon

Drain liquid from beans and reserve.  Grease an enameled cast iron dutch oven (this is what I used with excellent results, but you could probably use any type of dutch oven) with a couple pieces of the bacon.  Put drained beans and bacon into greased dutch oven.  If you are using onions, layer them in between the beans.  Drizzle molasses on top of the beans and bacon, then add reserved bean liquid just to almost cover the beans.

Beans before baking

Beans before baking

Put a lid on and bake for four hours at 250, remove the lid and bake for another four hours.  Alternately you can bake for four hours at 350.  In either case, add liquid if necessary to keep beans from drying out.  You don’t want the surface to start drying out some until the last hour of baking.

Baked Beans

Baked Beans

Serve with a small pitcher of molasses, if desired.  Cornbread is an fantastic accompaniment.

*I started cooking the beans at about 8:30 in the morning and dinner was ready around 6:45pm.

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Spicy Green Chile and Pinto Bean Soup & Cast Iron Skillet Potatoes

Posted by Lisa

Soups are so warming and nourishing in the winter and they are also versatile.  In a pot, throw in what you have in the fridge or pantry along with some stock and seasonings and you have a soup.  Or you can be less casual and use a recipe, either written or just the same soup you’ve made before with great results.  My Spicy Green Chile and Pinto Bean Soup is just that.  A soup made up one time and now I more or less remember the ingredients and the results are approximately the same each time I make it.  I start by soaking pinto beans the night before I plan to make it.  If I’m cooking beans I generally soak and cook more than I will need for the meal at hand.  Cooked beans are great for freezing or using for lunches the days following a meal including beans.  For this recipe I used about one pound of dry beans, so I soaked  and cooked about two pounds.  I have to give much thanks to my Aunt Kathy for this meal.  She and my uncle brought up about 15 pounds of frozen green chiles last year from New Mexico for us, so we have the real thing!  Not local, I know, but a treat nonetheless, and they were already heading up here for a wedding!

Spicy Green Chile and Pinto Bean Soup

  • Oil for cooking, I use what I have handy, usually olive oil, coconut oil, chicken fat or beef tallow
  • One large onion, chopped or diced
  • Four cloves  garlic, minced
  • One teaspoon cumin
  • One teaspoon dried oregano, (preferably from your own garden)
  • Sea salt to taste, usually 1 1/2 – 2 teaspoons
  • 2-3 cups of canned diced tomatoes, (a home canned pint  or a 15oz can if you are purchasing from a store; also check your fridge to see if you haven any partial jars of tomatoes in there and throw those in too)
  • Chiles to taste, this will vary for your palate and what chiles you have on hand; I used about 3/4 c. of frozen green chiles
  • One pound of dried beans, previously soaked and cooked
  • 3 – 5 cups of water or vegetable, chicken or beef stock

Heat a dutch oven or large pot over medium-high heat.  Add several tablespoons of your chosen oil or fat and heat the oil.  Add the onions and cook for several minutes until they start to soften and brown, stir frequently to prevent burning.  Add garlic, cumin and oregano and cook for another minute or two until it starts to smell fragrant.  Be especially watchful and stir often, burned garlic and spices don’t add anything appealing to a dish.  When it is fragrant, add salt, tomatoes and chiles.  If you are adding frozen chiles, let the chiles melt and incorporate into the soup; if you are adding fresh let the chiles cook and soften a bit.  Then, add beans and water or stock.  Simmer until heated through and flavors meld a bit.  This is usually only about 10 minutes for me, because I’m always late with getting dinner on, but for you people who are better in the time management department, I would say up to 30 or 45 minutes.  Just don’t let the beans get too soft, unless you like them that way.

I serve this with some grated raw cheddar and sour cream on the table so everyone can garnish as they like.

Spicy Green Chile and Pinto Bean Soup & Cast Iron Skillet Potatoes

Spicy Green Chile and Pinto Bean Soup & Cast Iron Skillet Potatoes

This soup is pretty good with potatoes, like peasant food.

I frequently make my potatoes in a cast iron skillet, because it caramelizes the potatoes on the outside and give them a little crisp, but makes them lovely and tender inside.  I added green chiles this time because it went so nicely with the soup.

Cast Iron Skillet Potatoes

  • One or two tablespoons butter
  • One or two tablespoons olive oil
  • One onion, chopped into larger pieces, 1/2″+
  • 1-2 pounds of potatoes cut into pieces smaller than the onions (I use closer to two pounds for our family of five)
  • Freshly ground pepper
  • Sea salt to taste, about 1 teaspoon
  • Optional additions:  green chiles, garlic, fresh herbs

Heat your cast iron skillet for several minutes on medium-high heat.  When it is nice and hot add butter and olive oil.  (For some reason using both keeps the potatoes from sticking, but still crisps and browns them nicely.)  When the oil and butter are melted and hot, add onions.  Cook onions for several minutes.  Add potatoes, pepper and salt to taste (and any optional additions) and stir to combine, then let it cook and only stir/turn every three or four minutes so the potatoes can brown.  *Let me take a moment to say that I always use a metal spatula/turner when I’m cooking potatoes in a cast iron skillet.  The edge of the turner gets under the potatoes when turning and leaves the crust that forms on the potato attached to the potato rather than attached to the skillet.  I’ve had inferior results from using a spoon or wooden spatula/stirrer thingy.*   After potatoes are nicely browned and starting to get tender, turn heat to low and put a lid on the skillet.  Cook another 10 or 15 minutes until potatoes are melt-in-your-mouth tender.  Only turn often enough to prevent burning during the time the lid is on; don’t get too enthusiastic or you’ll start to mash the potatoes.

These are also nice served with grated raw cheddar, sour cream and some salsa.

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