In search of bean-based recipes that don’t require a lot of steps or ingredients or equipment. I’m looking for more comfy staples that I can make while I’m not feeling well. Any ideas?

  • unwellsnail@kbin.social
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    Instead of different bean recipes I like to make a variety of beans. There’s a great website called Rancho Gordo with a lot of different heirloom beans that are phenomenal, I love trying new beans. I usually cook each new type the same with simple spices to experience the base bean flavor before using them in more complicated dishes.

  • David of the Ferns@fernchat.esotericmonkey.com
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    My all time favorite BEANS recipe: Take 28 grams of dried BEANS, and grind them coarsely. Put BEANS into a suitable vessel that can strain. Take 475 grams of 200°F HEATED WATER. Pour about 75g into BEANS and wait 30 seconds. Pour the rest of the HEATED WATER into BEANS, stir it, cover it, and wait 3 minutes. Strain your BEAN JUICE into a SUITABLE CONSUMPTION VESSEL. Enjoy your HEATED BEAN JUICE.

  • AnonymousFish@kbin.social
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    My mom used to put a bunch of beans in the crock pot with a chopped up onion and some bacon when I was growing up, it was always great! I think they were pinto beans, with the measurements somewhere around 1lb beans, one package of bacon, one large onion. Cover with water and crockpot until everything is cooked through and you’re happy with it :)

  • zhunk@beehaw.org
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    There are 3 quickish bean recipes that I make. There’s a range of effort levels for each.

    Chana Masala. Start a pot of rice. Maybe add bullion. Sautee onions, throw in garlic, sprinkle in curry powder. Strain and add a can of chickpeas. Add any can of tomatoes (fire roasted, w/ green chiles, plain). Maybe a little can of diced chiles. More curry powder. Low heat until the rice is ready. Serve the goop over rice. Or mix them.

    Lentil soup. Sautee onions. Add garlic. Add broth and bullion. Add carrots, celery, tomatoes, maybe bits of potato, and some spices (I do a random Penzey’s blend, smoked paprika, bay leaves) and boil it. Add lentils. Simmer until it’s right.

    Bean tacos. Heat some corn tortillas, either foil wrapped in the oven or fried until they’re crispy. Sautee some onions and peppers (bell, poblano, jalapeno, fresno, idk). Strain and add a can of pinto or black beans. Smash those up a bit. Maybe add tomatoes. Add taco or adobo seasoning and some MSG. Maybe some cubed up leftover chicken. Goop some of that into each tortilla. I like to have pickled red onions in the fridge to add. For sauce, I usually have plain Greek yogurt, so in a bowl, mix yogurt, salsa, hot sauce.

  • molls@beehaw.org
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    1 year ago

    My suggestions would be to learn how to cook a perfect pot of beans on their own. Beans are wonderful and can be the star of their own solo show, complimented by salt, fat, and some humble aromatics. Carla Lalli Music is a bean queen and following her bean philosophy has given me the best pots of beans. This is a good starter recipe for brothy basil beans and this is more of a ‘beans and other things’ kind of recipe. Carla talks a lot about using fat liberally and as far as beans go, I have yet to overdo it. Don’t be afraid to really let that bottle of olive oil glug glug glug away.

    If you’re going for canned bean ideas, I like doing crispy roast chickpeas or a simple chana masala. I find other canned bean applications are fairly lackluster compared to the flavor and texture payoff you can get from cooking from dried. That said, canned beans are great in a pinch and I always have a few kinds in my pantry.

      • molls@beehaw.org
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        1 year ago

        Sure thing! Also I forgot something very important: beans take FOREVER to soften in acidic conditions. My biggest bean fails have been attempting dried beans (even pre-soaked ones) in tomato based sauces from the start. They just never fully soften. Instead, save tomatoes and vinegar for the end. If you’re doing something like chili, I’d recommend cooking the beans in a separate broth. Keep it simple but well seasoned, cook until tender or just shy of tender, and then add to the chili to finish cooking them in the sauce.