Friday, June 8, 2012

All Is Well



aka SOUL FOOD WILL GET YOU THROUGH



Ready to eat - my version of Red Beans and Rice


I don't know about you, but the past few weeks have been wearing for me - finishing off a lot of classes, difficulties with the Whole and Natural Foods Chef Training Program logistics - really, just life saying not so gently - no, don't go this way, but rather this way. Sometimes it takes a great deal of surrender, but I have found over the years that there is always a higher reason and if I just breathe deep and become still enough, not hold on so tight to what I think is the right way, it always works out. Don't get me wrong - I love teaching and classes, but I'm at that tired point right now but fortunately I have some space, time now to plan for program and logistics for the WNFCTP - no place to be, nothing else to plan for and it's heaven. I'm going slow and cooking slow (and in some cases, thinking slow if the truth be told).


onion, spices and vegetables ready to go



I want to go and listen to these guys but that would mean I would need to catch a plane and head east  and right now I don't really want to go anywhere !!! I'm so loving being at home and BEING IN MY home, feeling it's walls and space holding me. But if I was there in Bellingen, I'd like to go also and get my goat on and who could resist going to a gallery called " Everything That's Beautiful Galley" - not me. I'd go, I'd spend and I'd be really wanting to get one of Jay's glorious vegetable embroideries. Yup. But, I'm not - I'm here loving and being at my desk, at my pace, in my home. But I need soul food and nothing says that more than Red Beans and Rice. Like perfume that brings a memory to consciousness, eating this I am immediately back in the French Quarter at a funky vegetarian cafe I've long since forgotten the name of. Red Beans and Rice is classic New Orleans soul food - honest, nourishing, cheap, easy and above all delicious - even Michael Franti has a song about it. Traditionally made on a Monday (washing day) it just does it's thing simmering along ready for you at the end of the day. There are hundreds of versions, my favourites include those by Bryant Terry (I can heartily recommend both his books - Vegan Soul Kitchen and the new one The Inspired Vegan). This recipe here is a variation from the original in my book Coming Home to Eat - Wholefood for the Family, but I've chosen to highlight it here as I think many people just might overlook it. I've cooked mine this week with chicken stock I had in the freezer and I would recommend this if you have any digestive issues. It is also a classic example of frugal cooking - deeply nourishing and cheap home made bone stock ensures that you can utilise more of the protein in those beans.


Your beans are cooked when they yield a soft, creamy centre to gentle pressure from your finger. The two in the front are cooked, the one at the back not at all. 


But just a word about beans - organic beans can be problematic in Australia. I'm finding that many of them (black, borlotti, pinto, kidney, cannellini, great northern, etc) don't cook - ever. What has happened is that many of them are sourced from China - coming into Australia they must be treated in some way. Because they are organic, they are heat treated (in China). You can see in the bean above at the back that it's not creamy in any way, certainly not cooked and if you could look up close you could just see a little band around the edge of the interior of the bean. This is where the heat has seared it. They never cook. I tend these days in Australia to go for conventional beans. I dream of growing them myself or being in San Francisco at the Ferry Plaza Farmers Market and buying beans from Rancho Gordo. But, until then, I'm sticking with conventional. Organic chickpeas, split peas and lentils are fine - it's the beans that seem to be the problem. 


Go and put a pot of these beans on the stove now. If your world is busy and life is throwing up it's challenges, if money is tight, this will reassure you that indeed, all is well. Body and soul will be nourished.



SOUL VERSION RED BEANS AND RICE (with pinto beans)

I've made this version using pinto beans as it's much quicker. Chicken stock will give a slightly sweeter end result, but vegie stock will do just fine. I've chosen to stick to a slightly more traditional format by adding greens at the end - in this case Tuscan Black Kale. I serve with brown rice. 



1 cup raw (dried) pinto beans, soaked overnight in lots of water to cover the beans by about 3 cm


The Next Day

1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon ghee
1 onion - finely diced - if I have a red onion, all the better
1 teaspoon each dried basil and oregano
1/4 teaspoon dried thyme
pinch dired sage
2 fresh bay leaves
1 medium carrot cut into small dice
2 sticks celery sliced finely
2 cloves garlic finely diced/crushed
fresh chilli as desired finely sliced
freshly ground black pepper (I sometimes use a mix of black, white and pink) to taste, but generally about 1/4 - 1/2 teaspoon (or even more). Remember, pepper is an important part - it has taste as well as heat
pinch asafoetida (or if you have Kombu sea vegetable a 5cm strip
3 - 4 cups vegetable or chicken stock
 I used 5 medium leaves Tuscan Black Kale, roughly sliced, but collard greens are the traditional ingredient
1 - 2 teaspoons wheat free tamari
1 - 2 tablespoons flat leaf parsley

Add the oil and ghee to a good size stewpot ( I like a 24cm Le Creuset enamel coated cast iron). Add the onion, herbs and vegetables - saute over a very gentle heat for 10 minutes avoiding frying the onion. Add the garlic, chilli and black pepper after 5 minutes, stirring every now and then.

Drain the beans and rinse well. Add to the pot with the asafoetida (or kombu) and stock. Partly cover with the lid and increase the heat to bring to a gentle simmer. Cook for about 11/2 - 2 hours. Check where the beans are at - they should be just about cooked and most certainly yield a creamy centre to pressure. If they are still like pebbles, you most likely have heat treated beans or they are stunningly old. If so take a risk and put the lid back on and simmer until they are soft - if they still aren't soft after 4 hours, I would give up. After this time, remove the lid and increase the boil to reduce the beans to a thick, saucy consistency - stirring often. You might like to mash some of them to help thicken the sauce. Before checking for taste and adding tamari and parsley, add the kale or collard greens - sprinkle them on top - I prefer not to stir them through, add the lid and over a very gentle heat, let them steam for 10 minutes or until just soft. Stir through then check for taste - adding tamari and black pepper as needed.

Other traditional ingredients for the dish include red and green capsicums, spring onions (whites and greens), ham or bacon bones or bacon drippings used for the fat. Onions, spring onions, capsicums, garlic and spices would be sauteed in the bacon drippings. 




9 comments:

  1. Hi Jude,
    Your red bean with rice looks so fresh. :)
    I don’t mind eat this every day. LOL.
    Thank you for sharing. :)
    You can submit your red bean with rice pics on http://www.foodporn.net It is a food (and drink of course) photography site where members can submit all food (and drink of course (again) LOL ) pictures that make readers hungry.
    Well, you know it’s fun to make others hungry (and thirsty)! :D

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  2. the very second I read "Red beans and rice", Micheal's voice started ticking in my head! I just love the sound of this, and will be trying it asap.

    I hope you don't mind, but I linked in to your blog today from mine. Thought you would like to know, and maybe pop in sometime and tell me what you think!

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  3. Hi Kylie,

    so pleased - yes, put that funky boy on the stereo and get cooking !!! How did the Lunchbox slice end up? !!

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  4. Well, it took until 10.30pm (and it was not the slices fault at all, but the result of a 2 1/2 yr old who's trying her best to convince me that sleep is for the weak), but I got the Banana, Oat and Dried fruit lunchbox slice finished alongside the Dried apricot, date and coconut balls. And the result this morning was so inspiring that I wanted to fall down and pray directly to the whole food gods! Ethan ate four pieces of slice after his breakfast, Alice had one. They devoured about 4 or 5 balls between them before we even left for school drop off!

    So I would say that is an amazing win! I'm only a blushing bride with the whole food movement thus far, about a year in and still committing the occasional sin with mostly what I term 'stuck out of the house' food when we are at the park near school. But now I know where the good stuff is, I shall be fossicking through your books more and more!

    Thanks so much! Should also add that I grabbed the ingredients for red beans and rice today. Couldn't help myself...

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  5. OMG Kylie, you legend. It's interesting, but children tend to respond to real food - they eat it. You should win the Australian of the year. So pleased for you...

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  6. We had red beans and rice a la Jude for dinner tonight. The kids had three helpings. And I'm all homesick (originally from the southern US) now. We ate red beans and rice at least once a week in uni...it's very cheap! Thanks, Jude. We'll reinsert this in our winter food rotation.
    Carina

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    Replies
    1. Hi Carina... yep, red beans and rice will do that to you. I've been watching Treme (HBO Series) and all homesick myself. It's such a good, winter meal. So glad you've re discovered it Carina...

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  7. I like Bryant Terry's books too.
    Do you recommend buying a toaster oven? Will food still taste as good as it does with a regular oven?

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    Replies
    1. It depends - nothing wrong with a toaster oven for emergencies - better than a microwave. Really, the taste of the food will depend on a lot of other factors also -really, there are millions of variables that effect the end result.

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