T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1052.1 | Refried Beans (the "good" is relative) | HAVOC::TRAVIS | | Mon Mar 21 1988 10:59 | 26 |
| As with so many "plain"-type foods, refired beans are very much
a matter of personal taste. I prefer to use pinto beans, beginning
with dried and cooking. per package directions, till quite soft
Drain any remaining liquid from cooked beans and reserve.
Heat bacon fat, (lard or shortning do well, oil does less well)
in a heavy fry pan. Saute garlic and onion until tender and lightly
colored. Add small amounts of beans, mashing to the consistency
you prefer. Keep adding the beans and reserved liquid, by portions,
until you have what you consider "good" refried beans. Chicken
broth or boullion can be used if you run out of bean liquid. During
this adding-and-mashing process the heat should be kept so that
the mixture simmers; this needs to blend without drying out.
Added flavor is gained by the generous use of bacon fat, but you
may want to avoid this. Flavor can also be gained by adding cooked
bacon or sausage, Chorizo, Mexican-variety sausage, would be most
authentic but Italian Sausage, either hot or sweet, or regular ground
sausage work as well.
This is a bit of work - you might want to find someone to spell
you with the mashing, if you do a large batch. This freezes quite
successfully.
Enjoy - homemade is SO much better that store-bought!
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1052.2 | Fast food beans.... | SQM::AITEL | Every little breeze.... | Mon Mar 21 1988 15:33 | 8 |
| If you want to make this process quicker, start with canned
kidney beans. They're very soft and mash up more easily
than the freshly cooked beans.
I like mine with lots of garlic - I like almost all savory foods
with garlic added.
--Louise
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1052.3 | NEW MEXICO STYLE REFRIEDS | THE780::WILDE | Being clever is tiring.. | Mon Mar 21 1988 19:19 | 36 |
| FIRST, the correct (and best tasting) recipe is BAD FOR YOUR HEART...
REAL REFRIED BEANS
Cooked, cold pinto beans
LARD (yep, its gotta be lard to be real refrieds - or rendered salt pork
may be used as a substitute)
grated cheese (cheddar and monterey jack mixed)
chopped jalepena peppers to taste (optional to some people)
I consider optional:
sliced black pitted olives
sour cream
MAKE THE PINTOS THE DAY BEFORE YOU WANNA SERVE THE REFRIEDS:
clean and pick over dried pinto beans. Add cold water to cover and
either let soak overnight or bring to a boil and simmer for 1 hour.
Drain beans. Add cold water to cover, 1 large onion chopped. Bring
to boil and simmer until they are tender, and change color from
spotted to brown. They may be a little soupy, but probably will
lose that when they are chilled in fridge overnight...
PLEASE NOTE: I did not specify adding salt - DON'T ADD SALT!
The next day:
Melt approx. 1/4 cup lard or render out 1/4 cup fat from salt pork
into heavy skillet. Add 3 or 4 cups cold beans and cook until
thorough heated. Spread beans out in skillet after mixing in peppers
if you want them, cover liberally with grated cheeses and bake in
the oven until cheese is hot and bubbly. You may top with sour cream
and olives and avocados or whatever...serve hot as a side dish for
mexican food.
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1052.4 | | AUNTB::PRESSLEY | | Fri May 26 1989 15:00 | 2 |
| For a variation add Chile Powder, Tobasco, and minced onion to
mashed beans.
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1052.5 | How about Black Beans? | RUSTIE::NALE | Expert Only: I'll do it anyway | Wed Apr 10 1991 17:11 | 8 |
|
I *love* the black beans that you get at the Border Caf� in Cambridge. They're
separate, not mushed together like refried beans, and they're spicy. Anyone
know how to make these? I've got a bag of dried black beans in my cupboard and
would love to try my hand at them.
Thanks,
Sue
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1052.6 | | CSCOA1::ANDERSON_M | Dwell in possibility | Thu Apr 11 1991 08:43 | 10 |
|
I've never been to the Border Cafe, so this may be completely off base,
but Gourmet last month had a recipe for spicy black beans that sounds
like what you're looking for. It was essentially a modified red beans
and rice recipe, without all the smoked meat. You might try Paul
Prudhomme's red beans recipe in this file, using black beans,
omitting the andouille and ham hocks, and adding cilantro near the end
of cooking. I'd also cut down on the water.
Mike.
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1052.7 | Black Bean Chili | ALLVAX::LUBY | DTN 287-3204 | Thu Apr 11 1991 12:57 | 10 |
|
There is a note in this notes file for black bean chili. The
main ingredients are black beans, peppers, onions, and spices.
If you can't find it, I have a modified copy of it... basically,
I omit the roasting of the red pepper that it calls for and
add some Red Hot sauce to make it spicier. My roomate and I
used it for dip on chips last week! YUM!
Karen
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1052.9 | Look at 88.8 for Black Bean Chili | MPO::WHITTALL | Charlie Whittall @ MAXCIM Prog. Off. | Thu Apr 11 1991 14:42 | 1 |
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1052.10 | <pointer> | USCTR2::MCOREY | | Fri Apr 12 1991 08:36 | 6 |
|
See note 1925. I use this black bean soup recipe all the time
and it is delicious.
MJ
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