Thursday, April 15, 2010

Beans and Rice Recipe

Yesterday I made a great beans and rice recipe, and I wanted to pass it on to you because it turned out so great! I had everything I needed except for the sausage, so it was a very cheap meal for us. I was proud of myself because I took an allrecipes.com recipe for red beans and rice and added my own flavor to it, partially because of what I had in my pantry and partially because I thought it might taste good. The picture to the left is not of my beans and rice, and actually uses red beans instead of pinto like I did, but it looks pretty close. I eyeballed all my measurements, which means it'll probably never taste the same again, but it'll be close.

Ingredients:
  • 2 cups dried pinto beans
  • 1 clove chopped garlic
  • 1/2 small onion, chopped
  • 2 t salt
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 2 t white sugar
  • 1/2 t Tony Cachere's
  • 2 t celery seed
  • 1 t ground cumin
  • 1/2 t crushed red pepper flakes
  • 1 stalk celery
  • 1 t gumbo file
  • 1 t paprika
  • 1 can Rotel, undrained
  • 1 lb jalapeno sausage, sliced

Directions:
  1. Place all ingredients except for Rotel and sausage in a large pot. Cover with water and bring to a boil. Boil for 35 minutes, stirring occasionally. (I started with just beans and water and used the 35 minutes to get everything chopped and stirred in. That made it fun because I really don't like the smell of cooking beans, and then it just got better and better and better!)
  2. Transfer everything into a crock pot. Stir in Rotel and sausage. Add enough water to cover ingredients. Simmer on low for 6 hours.
  3. Skim grease off the top (I used slices of bread to soak it up), and serve with rice.

Notes:
Jon and I like things a little spicy, so we added Tabasco to our individual bowls, leaving it a little milder for Caleb. Today instead of Tobasco I used more Tony's on my leftovers. This would be great with corn bread (I forgot until too late), and a fruit salad, to temper the heat and heaviness of it.

4 comments:

  1. This looks delicious! I will have to try this soon. But what is gumbo file?

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  2. Yummy yum! I've developed an appreciation for this dish since we moved to NOLA. Thanks for the recipe!

    @lindsey: gumbo file is a ground up part of some plant. The chicory plant, maybe? Hmmm... shoulda Wikipedia'ed it before I commented....

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  3. Gumbo file is ground sassafras. It's a seasoning commonly used in gumbo, obviously, but I thought it might be good in this, too. I used to call it "algae" because that's kind of what it looks like when you put it on top of gumbo, but I've come to appreciate it's subtle herby taste.

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  4. I am going tot try this one when I have the time. It looks delicious.

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