Along with corn another staple New World food are beans. There are a variety of ways to serve beans and prepare dishes made with beans but there is a core way to cook beans which I will discuss here. There are a variety of common beans than are often used in Mexican food and this is often dictated regionally by the varieties common to the indigenous peoples of the area. In Arizona pinto beans are the prevalent variety, elsewhere black beans and white beans can be found in dishes in Central and Southern Mexico. Nonetheless the methods for the basic preparation is the same. For the methods below I will be using an Italian variety of bean that is quite close in appearance and flavour to the pinto bean.
Beans
pinto beans after the fast soak method |
Pinto beans with onion and poblanos before cooking |
Frijoles rancheros (ranch beans, recipe I stole from my friend's aunt): After your beans are done cooking, in a skillet fry up some bacon until crispy, remove the bacon. In the grease fry up diced red onion until soft, then add chopped tomato. After the mixture is hot, chop and add the bacon back then use this to top a bowl of beans with some chopped cilantro (fresh coriander). Serve with tortillas and salsa.
Frijoles refritas (Refried beans):
Despite the name these beans are never fried. They are just smashed beans with fat, lard is the best (you can use vegetable shortening or butter). I take the beans, prepared as above, add a tablespoon of lard and blend with a hand blender. If they are too thin you can keep heated until they evaporate enough (if you plan on making refried beans I try to adjust the liquid before blending as it is much easier to burn the beans after blending). These go with almost everything, for instance burritos with chile verde (below). Tortillas from previous post, salsas and chile verde to come...
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