I grabbed an 8 cup measuring cup and walked out to pick some beans. The remnants of Hurricane Patricia were still coming through our area. I dropped 5 1/2 inches of much needed rain on Our Maker's Acres Family Farm and an easterly breeze was blowing as I began filling the measuring cup with lima bean pods. Or maybe I should call them butterbeans. I like the term butterbeans for them a bit better. When cooked with some sausage, they are creamy, rich and delicious, just like butter.
When Russ was just a baby (now he's 20!), he had a serious, life-threatening condition that required a lifeflight transport to New Orleans for emergency surgery. He was only a day old, and I remember one of his flight nurses on his transport team nicknamed him "her little butterbean!" I still remember that. Anyway, here are three butterbean pods, plump, full and ready for picking! Some pods are brown and the beans inside harder and dry, but that's okay. They both are good eating.
Henderson Lima Beans |
2 Quarts of Butterbeans |
Here is a Henderson Lima Bean:
Henderson Lima Bean shelled |
And here is a Speckled Butterbean:
Speckled Butterbean shelled |
I enlisted Benjamin's help and we sat on the floor and shelled the butterbeans. It is an easy job. The pods pop right open and the beans go in one bowl and the pods go into another. The beans, obviously, will be eaten while the pods will be composted right back into the garden soil.
Shelling Butterbeans |
In just a little while, we were done. We had a beautiful bowl full of fat butterbeans.
A Bowl of Butterbeans |
I can't wait to eat these cooked down with a little sausage or tasso for some smoky flavor and served over rice, with some buttery cornbread on the side.
No comments:
Post a Comment