To this day beans and rice is a favorite meal of mine. It's such a simple dish, but so filling, healthy and satisfying! As a youngster, my favorite was Red Beans & Rice and sausage with cornbread on the side. Before you served the beans over rice, it was very important that you would mash up a bunch of the beans. This thickens the dish and makes what I call a bean "gravy" or roux.
You might say that beans are beans, but my Mom and everyone I knew were partial toward a specific brand of Red Beans and bought them with the sort of brand loyalty that you would thing only exists with diehard Chevy or Ford folks. Camellia Red Kidney Beans. They came wrapped in a clear cellophane bag so that you could inspect every perfect, shiny red kidney bean inside the bag.
At one point I was going to attempt to try to grow our own red kidney beans. Up to this point, I haven't done it, but if I might buy some Camellia Red beans and see if they'll germinate. For the past several years, though, I've planted Black Beans. They are called Black Turtle Beans, to be specific. Black Beans or frijoles negros are a special dish in Latin America and Mexico. Mainly, Tricia cooks them like you would refried beans. As a treat, we put the refried black beans in a fresh flour tortilla, fold and eat. It's a simple, tasty meal.
So let's go out to the garden, where our black beans are slowly ripening. I only have one row of them and the dry, dry month of October is not doing the yield any favors, but my goal is to grow them and watch them closely as they mature.
The black beans have lots of pods, and they are ripening. My goal is to allow them to mostly ripen on the stalk until they are almost totally dry and the pods have turned yellowish-brown. You don't want the pods to get dry and crack open, though, as you'll lose the beans when the pop onto the ground.
Each day I check the beans and pick those that have dried. I carry them to our fancy black bean dryer apparatus for the finishing touches on drying. I lay them in the sun on our expanded metal patio table. The sun completes the drying process and the table allows maximum air flow.
When the pods are dry and 'crinkly' to the touch, we pop open the pods and collect the black beans in a bowl. We just started the harvesting process and have a lot left to go, but here's what we have so far.
We'll eat most everything we pick but will save some for planting for next year. The Black Turtle Beans I buy are non-hybrid and come from rareseeds.com, so they are perfect for seed saving. Perhaps 2025 is the year that I'll grow Red Beans!
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