Back from the bar Black Bean and Sweet Potato Chili

Black Bean & Sweet Potato Chili

Black Bean & Sweet Potato Chili

Black bean and sweet potato chili – I made this after we returned home from the new country bar just up the road. Not as in country music, but out in the country.  We live about 9 miles from the closest town, so my scrounging is honed to a fine point.  It’s a nice backroad ride to town, but still one must plan ahead cuz nothing is open 24/7 in these parts.

Black Bean and Sweet Potato Chili

1 15 oz can  of refried black beans

1 sweet potato (6-8 oz)

1/2 cup chopped onion

1-2 cloves garlic, minced

1 tsp ground cumin

1/2 tsp ancho chili powder

1/2 tsp chili powder (your choice of heat level)

1/4 tsp chipotle chili powder (or cayenne)

Salt and pepper to taste

1 Tbsp (scant) olive oil

Water, stock, beer or combination

In a 2 qt saucepan saute the onions in olive oil until they soften and begin to color.  Add the garlic and continue cooking over medium heat until the garlic softens.  Garlic burns easily; stir frequently and adjust heat as necessary.  While the onion cooks, pierce the sweet potato skin on all sides.  Microwave on high for 2 minutes, turn the potato over and microwave on high another 2 minutes.  All microwaves cook differently; just cook until it feels soft, but not mushy when touched.  Let the potato cool while the onion/garlic mixture gets nice and soft and golden.

Add the beans to the onion/garlic mixture.  Add one cup of your liquid of choice and stir the mess well.  Add all spices and seasonings, stir to combine while adjusting the heat to medium.  Peel the skin from the sweet potato.  Your hands work fine for this task.  Then dice the potato (or your preferred size) and add to the chili.  Add liquid to your desired consistency; most likely another cup will be needed if not more.  Let the mixture simmer for 10-15 minutes, stirring occasionally.

Serve with your choice of topppings.  Suggest using sour cream, shredded cheddar, cilantro, and LOUISIANA HOT SAUCE!

Tossed salad and BEER and you’re good to go.

We like our food on the spicy side; you may adjust spices to your taste; measuring with your fingers is OK.

It's a long ride to town

It's a long ride to town

No Tuna casserole turkey again

Turkey not tuna no bake casserole

No bake tuna casserole – no wait, a no bake turkey casserole.  I don’t know what came over me.  Guess I was tired and Mr. Mike was at his evening class, so it was time to cook wierd and easy.  As you’ll see, substitutions were made, but cookbook recipes are meant to be guides only not set in stone.  This one came from Believe It! Quick and Easy Meal Solutions (2008).

8 oz penne, elbow, or bowtie pasta

1 1/2 cups frozen vegetables (I used cut green beans & mixed vegetables)

1/4 to 1/2 cup milk (I used skim)

6 oz cream cheese (can use 1/3 reduced fat or regular)

1 12 oz can tuna, drained & broken into chunks (I used cooked diced turkey from the freezer in place of tuna)

Salt & black pepper to taste

1 tsp Fines Herbs (my addition, choose your own herb mixture)

Cook pasta according to package directions.  If desired, add frozen vegetables during the last 4 minutes of cooking.  Drain and return to pan.  I microwaved the vegetables in a separate container because cooking pasta and veggies together is too much even for me.  Also don’t like tossing nutrients with the pasta water.  I kept about 2 Tbsp pasta water in the pan to help melt the cheese.  Add the milk and stir over medium heat until cheese is melted and the pasta and vegetables are coated.  Add seasonings.  Fold in turkey (or tuna) and heat through.  Makes four servings.  Cooking & prep time: 20 minutes.

More recipes to share in the next several days.  I’ve been writing Christmas cards and getting some legal materials together.  I liked this casserole because there is little cleanup and it’s one of the few tuna casserole recipes that isn’t baked.

This is what the scrounge cats did while I was cooking.

Turkey is boring. Wake us when it's tuna

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Tay-cos and rice? Taco Rice?

Taco rice

Taco rice with lots of toppings

Taco rice – it does sound like some freeze dried product but it actually comes from Okinawa.  Call it creeping American imperialism or stroke of brillance, but it is popular in that part of the world, with or without a taco truck.  This recipe comes from the Penzeys catalog.

Taco Rice (serves 4)

1 cup uncooked rice (see note)

1 lb lean ground beef or turkey

1/4 cup taco seasoning (I use Penzeys mix but the taco mix packets like Old El Paso would do OK)

3/4 cup water

1 cup salsa

Shredded lettuce

Shredded cheddar cheese

Sliced Black olives

Diced avocado

Sour cream

Add meat to a spray released skillet over medium high heat.  Cook, stirring to break up the meat, until it is well browned.  Drain fat if necessary.  Add the taco seasoning and cook 2 minutes, stirring frequently.  Add the water, stir to combine.  Reduce heat to low and simmer about 8-10 minutes.  Most of the water should have evaporated but the meat will be well coated with the sauce.

Divide the rice inot four wide bowls.  Top the rice with the meat mixture, then add 1/4 cup salsa to the meat.  Top with the lettuce and cheese; serve the other toppings on the side.

I like this recipe because you can add leftover bits or leave out some items such as salsa if you’re out and it still tastes good.  Last week I added about half a cup of leftover black beans/sweet potato chili to the meat mixture.

Serve with tortilla chips and BEER.

Note:  People complain about cooking rice.  It’s not hard to cook the real stuff.  Save your dignity and don’t use instant or the parboiled variety.  Do this: For each serving use 1/4 cup raw rice and 1/2 cup water.  For the recipe above you’d need 1 cup raw rice and 2 cups water (yields 3 cups cooked).  Heat water in a covered casserole in the microwave until it is just below boiling, about 3 3/4 minutes in my microwave.  Add the rice and heat on full power for 45 seconds.  Then reduce heat to 30% and cook for another 12-13 minutes.  Let it set for about 5 minutes, covered, before serving.  If using brown rice, increase cooking time to about 17 minutes.  Experiment a bit with times and power levels, your microwave may be different.  See? Cheap, good rice.

Pork chops with Port & cherries

Need a break from turkey?  Yeah, I love it but even scrounges need variety.  No recipe reference today.  I made this one up.

Pork chops with Port & dried cherries

2  4 oz boneless pork loin chops

1 tsp pork chop seasoning – I use Penzeys

1/4 cup port wine (just use the cheap stuff)

1 Tbsp (or splash) of balsamic vinegar (optional)

2 Tbsp dried cherries

Spray a frying pan with food release.  Heat the pan to medium.  Sprinkle chops with pork chop seasoning (see www.penzeys.com).  Brown chops 4 minutes per side.  Reduce heat to medium-low; remove pork chops from pan.  Cover chops and let rest (I use one of the dinner plates and cover with the frying pan lid).

Browned seasoned pork chops

 

Add the port, cherries, and balsamic vinegar (if using) to the pan, scraping up the browned bits.  Adjust heat as needed; the liquids should bubble slightly but not so fast everything evaporates.  Remove the pan from the heat if necessary.  Allow the liquids to cook to a syrupy consistency.  Turn off heat and get your silicone spatula ready.

Uncover and divide chops one per plate.  Scrape the sauce mixture over the chops.  You can be fancy and “nap” the sauce or just scrape it out.  Tastes the same either way.  Serves two; ingredients can be adjusted for the number of people you’re serving.  For this meal we had baked sweet potatoes, broccoli, and french bread.  Red wine to drink.  I’m not a big fan of gadgets.  A few simple tools work just fine.  Learn to use your hands (washed) too.

Wine, cherries, & vinegar.  Note high tech gadget

Wine, cherries, & vinegar. Note high tech gadget.Pork chops with port-cherry sauce

Got my red beans cookin

As Marcia Ball sang…red beans and a ham bone.  Well no ham bone but I did use the Thanksgiving turkey stock for my red beans and rice.  This is the first time I’ve used this recipe from Southern Living’s Homestyle Cookbook.  I don’t follow recipe directions exactly, and you shouldn’t either.  They’re just guides to get you to the table.  Back in my mass quantity food days I was a stickler for having the production recipe followed exactly.  Home cookin is another story.  Here it is:

CREOLE RED BEANS AND RICE (pg 12)

1 lb red kidney beans (red beans work fine too)

1 lb smoked sausage, sliced

3 stalks celery, sliced

1 green bell pepper, chopped

3 cloves garlic, minced

1 onion, chopped (6-8 oz)

1 14.5 oz can diced tomatoes

2 qt poultry stock (I used smoked turkey)

3.5 cups water

2 bay leaves (I prefer powdered bay leaf, 1/8 tsp=1 leaf – saves you from having to fish the things out of the food)

1 Tbsp Worcestershire sauce

1 tsp sugar

1/2 tsp each salt and pepper

1/8 tsp ground red pepper

Hot cooked rice

sliced green onions for garnish

Rinse and sort beans; add them to a large pot and cover with water.  Bring water to boil, and boil for 1-2 minutes.  Turn off the heat, cover the pot and let it set for an hour.  Change the water in the pot, add the 3.5 cups of water and 2 qt stock to the pot and bring the liquid to a boil.  Reduce the heat and simmer until the beans are tender, likely 1-1.5 hours.

As the beans are near done, coat a frying pan with spray release and heat it to medium.  Add the vegetables and sausage to the pan and saute for 7-10 minutes, stirring so the food doesn’t stick to the pan.  For maximum flavor it’s important to brown the sausage well, but don’t burn it or allow the vegetables to burn.  The veggies should be soft and slightly carmelized by the time the sausage is browned.  Drain off any accumulated fat and add the sausage mixture to the beans.  Add all seasonings and the tomatoes.  Increase heat to boiling and then reduce to simmer for 30 minutes.  The mixture may seem thin, but resist the urge to thicken it.  That’s what rice is for.   Plan to cook  1/4 cup uncooked rice per person.

Spoon the hot cooked rice into wide soup bowls – gumbo bowls work well.  Ladle the red bean mixture over the rice.  Garnish with the green onions.  Accompany with Louisiana style hot sauce.  French bread or cornbread helps you sop up any remaining liquid.  The book states it will serve six – where you live may determine the appropriate serving size.

 

One last turkey thing – Scrounge Stock

One last turkey thing – Scrounge Stock.

Pickin’ Turkey

Miss Ann would tell you there is still meat on the bird.  Keep going!  For mass quantity foodservice people, it was Thanksgiving about once every month.  What is the recipe for turkey carcasses that look similar to the photo?  First, you need administrators who think EVERYTHING should be made from scratch.

1. Order 1,000 lbs frozen turkey, give or take a few pounds.

2. Have your central food storage/distribution department cut the frozen turkeys into quarters with a band saw.

3. At 8AM load every possible cooking orifice with frozen turkey quarters: ovens, steamers, steam jacketed kettles and crank them up.

4. At 1PM round EVERYONE (dishroom, pot & pan staff, storeroom) up and send them to the cooks’ area.  Miss Ann has her apron tied in a perky bow.  She bangs a metal spoon inside a stainless steel bowl and shouts “Turkey! Turkey! Turkey! Turkey quarters ready to pick!”  This is the highlight of her month.

5. Using your hands only, rip/pick the meat from the carcass.  This includes the turkey necks.  Don’t leave anything on the bones (or at least tuck the nasty stuff under the carcass skin so Miss Ann can’t see it as she makes the rounds).

6. Picked meat is transferred to cutting boards to be diced into “bite size” pieces.  Diced meat is put in plastic bags, about 5 lbs per bag.  Now you can’t use any twist ties in the kitchen because they might get in the food, so you twist the bag top and make a knot.

7. Date the turkey bags and store in the freezer.  Pour the collected turkey “broth” into five gallon buckets and chill in the walk-in overnight.  The next day pull the fat crust from all the buckets, seal & date them and move to the freezer.

8.  Use the meat and broth for specified casseroles, soups, and gravy.  Now how much does this recipe yield?  Well, the sad fact is poultry, if you are a diligent picker, yields 30%.  Do the math: 1,000 lbs frozen yields 300 lbs meat.  The rest is trash – imagine carrying 700 lbs turkey bones and other unidentifiable body parts to the dumpster.

9.  How long does this stuff last?  If you are feeding 1,500 residents 3 square, it lasts about a month.  Then it’s deja vu all over again.  Wish I had photos of the real pickin’ parties.

10. That’s why I can pick up searing hot items – you got used to handling hot meat!

I did pick my turkey one and a half carcasses clean but I did NOT pick the neck.  I did make stock from the bones but will not be storing it in a used five gallon pickle bucket.

**Have to credit the image from orangesanctuary.blogspot.com  Just to let you know that I won’t use material without citing it and any recommendations I make are personal.  There is no affiliate marketing on this site.  I make no money from any products mentioned.  I ain’t that scroungy.

Turkey Remains

It was one of the best Thanksgivings, food-wise that we’ve had in years.  Though Mr. Mike and I are between gainfulness, we’re counting our blessings.  The blessings have included donated food from our neighbor, bless her heart.  It is a Thanksgiving reprise.  No problem for us, we can eat turkey day menu more than once a year.  This year the recipes in the November Women’s Day were different, but not unreasonable.  I used the Green Beans with Toasted Garlic and Almonds, Honey and Lemon Glazed Carrots, Sweet and Spicy Roasted Sweet Potatoes (I subbed butternut squash), and herb roasted turkey (added spices).  Made my own cornbread apple-cranberry dressing, mashed potatoes, gravy, rolls and pumpkin pie.  Pre-Thanksgiving we enjoyed sausage gumbo and tossed salad.  Now that “chicken gumbo” canned soup is NOWHERE near gumbo.  It has okra and rice but the resemblance stops there.  Homemade roux for gumbo base is best but tricky.  A really good alternative is Tony C’s gumbo base.  Try www.tonychachere.com for gumbo products and more.  Around here it’s known as “Tony’s”.  I’ll have more recipes and graphic photos as soon as I get a digital camera.  In too much of a food and football stupor for detailed writing at the moment.  The red N is 9-3.  I’m grateful!  Turkey carcass is giving its all in the stockpot for soup tonight.

Canned Soup: More things to worry about

From HealthlandTime.com, written by Alice Park (she has a Facebook page)

Study Finds Spikes in BPA From Eating Canned Soup

 Wednesday, November 23, 2011

David Stuart

We may not know all the ways in which the chemical bisphenol-A (BPA) affects our health, but we can be assured that we’re exposed to it frequently — BPA is in many plastic products and lines nearly all food and beverage cans.

Exposure to BPA, an endocrine-disrupting compound that mimics the body’s hormones, has been linked to heart disease, diabetes and obesity, and to potential problems during development in fetuses and young children. In Canada and Europe, the chemical has been banned outright from baby bottles, and while many manufacturers have removed BPA from baby products in the U.S., it hasn’t been regulated yet by the government.

Researchers led by Jenny Carwile, a doctoral student in epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health, sought to figure out just how much BPA you get from eating food from cans. Carwile and her colleagues recruited 75 fellow students and staff members to participate in the study. Half of the participants were asked eat one 12-oz. can of vegetarian soup each day for five days, while the other group ate soup made from fresh ingredients. Then, after a two-day interim of no canned soup, the two groups switched roles for another five days. This way, says Carwile, she could be sure that whatever else the participants were eating during the two-week study wouldn’t affect their BPA levels, since the only thing that changed was the source of their soup.

To measure levels of BPA, the researchers asked all the participants to give urine samples after each soup-eating period. Carwile found that in the fresh-soup group, average levels of urinary BPA were about 1.1 micrograms per liter, roughly equivalent to what’s seen in the average American adult. After five days of eating canned soup, however, those levels rose to 20.8 mcg per liter, a more than 1,000% increase.

The study — the first to measure how much BPA is absorbed by eating canned food — found some of the highest recorded levels of BPA in urine outside of manufacturing facilities where BPA is used. “We were surprised,” says Carwile. “Other studies have quantified the amount of BPA in canned food itself, so we were expecting a modest association. But this is really big.”

Although the study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, looked only at canned soup, the results likely apply to other canned foods and beverages as well.

The researchers did not explore the health effects of the spike in BPA levels or how quickly those levels may return to normal. Other studies have noted that BPA levels do fluctuate depending on people’s exposure to the chemical, but it’s not clear yet whether repeated spikes of BPA concentrations are particularly harmful or not. “We see an increased amount of BPA in urine. We don’t know how long that lasts, and we don’t know the effect of a fluctuating BPA level on health outcomes. But the results definitely deserve further study,” says Carwile.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 93% of Americans have a detectable amount of BPA in their bodies. BPA comes not only from food and drink in cans, but also those packaged in polycarbonate plastic. The chemical is also found on thermal register receipts, which people receive at checkout at nearly every retailer.

The Food and Drug Administration says the small amount of BPA exposure we typically get doesn’t appear to be toxic, but notes that recent studies have led to “some concern about the potential effects of BPA on the brain, behavior, and prostate gland in fetuses, infants and young children.” A growing number of studies also links BPA exposure to changes in liver and heart function, and to detrimental effects on insulin levels. In a study involving a U.S. government health database, for example, British researchers reported that people with the highest levels of BPA in their urine were twice as likely to have heart disease or diabetes as those with lower levels.

The FDA is currently conducting further studies on the effects of BPA exposure and supporting other research seeking alternative ways to manufacture food and beverage cans without BPA in the lining. In the meantime, the agency is continually urging manufacturers to stop using BPA in baby bottles and feeding cups.

Read more: http://healthland.time.com/2011/11/23/study-finds-spikes-in-bpa-from-eating-canned-soup/#ixzz1eZ3T7JM8

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