Red Beans and Rice
From thepoint 15 years agoIngredients
- 2 onions -- diced shopping list
- 1 green bell pepper -- seeded and diced shopping list
- 1 stalk celery -- diced shopping list
- 2 tablespoons bacon fat -- rendered shopping list
- 1 pound dried red beans -- kidney shopping list
- 2 smoked ham hocks shopping list
- 3 bay leaves shopping list
- 1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper shopping list
- 3 scallions -- chopped shopping list
- salt and pepper -- to taste shopping list
- Tabasco sauce -- to taste shopping list
- ... shopping list
- Basic Louisiana white rice (3 cups) shopping list
- 1 tablespoon chicken fat -- EVOO or butter shopping list
- 1 small onion -- minced shopping list
- 1 1/2 cups long-grain rice shopping list
- 3 cups chicken broth shopping list
- 1 bay leaf shopping list
- 2 pinches salt -- (1 to 2) shopping list
How to make it
- In a heavy soup pot, over medium-high heat, sweat the onions, bell pepper and celery in the rendered bacon fat. Once the onions become translucent, add the kidney beans, ham hocks, bay leaves and cayenne, and add water to cover by 2 inches. Increase the heat and bring the water to a boil. Cover the pot, reduce the heat to low, and allow the beans to slowly simmer for 2 hours. Periodically stir the beans to make sure that they don't scorch on the bottom of the pot, and add water if necessary, always keeping the beans covered by an inch or move of water. Continue cooking the beans until they are creamy and beginning to fall apart when they're stirred. Remove the meat from the ham hocks, roughly chop it, and add it back to the pot of beans. Stir in the scallions, and season with salt, pepper and Tabasco. To serve, ladle beans over white rice.
- Make the rice: In a medium sauce-pan over moderate hat, sweat the onion in the fat, oil or butter until translucent, about 5 minutes. Pour the rice into the pan and stir for 2 minutes. Add the chicken stock and bring mixture to a boil. Add the bay leaf and salt. Cover the pan with a lid, reduce the heat to low, and cook for 18 minutes. Remove the pan from the heat, fluff the rice with a fork, and serve.
- Source: "Chile Pepper Magazine, January 2010"
- NOTES : Adapted from John Besh's "My New Orleans: The Cookbook." Time is the key to making successful red beans. They need to cook slowly and well. Using flavorful fat is another secret. Keep the fat when you fry bacon, roasted chicken drippings, etc. A little bit adds big flavor.
- Art's Notes: I fried a half pound of bacon until brown, removed the bacon, and cooked the initial vegetables in the bacon fat. I added the bacon (crushed) back in at the end of the cooking processes. After removing the hocks, I added a little thickener and a tablespoon of ham seasonings.
The Rating
Reviewed by 3 people-
Sooo tasty and good. Thanks for posting.
mystic_river1 in Bradenton loved it
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~HELLO~
I LOVE EVERYTHING about this
"5"FORK!!!!! recipe~(^_^)~
I will make it very soon!
Takes me back to my Southern 'Roots'~
~*~mj~*~
~Photo~FLAGGED!!!!!mjcmcook in Beach City loved it
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