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Magic Beans
Growers Anthony
and Carol Boutard make the case for small-batch varieties that
are fresh and more flavorful
The Oregonian, Tuesday, February 21, 2006
LESLIE COLE GASTON -- It takes Anthony and Carol Boutard about a
minute of polite conversation before they start busting myths
about dried beans. First and most egregious of the lot: A bean
is a bean, no matter how long it's been on the shelf. Carol, one
half of the duo behind Ayers Creek Farm, politely squashes that
assumption this way: "A dead bean" she says, "is dead food."
And if you think all types of dried beans are more or less
equal, take a walk in the Boutards' mud-crusted boots. Here in
Gaston, where Bald Peak gives way to rolling fields, more than a
dozen varieties will grow this season on a four-acre slice of
their land. And each deserves its own stage.
Black Basque are inky with a barely perceptible note of
chocolate. French Tarbais, like giant lima beans, stew without
surrendering their meaty texture in crocks of cassoulet. And
silky-smooth Zolfino, a tiny white sulfur bean, is so fruity and
sweet Anthony occasionally drinks its cooking water.
The Boutards, New Englanders who came to farming eight years
ago, are among a handful of farmers on the West Coast growing
small-batch dried beans. The unusual varieties they grow
organically have nearly vanished from commercial farms, replaced
by beans bred to withstand the rigors of machine harvesting.
Most of theirs are pole beans, which are devilishly toilsome to
grow. Some are grown for fresh shelling, some are hybrids and a
good number -- but not all -- are heirloom.
Tarbais, from the Basque region of France, started with a
request (and seeds) from a Portland chef. Borlotto Lamon is the
speckled king of Italy's prized borlotti beans. China Yellow, an
uncommon old American variety, is distinguished by its slightly
nutty flavor and thin green eye, a roundish marking where the
bean attaches to the pod.
This year, they have high hopes for Aunt Jean's Pole Bean, a
brick-red beauty they will sink into the soil in May and drench
with kelp and other fertilizer as the tendrils twine up six feet
of trellis.
But plenty of cute-sounding names come and go here. The
also-rans "just taste OK," says Anthony, with a trace of a
Boston accent. "I'll sell them (for a season). But I won't plant
them again."
Keepers have one thing in common: flavor.
Pickers pull them off the soaring vines in October, strip the
papery pods, then clean the partially dried beans of stones and
chaff with a machine that fits on the Boutards' dining room
table.
When the beans finish drying on racks, Carol sorts and bags them
by hand. That's the only way to spot imperfect beans, those that
are slightly wrinkled, broken or dark from mildew, all of which
affect flavor.
"It seems ridiculous," she says, pushing fingers through a tray
of glistening Black Basque. "But it's amazing what you can catch
if you take a long time to do it."
For their extra care and labor, plus the novelty and the promise
of flavor, they can charge a premium. A 1-pound bag of any
variety sells for $5 at the Hillsdale Farmers Market, where the
Boutards bring dried beans on alternate Sundays November through
February.
If customers blanch at the price -- at least twice as much as an
equal amount of supermarket beans -- the Boutards, both lifelong
food gardeners, turn on their sales pitch.
It matters, Anthony says, where and how they're grown. It
matters which bean you choose for which dish. And if you want
them creamy and fragrant, they shouldn't be stale.
Portland chefs agree. Pascal Sauton buys 200 pounds of the
Tarbais each November to make cassoulet at his downtown
restaurant, Carafe. "When they run out," he says, "I take the
cassoulet off the menu."
But these boutique beans -- they're beans, after all -- easily
adapt to home cooking.
Anthony's favorites are the small white varieties, with
delicate, thin skins and a hint of sweetness.
Carol loves the soldier bean, a big, meaty American variety,
because it grabs the smoky essence of ham hocks, or any
seasoning it's cooked with. "It's like a great perfume that
doesn't open up until 15 minutes later," she says.
"If you start just eating the bean plain, that's when you begin
to know them," Anthony says. When using beans in soups or pasta
sauces, he recommends fully cooking the beans separately, then
mixing them into the finished dish. This technique, he explains,
helps retain the flavor of the beans.
Flavor is their filter not just for beans, but for every crop on
their 144-acre farm.
Fall and winter bring Italian chicories, parsnips and "hideously
ugly" carrots that, Carol says, trump every other variety she's
eaten.
Mere mention of their summer melons, a Charentais called Petit
Gris, brings audible sighs from chefs. Thornless blackberries,
their main crop, show up in July, raining juice down to the
elbows of anyone who grabs a handful.
Now the couple, both in their 50s, are curators of corn, rare
varieties that they dry, cure and grind into artisanal cornmeal
and grits.
As for the dried beans, the Boutards will sell their last bags
soon, which at Ayers Creek is the way it should be.
They'll be back again next November. When they're fresh.
Ayers Creek Farm's dried beans are available for one more Sunday
(Feb. 26) at the Hillsdale Farmers Market in Southwest Portland,
next to Wilson High School. Market hours are 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Boutique dried beans also are sold online; check The Bean Bag
(www.beanbag.net), and Rancho Gordo (www.ranchogordo.com).
Leslie Cole: 503-294-4069;
lesliecole@news.oregonian.com
Take care with salt and soaking for
a better batch of beans
Cook up a pot to store in the refrigerator to serve as the base
for many great, tasty dishes
Tuesday, February 21, 2006
-- Leslie Cole
Sure, beans are simple food. But cooking them with care makes
them all the better. To soak or not to soak? The jury's still
out on this one, but we know that soaking beans shortens their
cooking time and reduces the amount of water needed to cook
them. In some cases, it keeps the skins from bursting before the
beans get tender.
Soaking and draining the beans -- or quick-soaking them for an
hour in water brought to a boil -- also lessens the gastric
effects caused by beans because it leaches out some of the
soluble sugars. Really fresh dried beans need no soaking, but
they benefit (and so do you) from boiling, draining, then
replenishing cooking water with fresh.
To salt or not to salt? Beans need salt for flavor, but many
venerable cooks say to hold off on adding it until late in
cooking because salt toughens the skins. Shirley O. Corriher,
author of "CookWise: The Hows and Whys of Successful Cooking,"
says when you add salt makes no difference -- unless you start
with really old beans, which salt can actually help tenderize.
"What people don't realize is, the reason their beans aren't
getting soft after two hours is they're old beans. So they need
to try to find as fresh a dried bean as they can."
We say, better to start with fresh beans and salt them as you
please. Italian cooking guru Marcella Hazan agrees: She spent a
lifetime following the established wait-to-salt notion, but now
she salts even the beans' soaking water, saying that it has no
ill effect on the skins, and improves their taste. If you're a
"late salter," note this tip: Taste the cooking water to adjust
seasoning, not the beans, which may take a while to absorb it.
Sweetening the pot: Sugar prevents the breakdown of pectic
substances, or the glue between the cells, Corriher says, which
is why syrupy Boston baked beans don't dissolve into mush after
hours in the oven and a day or two in the fridge. Corriher's
advice: If you want to control the mush factor on any bean, cook
them until they're as soft as you want them, then add a bit of
sugar.
Ginger magic: Take a tip from savvy Indian cooks: A few
tablespoons of minced ginger tenderizes lentils, and presumably
all dried beans, thanks to an enzyme that softens proteins. Want
creamier beans? Stir in a handful of spinach leaves as they
cook, Corriher says, which gives them a lovely, soft mouth feel.
Soak now, cook later: Beans may be soaked two or three days
before cooking. After soaking, drain, rinse, pat dry in a
kitchen towel and store in a sealed plastic bag or lidded
container in the refrigerator.
Frozen assets: Cooked beans may be frozen in small batches to
add to pasta sauces or soups, to puree with seasonings as a
topping for crostini, or to toss with greens and eat as a side
dish. Freeze in self-sealing plastic bags, and thaw overnight in
the refrigerator or by placing the sealed bag in a bowl of cold
water.
Fabulous flavorings: Good-quality scratch-cooked beans need
little more than a sprinkling of salt and a drizzle of nice
olive oil. If you have more time, toss cooked cannellinis in a
hot pan with olive oil, minced garlic and fresh herbs (rosemary
or sage are good choices). For pintos, try garlic with a squeeze
of fresh lime juice, and add hot sauce to taste. Add cooked
beans to a stew or soup, serve alongside grilled chops, or ladle
them into a pot of sauteed greens and serve with chewy bread. --
Leslie Cole
Aunt Sadie's Cuban Black Bean Soup
Tuesday, February 21, 2006
-- From Sadie Colligan
Makes 8 to 10 servings
In this classic Cuban dish, beans are simmered with pork and
sofrito, a savory onion-based sauce, until thick and creamy, and
served over rice. For a more refined variation, force leftover
soup through a sieve, thin with water and serve garnished with
chopped hard-cooked egg, sour cream and a squeeze of lemon.
• 1 pound black turtle beans
• 2 smoked pork hocks
• 2 to 3 green bell peppers, chopped (divided)
• 2 large onions, chopped (divided)
• 1/4 pound salt pork or bacon
• 2 tablespoons olive oil
• 2 large cloves garlic, minced
• 1 8-ounce can tomato paste
• 2 teaspoons dried oregano
• 1 bay leaf, crumbled
• Salt and pepper to taste
• 1 tablespoon granulated sugar
• Cooked white rice
• Minced onion, for serving
• Olive oil
• Red wine vinegar or apple cider vinegar
Soak beans in a large stockpot overnight in 10 to 12 cups of
water. Do not drain. The next day add pork hocks, half of bell
pepper and half of onion to beans and the soaking water and
bring to a boil. Reduce heat to low and simmer the beans,
covered, for 2 to 3 hours, until they mash easily with a fork.
Meanwhile, make sofrito: Dice and fry the salt pork until
browned. Add olive oil and garlic, remaining onion and remaining
bell pepper and cook for 2 to 3 minutes, until soft. Stir in
tomato paste and continue cooking for a few minutes. Stir in
oregano, remove from heat and set aside.
When beans are sufficiently tender, add sofrito, bay leaf, and
salt and pepper to taste. Simmer, covered, for an additional
11/2 hours, adding more water if necessary to keep it soupy.
Remove pork hock. If you like, pull meat off the bone, chop and
add meat back to soup; discard bone. Stir in sugar. With a fork
or potato masher, pulverize about one-third to one-half the
cooked beans, and stir to blend until soup is thick and creamy.
Serve in soup bowls over a mound of white rice, garnished with
minced onion, olive oil and vinegar.
-- From Sadie Colligan
Basic Beans
Tuesday, February 21, 2006
-- Adapted from "Zuni Cafe Cookbook," by Judy Rodgers
Makes 2 to 3 cups
This recipe works for most types of beans, and adapts to any
flavorings you choose. Soaking beans for up to 8 hours ahead of
time will reduce cooking time, and is recommended unless you
have very fresh dried beans such as those from Ayers Creek Farm.
This recipe is a starting point: You can use more, less or
different aromatic vegetables, including garlic or leeks. You
can add herbs, such as fresh thyme or sage; spices, such as
dried chiles or peppercorns; or a scrap of prosciutto or bacon
if you want. For more character, use a little stock in place of
some of the water.
• 1 cup dried beans
• 1 small carrot, peeled, split lengthwise and cut into a few
chunks
• 1 small yellow onion, peeled and trimmed, leaving the root end
intact, and halved
• 1 bay leaf
• Salt
• 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
Rinse the beans and place in a 2-quart saucepan. Add cold water
to cover by about an inch and bring to a simmer. Skim any foam.
Stir, then add the carrot, onion and bay leaf. Maintaining a
very gentle simmer, cook the beans uncovered until tender but
not mushy, anywhere from 30 minutes to 2 hours, depending on the
variety of the bean and how dry it was. Stir occasionally early
on, especially if you are cooking larger quantities, so those on
the bottom are not crushed, and add water as necessary so that
the beans remain just covered. To test for doneness, place a few
beans and a little cooking liquid in a cup and set in the
freezer for a minute to cool a bit. Taste one. If it is tender
through and shows no trace of raw starchiness, pull the pan from
the heat and add salt to taste, gently stirring to make sure it
will be evenly absorbed. Taste the bean liquid for salt, not the
beans, which will take a while to absorb it. Stir in the olive
oil.
Serve immediately, alone or in salads, brothy soups or pasta
dishes. Otherwise, let the beans cool in their liquid, then
store, still in their liquid, covered and refrigerated for up to
4 or 5 days.
-- Adapted from "Zuni Cafe Cookbook," by Judy Rodgers
Sauteed Tuscan Kale With Garlicky
White Beans
Tuesday, February 21, 2006
-- Adapted from "Mediterranean Grains and Greens," by Paula
Wolfert
The Oregonian
Makes 2 to 3 servings
This heavenly yet simple combination of beans and greens makes a
delicious light meal with slices of salami and other cold cuts,
or a stand-alone dish served with some good bread. Tuscan kale
(also known as lacinato and dinosaur kale) is the kale of
choice, perfect for this special manner of cooking. If you
substitute another green, simply stew it in garlic-flavored
olive oil before serving with the reheated beans.
• 12 small to medium leaves Tuscan kale (4 ounces)
• 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for garnish
• 3 cloves garlic, thickly sliced
• 1/2 cup cooking liquid from the beans (see accompanying recipe
for Basic Beans)
• 11/2 cups cooked white beans (see accompanying recipe for
Basic Beans)
• Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
Remove center ribs from kale and tear each leaf into 4- or
5-inch lengths. In a large skillet with a lid heat the 2
tablespoons olive oil, gradually add kale and cook, stirring,
until leaves wilt and sizzle in the hot oil, about 2 minutes.
Reduce the heat. Add the sliced garlic, cover and cook leaves
until tender, about 10 minutes. Add the bean broth by the
tablespoon, as needed, to keep the leaves from drying out.
Push the leaves to one side in the skillet; add the cooked
beans, salt, pepper and enough bean liquid to keep the dish
juicy. Cover and simmer for 5 minutes. Serve warm with a drizzle
of good-quality olive oil and freshly ground black pepper.
-- Adapted from "Mediterranean Grains and Greens," by Paula
Wolfert
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