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Started By
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Red beans splitting
Posted on 3/25/17 at 5:58 pm
Posted on 3/25/17 at 5:58 pm
Soaking some red beans and they all split open. Wtf? Is this normal? Ok to cook em? Need to scratch and start over?
Posted on 3/25/17 at 6:00 pm to INFIDEL
How long have they been soaking?
Posted on 3/25/17 at 6:51 pm to INFIDEL
It happens! I cooked seven pounds last Saturday and some split and I soaked for like twelve hours.
Posted on 3/25/17 at 7:01 pm to INFIDEL
I prefer a more sloppy Natchitoches style red beans instead of a soupy beany New Orleans style red beans, so cracked beans wouldn't bother me. To be honest, I don't even soak and total cook is about 3-4 hours.
Posted on 3/25/17 at 7:15 pm to TigerstuckinMS
quote:I see what you did there.
prefer a more sloppy Natchitoches style red beans instead of a soupy beany New Orleans style red beans
Posted on 3/25/17 at 7:20 pm to TigerstuckinMS
quote:
To be honest, I don't even soak and total cook is about 3-4 hours
Same here, haven't soaked in years
Posted on 3/25/17 at 7:23 pm to fightin tigers
I think your problem is that you are using too old beans. I don't think split beans are that much of a problem, but that's just me.
Posted on 3/25/17 at 9:12 pm to bleeng
quote:
Must be red beans day...
No, but after this thread made me hungry for some, tomorrow sure as hell is.
Posted on 3/25/17 at 9:15 pm to TigerstuckinMS
Been on a bean trip lately. Two batches of white beans in two weeks. Changing it up.
Posted on 3/26/17 at 12:46 am to INFIDEL
We all buy dried red beans. Does anyone ever grow them in their garden? Never seen them at a farmers market.
The Camelai people say the beans started in Peru and "were spread by migrating tribes and served as an important protein source in the diets of the Indians of the Americas. Grown in Colonial America, kidney beans were cultivated by Acadian farmers in Louisiana in the late 1700s and planted by Spanish settlers."
So folks used to raise them in Louisiana. Does anyone still do so?
The Camelai people say the beans started in Peru and "were spread by migrating tribes and served as an important protein source in the diets of the Indians of the Americas. Grown in Colonial America, kidney beans were cultivated by Acadian farmers in Louisiana in the late 1700s and planted by Spanish settlers."
So folks used to raise them in Louisiana. Does anyone still do so?
Posted on 3/26/17 at 1:00 am to INFIDEL
Add a little salt to the water
Posted on 3/26/17 at 7:18 am to Twenty 49
Great northern beans are the beans inside the pods most people know as green beans.
This post was edited on 3/26/17 at 7:19 am
Posted on 3/26/17 at 8:32 am to Stadium Rat
What Bressus said. Salt in the soak will make a huge difference.
Posted on 3/26/17 at 8:55 am to fightin tigers
Yeah when I make beans I don't soak either. I guess it makes for a longer cooking time but I rather have them going for longer in all the good seasoned water than just soaking. Mine come out very soft.
Posted on 3/26/17 at 8:59 am to Twenty 49
I still grow them in my garden every year.
California Red Kidney bush variety always does really well for me.
California Red Kidney bush variety always does really well for me.
This post was edited on 3/26/17 at 9:06 am
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