So says my husband as I plopped dinner on the table tonight. After returning from a chilly evening stroll with the dog, I wandered into the kitchen to assemble dinner before Wayne had to leave for his weekly radio show. 30 minutes later, dinner appears in the form of a sort of chili. It smelled great, tasted like it had been long-simmered, and thus prompted his question "How did you whip this up so fast?"
Let's see. I started this dish a year ago when my friend gave me a handful of cranberry bean seeds that have been passed down in somebody's Appalachian family for generations. I planted those seeds last May, weeded, watered, mulched, fed and harvested the beans. Dried and shucked them in August, put them in jars. Last night, I soaked them and slow cooked them for hours today. Then I added tomatoes. That I grew from seeds I saved from a combination of local heirloom tomatoes and those given to me by a Tuscan farmer whose agriturismo I visited in the fall of 2010. I grew the tomatoes, blah blah blah, harvested, roasted them for hours in a slow oven last summer with herbs and garlic from my garden. The chili powder came from here because I like these guys and what they're doing for small family farms in the southwest and in Mexico and plus, it's yummy. The meat came from a local farm. OK, I bought the onion at the grocery store.
I don't have a recipe. I just whipped it up.
Just sayin'
PS The beautiful beans are delicious and I'm sharing them if anybody wants a handful to plant.

Hi Barbara, I discovered you and your beautiful breads through my husband's Mother's Day gift to me (Aunt Barb's Bread Book) and I wanted to tell you how inspiring you are to me! I love to cook/bake (particularly breads and pies) and I have a deep love for things "old-fashioned" (i.e. Anne of Green Gables, 19th century literature/way of living/traditions, etc.) I'm from Northern Cal. and am a mother of 2 (and 1 due this fall!) I look forward to finishing reading your book, taking a closer look at your blog, and starting to bake some of your delicious breads! Thank you for sharing your talents with us.
ReplyDeleteJamie
PS...I am coveting your wood cookstove! :)
Hi Jamie,
DeleteThanks for your great comment! And good luck with bun number three in the oven. Keep me posted on your bread and pie making adventures (I've moved over to www.logcabincooking.com) Hopefully the bread baking video fairy will visit me there this summer!
Barbara