โJul-19-2014 04:09 PM
โJul-26-2014 02:13 PM
โJul-23-2014 03:07 PM
SWMO wrote:
Once you pre soften BEANS with a 3 minute boil and an hour rest, the water you discard will will make you feel it's worth it. The unappetizing foam that generally comes off of them is enough for me.
This is the only way we do it. It's also a good way to use up some onion root ends, which we throw in and later discard.
Had eggs on the brain from an earlier post I assume. You just can't trust 75 year old brains!
โJul-23-2014 10:46 AM
โJul-23-2014 07:37 AM
SWMO wrote:
Once you pre soften eggs with a 3 minute boil and an hour rest, the water you discard will will make you feel it's worth it. The unappetizing foam that generally comes off of them is enough for me.
This is the only way we do it. It's also a good way to use up some onion root ends, which we throw in and later discard.
โJul-23-2014 07:10 AM
โJul-22-2014 10:17 PM
โJul-21-2014 10:41 PM
โJul-21-2014 07:30 PM
TexasShadow wrote:
de gassing the beans. I read about this and tried it and it seems to work pretty good.
bring the beans to a boil, add a heaping TBSP baking soda...it will foam up... let it boil about a half minute or minute, drain, rinse the beans good and start them again in cold water. Then cook them the way you cook your beans.
Much less gas for us.
โJul-21-2014 04:54 PM
โJul-21-2014 02:24 PM
โJul-20-2014 06:27 PM
swtgran wrote:
More often than not, beans that take longer than the appropriate amount of time, are old beans. The older the beans, the longer the time.
Now how is that for "opening a whole other can of beans"?
Welcome Naio. terry r.
โJul-20-2014 05:28 PM
โJul-20-2014 07:36 AM
Kenji Lopez-Alt, The Food Lab of Serious Eats website wrote:
Myth number 6. Salting Beans During Cooking Will Make Them Tough
Most of us have been told at some point in our culinary careers that salting beans will cause them to toughen. It's incredible that this little bit of culinary mis-wisdom still lingers, for it couldn't be further from the truth. A simple side-by-side test can prove to you conclusively that salting beans (both the water used to soak them in and the water used to cook them) actually tenderizes the skins.
It's got to do with magnesium and calcium, two ions found in the bean skins that help keep the structure of the beans' skin intact. When you soak the beans in salt water, sodium ions end up replacing some of the magnesium and calcium, effectively softening the skins. Your beans come out creamier, better seasoned, and have a much smaller likelihood of exploding while cooking.
โJul-19-2014 09:46 PM