Tuscan Beans
The ingredient list is straightforward: Cannelini beans (aka white kidney beans) – canned are fine, Progresso are widely available. Rinse off the smelly, gooey liquid they’re packed in before using. Tomatoes – canned diced or crushed are preferred but be sure to use a good brand like Muir Glen, Progresso or San Marzano. Rosemary – The official recipe calls for sage but I prefer minced fresh rosemary. If you don’t have fresh, which would be a big bummer, use sage (preferably fresh), thyme (fresh or dried), or fresh basil. Then go out and plant rosemary somewhere in your yard or the local park because the dried rosemary needles aren’t the same. Extra Virgin Olive Oil – don’t use the really expensive stuff – save it for dipping bread or serving at the table. Filippo Berio or Bertoli are fine. DaVinci is one of the best supermarket brands. Garlic – minced or pressed. If you don’t like garlic or want something milder use shallots. Saute the garlic or shallots in a generous amount of olive oil in a skillet until soft but not brown. Add the tomatoes (a little of the juice is fine), the beans and the rosemary. It only needs to simmer for a 15 minutes or so. You want the beans to heat through, the tomatoes to mellow, the excessive liquid to cook off and the flavors to meld. Add salt, pepper and extra virgin olive oil to taste and don’t be niggardly with any of them, especially the olive oil. I like it best when you can see the green of the olive oil when you serve it up. Make a lot so you have leftovers because I discovered an additional use for them. I find Mexican breakfasts made with eggs and beans to be very satisfying as well as delicious. There’s something about the flavor and consistency of the earthy beans and eggs in the morning that tastes just right. I used this principle one morning with this cannelini dish. I fried an egg in a heavy amount of extra virgin olive oil, which gave it a beautiful, golden under crust, removed it to a plate and then heated up the cannelini dish in the same pan. I served the beans with the fried egg on top and it not only tasted really good but it kept me going for hours.
1 Comments:
Hi TB
Just wanted to make sure you got my biased only in loving our America outlook, as to the still developing problems in America and the middle east!
I have to disagree with you! In the past I have heard a few voices speak out but they are only ignorantly laughed at and dismissed.
It is right to question his policies because he has yet to have a good one or listen to any good advice. Instead, he ignores everything and does what he the decider wants and it is always wrong.
He is the real problem and the source of the countries problems and all the current violence in the middle east.
Until people in America recognize that and do something about it the world will continue to be in trouble and nothing will be solved in the middle east.
The west dropped the reality of Israel into the middle east. Right or wrong, the issue amongst middle easterners will never be pacified. As long as there has been people in the middle east let alone Jews, there has been conflict.
Until Bush and his purposeful intervention in the middle east there has never been something to enrage the entire middle east.
Ignorance of that reality is bad foreign policy in the working and things will only get worse because of it!
Regards,
Jim
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