As usual, any and all comments and feedback are welcome as long as it's creative.
Red Beans and Rice
This is a meal my family has at least twice a month. Not only do we love it that much, but it sure beats the shit out of pizza every day of the week and twice on Sunday. I don't generally serve it with a bunch of sides unless I'm serving a crowd, so at the end I will have in italics my notes for serving that crowd. This takes some planning ahead of time, so don't expect to whip this up in a hurry when unexpected company arrives.
That
is what the pizza is for.
Today, and possibly part of yesterday, we are going to make red beans and rice. If you haven't had true Cajun red beans and rice, you don't know what you're missing. Get thyself to the South of Louisiana and bury your ever loving face in a pot of this.
You Will Need:
16 oz red beans (soak them if you must)
1 T bacon grease (can substitute regular cooking oil, but come on! Live on the edge and use pork fat!)
1 bell pepper, chopped
1 medium yellow onion, chopped
2 celery ribs, diced
6 cloves of garlic, minced
¼ pound andouille sausage, cubed*
½ cup of parsley, minced (yeah, I don't use this much)
2 bay leaves
1 t dried thyme or 1 sprig fresh
1 t dried leaf oregano
1 t sweet paprika (I've left this out, up to you)
1 T Worcestershire sauce (or, if you're like me, just splash some in there til you're happy)
Cayenne, salt, and black pepper to taste (1 t cayenne, 1 t salt, ½ t black pepper)
2 smoked ham hocks (I use 4-6 ham hocks...)
8 cups chicken broth or water**
4 green onions, green parts chopped (save the rest for something else, or get them to root in a jar and keep using the green parts that grow)
6 cups cooked rice
*If you cannot find andouille, use your favorite sausage. Just make sure it's a firm smoked sausage and not something crumbly like breakfast sausage and you'll be fine. Pork/beef sausages work best, though.
**Wait til after the first steps in this process to decide if you want to use the chicken broth or do what I do.
Please keep in mind that I buy my meat at a meat market. At some point, the pig who belonged to the hocks I am cooking with today was hanging in a freezer. While I was at the market, I may have also bought the pig's shoulder, chops, and bacon. Since I have access to such a nice small meat market, I am used to very good quality meats. The hocks I buy are cut into pieces about the size of a baseball, are smoked on-site, and then put in a bag and frozen. Yes, I have gotten the pre-packaged ham hocks from my local grocery store. No, those do not work the same in this recipe.
Part One of the Process
If you're like me, you like the smokey taste of the ham hocks in your red beans and rice. This is where the process to make this dish gets the time expansion. I use 4-6 ham hocks for this because I like the added flavor of using more, and because my local butcher packages them by weight and I just use on whole bag.
Anywho, dump those hocks in a pot and cover them with water. If you want, you can add the trinity to this (bell pepper, celery, onion) but I don't. Boil them until they are falling off the bone. This will take several hours depending on how hard you boil them and how big the hocks are. Watch them, let them simmer pretty good for at least two hours, and then start checking them. If you can grab a bone end with a pair of tongs and it slides out of the meat, they're done.
If you do not want to go to this trouble:
Then you can skip this part and go right on to making the beans. I have added the ham hocks right into the pot with the cooking beans and chicken broth. It turns out just fine. Please note, however, that you will be finding bones til kingdom come if you do it that way. This process takes longer, but it saves a lot of pain and heartache later.
Alternatively, you could add some finely chopped bacon to the pot. It won't be the same, but if it's all you have and you must, then do it. But don't run to me when it doesn't turn out like that wonderful bowl of red beans and rice you had when you visited New Orleans that one time. You know why theirs was better? They used ham hocks.
Part Two
Get another large pot out and put it over medium heat. Saute the trinity in the bacon grease for about 10 minutes or until everything's soft. Add the garlic and sausage and cook another few minutes.
With a sieve (and maybe some help) pour the broth from the ham hocks into the pot with the veggies. Take the meat off to the side and shred it off the bones. Discard the bones, they've done their job and just added a whole new dimension of flavor to your beans. Add the meat back into the pot and throw the beans, seasonings, and the kitchen sink into the pot.
HOLD OFF ON THE SALT
Adding salt right now can make your beans hard later.
Now, some people cannot make a pot of beans without soaking the beans first. Most people swear by this process. I say fuck. that. shit. If you soaked your beans, your pot will be done in about 2-3 hours at a steady simmer. If you did not soak your beans, boil them hard right now for about 1 hour, and then simmer them for 3-4 hours. They'll be just as good as the soaked beans. In this dish, they will be even better because they will still be firm enough to hold up against anything else on the plate and not just a huge pot of mush.
If you are using fresh thyme and bay leaf, tie them together in a bundle before throwing them in the pot. The thyme will lose the leaves as it cooks, and then when it's done you just fish one bundle out instead of two leaves and a twig. If you don't have any twine to tie them together, then for the love of little green men take the leaves off the thyme twig. Bay leaves are easy to fish out of a pot, twigs are not.
After simmering the beans for at least 2 hours (stirring occasionally) remove the lid and continue to simmer them and stir them. If the liquid gets too low, add some water or chicken broth. Check the beans after this. They should be soft enough to eat but still firm enough not to be mush in your mouth. Hell, you better know when the beans are done by now or you should just get out of the kitchen.
When the beans are done, smash some of them against the side of the pot and stir them really good. This helps thicken the broth even more and makes them creamier.
Serve the beans over rice and put some hot sauce on the table. Tobasco is fine as long as it's the original red. For an extra kick, find the Louisiana Gold hot sauce.
Part Three, The Rice
Now, you can do the rice the same as people have been doing it for years - one cup of rice, two cups of water, and a pinch of salt boiled for 20 minutes or so. Or, you can do it a different way and treat your rice more like you would treat pasta and boil it in a lot of water.
Put your rice in a mesh strainer and rinse it under the tap until the water runs clear. What this does is knock off a lot of the starch from the outside of the rice. Follow the formula - one cup of rice to one
quart
of water and one tablespoon kosher salt. You can add a couple bay leaves to this as well.
Bring the water to a boil and add the salt and bay leaves. Add the rice and stir once to make sure the rice doesn't stick.
Do NOT stir the rice again!
If you agitate the rice too much it will become sticky, and that's not what we're going for here. When it comes back to a boil partially cover it and let it cook for 11 minutes. Taste it at this point. It should have some bite, but a crunch is bad. Again, think pasta. When it's done, strain it and put it in your serving receptacle. Oh, and don't forget to take the bay leaves out.
I like to do this for Cajun dishes served over rice (red beans, etouffee, gumbo, etc). I use Basmati or Jasmine rice, or your regular everyday long grain white rice. This method keeps the rice separate when you put it in a bowl with the beans, so you get rice in every bite. If you do it the way mentioned at first, it will be sticky. Either way is good, so this is really just up to your own personal preference.
Serve the red beans over the rice with a good French bread, corn on the cob, green beans, or just by itself. This is a really good stand alone dish, but at least with the bread you can sop up the juices.
If I am making this for a crowd, I do not put the sausage in with the beans. I leave it out, cut it into pieces about 3-4 inches long and cut those in half lengthwise. We put those on the grill or cook them on the stove top on a cast-iron griddle and serve it as a side. Since I use enough ham hocks that the beans have a fair amount of meat in them, this isn't a problem.
Depending on the size and hunger of the crowd, the usual sides I mentioned can be served as well. For a very large crowd, though, the red beans and rice are a side dish to fried catfish, wings, or some other party-friendly food.
*~*~*~*~*~*
Crawfish Etouffee
Or shrimp if you either don't like or can't get crawfish.
Now, for the longest time I shyed away from making etouffee even though I could honestly live off the stuff for the rest of my life. Why, you might ask, did I not want to make my own etouffee if I love it so much? Because for etouffee, I have to make a roux.