Anasazi beans were one of the few crops cultivated by the Anasazi Indians. Anasazi (ahn-a-sa-zee) is a Navajo word meaning "ancient ones." The Anasazi Indians are best identified for their architectual achievements known today as cliff dwellings and inhabited these structures as early as 130 AD. Today these structures can be seen of areas such as Masa Verde National Park, located in southwestern Colorado.
James Hamblin at TheAtlantic.com wrote:Recently [Helen] Harwatt and a team of scientists from Oregon State University, Bard College, and Loma Linda University calculated just what would happen if every American made one dietary change: substituting beans for beef.
at NewYorker.com, Burkhard Bilger wrote:I thought about that meal last spring, when I first met Steve Sando. We were standing at a table heaped with hibiscus flowers, at an outdoor market in the town of Ixmiquilpan, three hours north of Mexico City in the state of Hidalgo. It was a Thursday morning in May, and the stalls were full of women gossiping and picking through produce: corn fungus and cactus paddles, purslane and pickling lime, agave buds and papalo leaf that smelled of mint and gasoline. Sando, who is fifty-eight, ambled among them in a white guayabera shirt, untucked at the waist. He had on loose jeans, tennis shoes, and a bright-red baseball cap that said “Rancho Gordo” above the bill. He could hardly have looked more American, yet he fit in perfectly somehow. He was built like a giant bean.
That may seem too easy, beans being Sando’s business. But people are often shaped by their obsessions, and in Sando’s case the similarities are hard to miss. His body is mostly torso, his skin both ruddy and tanned, like a pinto. He makes a colorful first impression, gets a little starchy if you crowd him, then slowly softens up. Fifteen years ago, when Sando founded Rancho Gordo, he had no food-retailing or farming experience. Now he’s the country’s largest retailer of heirloom beans and a minor celebrity in the culinary world. He’s a side dish who’s become a staple.
in an email, Steve Sando wrote:You may not realize it but as time marches on, we home cooks are becoming rarer and rarer. The fact that we get excited about a new bean, a cooking pot, or even a new wooden spoon, puts us in the minority. Most of us think of cooking as fun and a great way to bring people we care about together. We see a pound of beans and we imagine how we’ll be cooking them, how we’ll be serving them, and maybe the smiling faces that will be eating them. I have a constant vision of leaving the kitchen and walking towards the dining room table with a huge pot of something good between my hands as I ask for help finding a trivet. This is possibly my favorite moment of the day. I try and do it most nights.
botd wrote:I know that we home cooks are a dying breed, but I also feel like the resources for those of us deep into the hobby (can I call it that now?) dwarf those available at any previous point in history. I can source even exotic Asian ingredients readily. There are so many internet resources for scientific cooking and every ethnic cuisine you could possibly want to eat. The tools available to us are state-of-the-art. I use commercial ice cream stabilizers to make great textured ice cream with clean flavors, a sous vide machine to make perfectly poached chicken breast and a pressure cooker to churn out great stocks in record time. Of all the times for home cooking to die, it shouldn't be now!
ronnie_suburban wrote:my SOP with the RG beans
Bok Choy Jr wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:my SOP with the RG beans
Do you discard the veg after cooking or does it retain some flavor?
BUY NOW
Dear Customer,
You asked us to email you when The Rancho Gordo Bean Club is available in stock. We are pleased to inform you that it has arrived!
But please complete your purchase as soon as possible. There is a limited quantity available.
janeyb wrote:I learned of this bean club here back in 2016, tried to join and it was sold out at the time.
This just in:
HOORAY!
The Rancho Gordo Bean Club is now Back In Stock.BUY NOW
Dear Customer,
You asked us to email you when The Rancho Gordo Bean Club is available in stock. We are pleased to inform you that it has arrived!
But please complete your purchase as soon as possible. There is a limited quantity available.
https://www.ranchogordo.com/products/the-rancho-gordo-bean-club
Al Ehrhardt wrote:Found a bag of Santa Maria Pinquitos that we forgot about. We've made this bean before and really liked them.
TSmitty wrote:Help please!!
I'm just finishing cooking my first batch of Rancho Gordo beans. I went ahead and cooked the whole bag and am using some in a recipe for dinner tonight. However, the remaining beans are to be used in salads and soups later this week. How should I store the cooked beans - in their cooking liquid or drained?
Thanks so much for your help!
ronnie_suburban wrote:TSmitty wrote:Help please!!
I'm just finishing cooking my first batch of Rancho Gordo beans. I went ahead and cooked the whole bag and am using some in a recipe for dinner tonight. However, the remaining beans are to be used in salads and soups later this week. How should I store the cooked beans - in their cooking liquid or drained?
Thanks so much for your help!
I always store them in the pot liquor and drain them if necessary/desired for other applications.
=R=
ronnie_suburban wrote:I always store them in the pot liquor and drain them if necessary/desired for other applications.
The GP wrote:I was recently gifted with two bags of Rancho Gordo beans. Ayocoto Blanco and Alubia Blanca. I've already read through this thread for tips and will peruse their website for recipes. I am a low-tech cook so these will be done in a pot on the stove. Maybe someday I'll get an Instapot.