Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Just a tip...
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
101 Ways to Stretch Your Food Dollars
Sunday, April 13, 2008
Friday, April 11, 2008
Seven Major Mistakes in Food Storage
- Not enough variety
- Extend your staples
- Vitamins
- Quick and Easy "Psychological Foods"
- Balance
- Proper containers
- Use your storage
For more detailed information on these items and others (including getting started and water storage) click http://www.ldslivingmagazine.com/articles/show/681%20
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Legumes
Legumes are an inexpensive and nutritious protein food which are high in fiber, low in fat, a good source of protein, carbohydrates, folate, and many trace minerals. Beans store well, cost little, and provide a punch for the nutrition dollar.
The Mayo Clinic has some great information on different types of beans and how to use them.
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/legumes/NU00260
Cooking Beans:
- Rinse all beans and legumes in cold water.
- Soak the beans in 3 times as much water as beans. Lentils and peas do not need to be soaked. Make sure and discard soaking water.
- Quick soaking method- For each pound of beans, bring 8 cups of water to boiling. Wash the beans, add them to boiling water, and boil for 1 minute. Remove from heat, cover, and soak for 1 hour. Discard soaking water.
- Add 1/8 tsp. baking soda and 1 T. cooking oil to each cup of beans while soaking. This will shorten the cooking time and decrease foaming.
- The slower the beans are cooked, the easier they are to digest.
- Beans will increase double to triple during soaking and cooking. (1 cup dry beans will produce 2-3 cooked).
- One pound of dry beans equals 6-7 cups cooked beans.
- Cooked beans freeze well and will keep up to 6 months in the freezer.
One major concern with bean consumption is digestive distress. A few things to try...
- Soak beans a minimum of 3 hours (8-12 hours better); disgard soaking water.
- Sprout beans before cooking-soak beans 2-3 days, changing water 3-4 times, until beans begin to sprout.
- Use Beano
- Continue to wash and soak beans until water is clear.
Bean flour is a great thickener and is finished and ready to eat in just 3 minutes.
A great and award winning legume recipe...
from Brooke Stucki
Chicken Chili Blanco
6 cans white beans
6 cups chicken broth
1 tsp chicken stock base (1 boulion cube)
2 onions chopped
1 tbsp. oil
6 cloves garlic, minced
4 oz. green chilies, drained
2 tsp. cumin
1 tsp. oregano
1 tsp. cayenne pepper (optional, but I put it in)
4 cups cooked and diced chicken
1 cup sour cream
3 cups co-jack cheese
Optional garnishes: sour cream, chopped fresh cilantro chopped tomatoes and tortilla chips
Saute onions in oil until golden. Combine beans, broth, chicken stock base, onions, garlic, green chilies, cumin, oregano, cayenne pepper, and chicken in large pot. Simmer for 30 minutes. Add sour cream and cheese. Heat until cheese melts. Garnish as desired. I also use the crockpot and combine all the ingredients except the sour cream and cheese (no need to saute onions) and cook on low for 5 hours. Add the sour cream and cheese 15 minutes before serving to let it melt.