Recipe

Red Beans Pasionaria and Durutti Column Rice (the commis revisionist version)

Red Beans Pasionaria and Durutti Column Rice (the commis revisionist version)

Photo by pierino

  • This recipe was entered in the contest for Your Best Recipe for Beans
    This recipe was entered in the contest for Your Best Recipe with Coffee
  • Chef

    pierino's Notes: This is a slightly revised version of a recipe I submitted in the rice competition, renamed in honor of Dolores Ibárruri, known in Spanish history as "La Pasionaria." I came up with this dish...

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Serves The trench

  1. One day ahead cover the red beans with water and soak them overnight.

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  2. Give yourself most of the next day to finish. Depending on the age of the beans they can take some time to cook. In a heavy pot such as a dutch oven place the ham hock and all of the aromatics including the seasoning. Add the water and bring everything to a simmer. Allow an hour or more for the ham hock to become tender enough to shred. When it’s ready, take the hock out and set aside until it is cool enough to handle. Pick off the meat and return that to the kettle. Now add the beans and the sausage. Make sure there is enough ham stock to cover the beans by about 1 inch. Hold any excess stock aside in case you need it later. Stir in the beans and the chorizo. Bring to a simmer, cover and cook slowly. Your kitchen will smell wonderful.

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  3. When the beans are roughly half way to being cooked through, stir in the coffee (see note to cook)

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  4. Once the red beans are cooked through remove from the stove and keep warm in the oven. On your cook top prepare your rice. Normally red beans and rice would be served with long grain white rice but in keeping with the Spanish theme I’m using a short grain white rice; in this case “bomba” [of course] from Valencia. Add a pinch of saffron threads to the cooking liquid; chicken stock or water. Two parts stock to one part rice. It takes about 15 minutes to cook.

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  5. Spoon the beans and chorizo over the rice and top with chopped scallions.

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  6. Note to cooks: The coffee thing is a trick I picked up in San Luis Obispo while fighting on the Higuera Street front near the mission. We were trying to drive the Rachael Ray brigades back across Highway 101 and over to the Madonna Inn side of town. Much as anchovies do in stews, the coffee adds a certain “bottom” to the dish that most people won’t be able to identify. It does the same thing with chili too.

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3 Comments on Red Beans Pasionaria and Durutti Column Rice (the commis revisionist version)

Img_2764 Reply

Hope you were able to hold your position in San Luis. Love the coffee-anchovy analogy.

Teresa_food52 Reply

My, my, what a "passionario" you are. I have to try this coffe trick. Thanks for sharing the recipe.

026 Reply

You are welcome. Trust me it works, especially with beans.

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