food
Welcome to c/food!
The place for all kinds of food discussion: from photos of dishes you've made to recipes or even advice on how to eat healthier.
Animal liberation is essential to any leftist movement.
Image posts containing animal products must have nfsw tag and add a content warning (CW:Meat/Cheese/Egg) ,and try to post recipes easily adaptable for vegan.
Posts that contain animal products may receive informative comments regarding animal liberation, and users may disengage by telling a commenter that the original poster wants to, "disengage".
Off-topic, Toxic, inflammatory, aggressive debating, and meta (community rules, site rules, moderators,etc ) posts or comments will be removed.
Please be sure to read the Code of Conduct and remember we are all comrades here. Share all your delicious food secrets.
Ingredients of the week: Mushrooms,Cranberries, Brassica, Beetroot, Potatoes, Cabbage, Carrots, Nutritional Yeast, Miso, Buckwheat
Cuisine of the month:
view the rest of the comments
FYI if you have access to a pressure cooker or instant pot, you can skip the soak on dried beans. Obviously it's still going to take a lot longer than a microwave and you have to account for the moisture they will absorb but it makes it much less of a pain in the ass. Typically takes 60-90 minutes to get them tender.
I make Pinto beans in the pressure cooker. Broth instead of water; jalapeño, onion, garlic, bay leaf, salt, pepper. Then when the pressure cook part is done I take the lid off and let them simmer for a while in the liquid so the starches break down a bit more, and I'll crush them a bit and stir. They end up like beans I get at a taqueria and I could probably eat a bowl of those bad boys on their own. So good
This is pretty much what I do, but on a regular pot, and I add some oil in the pot. Sometimes I'll run them through a food processor to get that smooth refried bean texture.
Agree with OP, good homemade beans are challenging