To start with you need pinto beans. For this I used a one-pound bag of beans. Some stores have beans in a crate that you can measure and bag yourself, but those didn't look so good when I checked.
One-pound bag of pinto beans |
Rinsing the beans |
Finding bad beans and debris (i.e., rock) |
Beans in the pot, with twice as much water as beans. |
Beans on the stove, covered, on low heat |
Cooking beans |
Other add-ins |
I suggest a good thick cut bacon for beans because it adds a good amount of flavor to the beans. You take about four slices, cut them up, and then cook them on the stove in a frying pan.
Cut up bacon |
Frying up bacon |
Chopped up veggies |
Adding garlic and onion to the bacon to cook. |
Tomatoes and cilantro |
When you're done and served up, your frijoles charros should look something like this:
Ready to eat! |
Let me know if you try this recipe or how you like to make your frijoles.
¡Hasta la proxĂma vez!
Kinda different from mine. I used to have to cook for vegetarians, so my version is mostly that. Differences:
ReplyDeleteI soak the frijoles (pintos or negros) overnight.
I try to cook them in beer and broth from the tinga chicken (or whatever) I made the day before. This rules out the 'vegetarian' part, but I don't live with vegetarians anymore (THANK GOD) so ni modo.
I use a whole white or yellow onion, garlic, a 3 or so dried chiles (usually chipotle, ancho, and guajillo) to flavor. Maybe comino sometimes, but not always. My pareja hates cilantro (I know, I know), so that's omitted but I use culantro or epazote if it's around instead.