Beans

jJjburton

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Anybody know a good recipe to add these to, plain they are kind of rough to eat, alot of them. I am thinking about blending/smashing into some type if paste and then adding to stuff.

or just drinking. The protein and carb ratio is amazing, and has no fat.

anybody know besides chili and tacos a good way to utilize them?

i can force them down but if someone had a way to make them taste better or more interesting. Thanks
 
I use black beans in steak bowls with rice. Pretty much the only way I use it but, that's about 90% of my diet right there.

I enjoy them with just salt honestly... I think cooking them in a pressure cooker is better than out of a can.

However, you can add just about any seasoning and it'll absorb. Chili powder, garlic, onion powder, etc. Add half water and half bone, beef or chicken broth. Throw half an onion into the pot and let it cook with the beans. Squeeze lime juice in, splash of picante, diced peppers. Whatever fits your meal.

You can also do a mix of black beans, lentils, chickpeas.. you have to cook them separately but they're good together. Really easy to get fiber in my adding a scoop to meals. Probably costs about $2 for a week's worth.
 
I use black beans in steak bowls with rice. Pretty much the only way I use it but, that's about 90% of my diet right there.

I enjoy them with just salt honestly... I think cooking them in a pressure cooker is better than out of a can.

However, you can add just about any seasoning and it'll absorb. Chili powder, garlic, onion powder, etc. Add half water and half bone, beef or chicken broth. Throw half an onion into the pot and let it cook with the beans. Squeeze lime juice in, splash of picante, diced peppers. Whatever fits your meal.

You can also do a mix of black beans, lentils, chickpeas.. you have to cook them separately but they're good together. Really easy to get fiber in my adding a scoop to meals. Probably costs about $2 for a week's worth.
Ahh good idea, absorbing a seasoned water. Nice will give this a try. Garlic,onion, water with broth sounds good.


I cook the raw beans in a crock pot, no can. Crock pot works amazing.
 
Like @Eman said, I mix black beans with rice & meat often, different cuts of beef or leftover chicken, pork.

One of my favorite meatless things too is black beans, rice, diced bell peppers, onions, diced tomatoes with maybe corn, black eyed peas, anything really with garlic, black pepper, cumin, cilantro.

Lately I've been using just canned beans because when I come across a sale I stock up but I agree they're not as good as soaking the real deal or using a pressure cooker.

But I'll heat the beans with the juice from the can and add a little beef or chicken broth then my seasonings - enough to cook the rice when I cook everything in one pot.

I'm always experimenting in the kitchen, I have a cookbook with a few dozen of my own recipes too that one day I'd love to self-publish but that's another topic.
 
Like @Eman said, I mix black beans with rice & meat often, different cuts of beef or leftover chicken, pork.

One of my favorite meatless things too is black beans, rice, diced bell peppers, onions, diced tomatoes with maybe corn, black eyed peas, anything really with garlic, black pepper, cumin, cilantro.

Lately I've been using just canned beans because when I come across a sale I stock up but I agree they're not as good as soaking the real deal or using a pressure cooker.

But I'll heat the beans with the juice from the can and add a little beef or chicken broth then my seasonings - enough to cook the rice when I cook everything in one pot.

I'm always experimenting in the kitchen, I have a cookbook with a few dozen of my own recipes too that one day I'd love to self-publish but that's another topic.
Yea i think black beans are the way to go, the kidney beans were beefy. But when i mashed them with a potatoe masher and then added to rice it made them 100% more easy to eat. I just did jasmine rice, smashed beans, and soy sauce. I was able to eat double the amount in one sitting.

corn is good cause its sweet, good idea.

Now in combk with the beans soaking up juices and some of what you said, they are going to be a huge help with eating clean and a cheap alternative to get cals, protein, and carbs.

i am trying to get fats between 90-100 even when eating 4000+ cals. As i looked my best when doing this.
 
Yes, soy sauce is great too. @jJjburton Good luck getting the fats, calories and all in order for your goals, I know it can be a bit tricky at times.

Personally I think it's part of the fun in the overall challenge to get to where we want to be but yeah, it can also get frustrating to say the least.
 
Anybody know a good recipe to add these to, plain they are kind of rough to eat, alot of them. I am thinking about blending/smashing into some type if paste and then adding to stuff.

or just drinking. The protein and carb ratio is amazing, and has no fat.

anybody know besides chili and tacos a good way to utilize them?

i can force them down but if someone had a way to make them taste better or more interesting. Thanks
I will make just beans with lots of spices and some diced tomato and onion. It is quite good. Then I'll mix it 50/50 and eat it with rice. Recipe:

- 1-2 tbsp of olive oil for frying
- 2 cans of beans: I often will do red beans, or 1 can red and 1 can black beans. Drain the bean juice out of 1 of the cans and leave it in the other
- 1 clove garlic, minced (or 1 tsp of pre-minced garlic)
- 1/2 of a medium-large onion, chopped
- 1 can diced tomatoes with juice
- 1 bell pepper, any color, diced (optional, I love peppers)
- 1 tsp smoked paprika (or more, to taste, I'll often use 1/2 tbsp which is 1.5 tsp)
- 1/2-1 tsp chili powder (the spice blend, not true chili powder)
- 1/2 tsp cumin
- 1/2 tsp iodized salt (there's also salt in the chili powder, so be careful not to add too much
- some lemon juice (get actual lemon juice, that "ReaLemon" shit is fuckin nasty and very much NOT real, but an illusion of the matrix)
- black pepper to taste
- can add some cayenne if you want a little spice

To be honest, I don't actually measure the spices when I put them in, I just eyeball what looks good and sprinkle it on then mix it up in the pan. So the spice quantities above may need some adjustment (and always adjust things to your taste anyway). You could also use mainly herbs instead of spices if you wanted to.

1. Add the olive oil to the pan and let it warm up.
2. Add in the garlic, sauté it at medium heat, careful not to let it burn. Burned garlic is fucking disgusting.
3. After about 60-90 seconds, the garlic should start to turn golden. Add in the onion and mix it all up well, then increase the heat to a little above medium (like a 6-7/10)
4. Let the onion sauté for 1-2 mins, then add the chopped bell pepper, mixing it all up again
5. Stir occasionally, let things sauté until they start to soften
6. Add the diced tomatoes and the beans along with all the spices and like 2 tbsp of lemon juice (my lemon juice comes in squirter bottles so I just give it a healthy squirt)
7. Turn up the heat so the mixture is simmering intensely. There should be a lot of evaporation going on (turn on your stove hood if you have one). Be sure to keep the top of the pan off, stirring occasionally. Let the flavors mingle and let the juice evaporate. This takes like 8 minutes or so if I remember correctly.
8. Once the sauce/juice has thickened, turn the heat off and give it one last stir. I will often leave it on the burner for a bit to absorb the leftover heat from my cooktop. Obviously if you have gas this is irrelevant--and if you don't have gas, you will soon unless you take some beano with your first bite of beans! (hardy har har, I am such a funny guy--seriously though beano is awesome when eating beans OR cruciferous veggies, it WILL prevent stomach bloating and stinky farts, it's amazing stuff).

Like I said, usually I mix it with rice, but my girlfriend bakes sourdough all the time, so we might have sourdough with it too. Put some beans on the fresh backed sourdough it's soooo goood. White rice, brown rice. Doesn't matter. I always prefer basmati rice over jasmine. We will air fry some chicken with it, maybe steam some broccoli or green beans (just one more reason to take that beano lol), and you've got yourself a whole meal!

Enjoy!
 
I will make just beans with lots of spices and some diced tomato and onion. It is quite good. Then I'll mix it 50/50 and eat it with rice. Recipe:

- 1-2 tbsp of olive oil for frying
- 2 cans of beans: I often will do red beans, or 1 can red and 1 can black beans. Drain the bean juice out of 1 of the cans and leave it in the other
- 1 clove garlic, minced (or 1 tsp of pre-minced garlic)
- 1/2 of a medium-large onion, chopped
- 1 can diced tomatoes with juice
- 1 bell pepper, any color, diced (optional, I love peppers)
- 1 tsp smoked paprika (or more, to taste, I'll often use 1/2 tbsp which is 1.5 tsp)
- 1/2-1 tsp chili powder (the spice blend, not true chili powder)
- 1/2 tsp cumin
- 1/2 tsp iodized salt (there's also salt in the chili powder, so be careful not to add too much
- some lemon juice (get actual lemon juice, that "ReaLemon" shit is fuckin nasty and very much NOT real, but an illusion of the matrix)
- black pepper to taste
- can add some cayenne if you want a little spice

To be honest, I don't actually measure the spices when I put them in, I just eyeball what looks good and sprinkle it on then mix it up in the pan. So the spice quantities above may need some adjustment (and always adjust things to your taste anyway). You could also use mainly herbs instead of spices if you wanted to.

1. Add the olive oil to the pan and let it warm up.
2. Add in the garlic, sauté it at medium heat, careful not to let it burn. Burned garlic is fucking disgusting.
3. After about 60-90 seconds, the garlic should start to turn golden. Add in the onion and mix it all up well, then increase the heat to a little above medium (like a 6-7/10)
4. Let the onion sauté for 1-2 mins, then add the chopped bell pepper, mixing it all up again
5. Stir occasionally, let things sauté until they start to soften
6. Add the diced tomatoes and the beans along with all the spices and like 2 tbsp of lemon juice (my lemon juice comes in squirter bottles so I just give it a healthy squirt)
7. Turn up the heat so the mixture is simmering intensely. There should be a lot of evaporation going on (turn on your stove hood if you have one). Be sure to keep the top of the pan off, stirring occasionally. Let the flavors mingle and let the juice evaporate. This takes like 8 minutes or so if I remember correctly.
8. Once the sauce/juice has thickened, turn the heat off and give it one last stir. I will often leave it on the burner for a bit to absorb the leftover heat from my cooktop. Obviously if you have gas this is irrelevant--and if you don't have gas, you will soon unless you take some beano with your first bite of beans! (hardy har har, I am such a funny guy--seriously though beano is awesome when eating beans OR cruciferous veggies, it WILL prevent stomach bloating and stinky farts, it's amazing stuff).

Like I said, usually I mix it with rice, but my girlfriend bakes sourdough all the time, so we might have sourdough with it too. Put some beans on the fresh backed sourdough it's soooo goood. White rice, brown rice. Doesn't matter. I always prefer basmati rice over jasmine. We will air fry some chicken with it, maybe steam some broccoli or green beans (just one more reason to take that beano lol), and you've got yourself a whole meal!

Enjoy!
Thanks for reply. Trying to avoid fats and frying, but this sounds delicious will try it without the oil. Do you eat it cold or warm? How much fats does a serving come out to approximately?
 
Well it makes several servings. So if you use 1 tbsp of extra virgin olive oil, that's only 120 calories total. Even if you use 2 tbsp that is only 240.

I mark it down as making 6 servings, but this will vary based off your goals and whatnot.

1/6 of the total dish contains:
- 213 calories
- 31.3g carbs (62%)
- 4.6g fat (20%)
- 9.2g protein (18%)

If you use 1 tbsp of EVOO instead of 2 then you get 193 calories, same carbs, 2.4g fat, same protein. Macros then are 65% carbs, 12% fat, and 20% protein.

Then you mix it with rice and the % fat goes down even further.

Also it tastes better/the texture is better when it is warm, but I personally am essentially 100% indifferent to food temperatures, so very often I'll eat it cold. I really don't care either way what temp it is with this or most other dishes.
 
Beans soaking up liquids was amazing, i put in crock pot and basically made a bean soup. Its delicious.
 
I use black beans in steak bowls with rice. Pretty much the only way I use it but, that's about 90% of my diet right there.

I enjoy them with just salt honestly... I think cooking them in a pressure cooker is better than out of a can.

However, you can add just about any seasoning and it'll absorb. Chili powder, garlic, onion powder, etc. Add half water and half bone, beef or chicken broth. Throw half an onion into the pot and let it cook with the beans. Squeeze lime juice in, splash of picante, diced peppers. Whatever fits your meal.

You can also do a mix of black beans, lentils, chickpeas.. you have to cook them separately but they're good together. Really easy to get fiber in my adding a scoop to meals. Probably costs about $2 for a week's worth.
This was a great idea. Thanks
 
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