They cook in waaay less than 3 hours in the pressure cooker.
Kathryn
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First cook with Rancho Gordo beans
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Here you go, NoFatNoFlavor : https://www.ranchogordo.com/products...19122325979232
There's usually a waiting list but be patient, your turn will come relatively soon.
In the meanwhile, here's a topic about the RG Bean Club: https://pitmaster.amazingribs.com/fo...-and-bean-club
Kathryn
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Those look great! And yeah, love the fact that you can cook Rancho Gordo beans in about 3 hours start to finish
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One of my reservations about cooking beans is sort of the same one I have with sous vide: by the time I know what I want to make for dinner, the time to start it has passed. With old beans, you either soak them the day before, or do the fast soak (boil then set for two hours). With these beans, I rinsed them and cooked them. No night-before planning, no prep-at-noon-for-6PM stuff. 5 minute hard boil, then simmer until tender.
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Club? They have a club for quarterly orders? I'm in! If I can find it on their site, that is... (if you have a link fire away, please)
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I can’t wait to try one of the ones I’ve never tried before, the yellow eye or scarlet runners, or the ojo de cabra. I’ve had the anasazis before.
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I'm on the waiting list for Marcella beans (my fave) and for chickpeas for hummus.
My Rancho Gordo Bean Club quarterly package arrives this week. Yay!
Yesterday must have been a pinto day, Mosca . I made up a batch as well.
Yours looks delicious. Can't beat ham 'n beans.
KathrynLast edited by fzxdoc; May 13, 2020, 07:05 AM.
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Thanks for the update. Read really good things about their beans and chickpeas but when I finally got around to going to the website, they were all sold out
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First cook with Rancho Gordo beans
I used the pinto beans, because I’m generally familiar with pintos.
I did what they wrote on the side of the bag, and what they write in their books and blogs: I chopped a carrot, a celery, an onion and a garlic. I sautéed them in olive oil, then added the beans and water. I brought them to a hard boil for 5 minutes, then lowered to a simmer. I added water occasionally to keep the level above the beans.
After two hours I added some cubed smoked ham, and some salt and pepper (about a teaspoon each). I simmered another half an hour, and called them done.
The flavor is very forward, very alive. These are good beans. They have a nice texture: neither tough nor mushy, but creamy with a little give at the skin.
I’d say that is the biggest difference between these and common canned pintos: the texture, and a more full flavor. Canned pintos are pretty good. If you used them for the rest of your life you’d be doing fine. If you cook these, you get a broader flavor than you get with the one note of the canned beans.
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