| (Photo Credit) |
In December I reviewed Moosewood Restaurant; Cooking for Health which I’d checked out from the library. When I had the book I wrote down a few recipes and hoped that I might get the book for Christmas. I bought the ingredients for one of the recipes using adzuki beans because I’d never heard of them. Luckily I found them in bulk at my local organic store and it seemed like a sign. Well, you know how things go. I had those adzuki beans in a canning jar and it was the holiday season and the days got away from me. I never made the recipe but still had the beautiful beans staring at me every time I opened my dry storage cupboard.
Last week I got inspired to use them but realized I hadn’t copied down the original recipe. I did what everyone does; I googled a new recipe and this is what I found at Healthy Green Kitchen, a new foodie blog for me! Winnie at HGK credits Ree Drummond (do I even have to say it…Pioneer Woman) for her recipe. I made them and we’ve been eating them all week in different easy meals.
Serves 8-10
*4 slices organic uncured bacon, sliced into 1 inch pieces- optional; bacon lends a nice smoky saltiness but you can leave out for vegetarian beans
*filtered water
*1 teaspoon course sea salt or to taste
*1 teaspoon black pepper or to taste
*1 teaspoon garlic powder or to taste
*1 teaspoon chili powder or to taste
The first night we had them with brown rice, chopped tomatoes, a little curry sauce and whole wheat wraps. In the middle of the week I had them on top of a green salad while my children ate pasta. Last night I turned the last of them into my food processor with a little water, fresh squeezed lime juice and a few diced tomatoes with juice and created a refried bean consistency. We had soft shell small tacos using the beans as our base with freshly shredded mozzarella, avocado, tomatoes, and green lettuce from our co-op. The beans were delicious! My kids didn’t even realize they were eating the leftover beans re-purposed!
This post is linked to Weekend Cooking hosted at Beth Fish Reads. Pop over and see what other food-related bloggers are cooking up!


Those sound really good. I like the fact that they're a base for other really good things.
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Love adzuki beans! Being from Hawai'i, my favorite way to eat them is with shave ice. 🙂
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I would love to be able to get my hand on these beans 🙂
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I've never heard of adzuki beans but I'm intrigued since they don't have to be soaked. I'm going to look for some.
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That looks really good!
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Adzuki beans are new to me but I like how versatile they sound. Will have to see if I can find them here.
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Terrific! I love that you got three meals out of this and that last one sounds so yummy!
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Nice recipe. I enjoy adzuki beans. We can buy them in cans at the supermarket down here in New Zealand and will often use them as the base for a summer salad.My post
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cool that you don't have to soak them.
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I think I have adzuki beans in the house … we love beans of all kinds. Love the no-soaking kinds, but all beans turn into no-soak if you use a pressure cooker. :)I love the different ways you served these. Now I have a hankering.
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I have never cooked with adzuki beans, but I haven't found a bean I don't like yet. Sounds like I should give these a try!
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