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Taking the ‘can’ out of Cannellini beans

September 11, 2013 by Beth Shepherd

Cannellini beans with olive oil, garlic and sage

Last Friday, while trawling my neighborhood farmers market for farm-fresh goodies, I spotted them: shriveled, damp looking bean pods, cream with rosy highlights. Cannellini shelling beans! Not a very attractive looking bean on the outside. But inside–heaven.

Cannellini beans themselves are white kidney-shaped beans, with a pale green to pale yellow pod that may be moist. Delicate bean flavor, not too dense. The shriveled pod indicates that the inside of these shelling beans are swollen and plump, full of rich bean flavor, and the dampness indicates the bean is still tender and ready to eat.

A shelling bean is any bean that is grown primarily for the edible seed inside. The pod is not eaten, because it is tough and stringy, unlike snap beans, which are eaten for the pod, with the bean inside barely developed. Most of the shelling bean crops are harvested when the pods and beans inside are dry, just before the pod shatters. After harvest, they are stored and sold throughout the year as dry beans. However, in late summer, some of these beans make it to the market in their fresh state – that is, when the edible seed is still moist, and can easily be bitten through. At this point the beans take only minutes to cook, not the hour or more needed for dried beans.

Fresh Cannellini beans

I think fresh shelling beans are one of the highlights of summer’s bounty, and I seek them out. Sometimes I grow them myself (favas!).  It is so simple to make them taste good–all the work is in getting them out of their shell. The shelling process, however, is an ideal time to keep your family and friends in the kitchen, sipping a glass of wine, and all shelling together. It goes quickly that way. Plus it’s a lot more fun.

Of course, you can always use Cannellini beans from a can. And I have. But–if you can find them fresh, why would you want to?

 Shelled Cannellini beans

How to cook ’em?

You will need to judge the time needed to cook the beans based on how mature they are. To do this, bite one of the shelled beans. If the bean is quite tender, if will need only about 5 minutes of cooking in boiling, salted water. If the bean offers resistance, you may need up to 20-25 minutes of cooking (which is how long I cooked mine). A pound of beans in the pod equals approximately 1 cup of shelled beans.

Where to get ’em?

I got mine from Rand at One Leaf Farm, my favorite farmers market veggie seller. Check out your neighborhood farmers market!

Simple Recipe for Cannellini Beans with Olive Oil, Garlic and Sage

Ingredients

  • Cannellini beans, shelled
  • Boiling, salted water
  • High quality extra-virgin olive oil
  • Course salt (Kosher or sea salt)
  • Chopped fresh sage (or herb of your choice), a few tablespoons
  • One or two (depending on how many beans you’re using) cloves of garlic, minced.

How to

  1. Shell your beans.
  2. Bring a pot of salted water to a rolling boil.
  3. Add shelled beans.
  4. Reduce heat to medium and cook for 5-25 minutes (I sampled a bean at 10 minutes and then cooked another 15).
  5. Drain beans through a strainer.
  6. Put the cooked beans in a bowl.
  7. Top with minced garlic, chopped sage (or other herb), and a healthy drizzle (1/4-1/3 cup, again, depending on how many beans you use).
  8. Give it a few stirs to blend it all together.

Seriously, that’s it! So simple. So delicious.

Optional add-ins might include:

  • a few tablespoons of freshly squeezed lemon juice
  • a generous sprinkle of shaved or grated Parmesan cheese
  • a handful of chopped Coppa, prosciutto or similar uncured meat

Cannellini beans with roasted corn tomato salad

We enjoyed our beans with a garden salad of tomatoes, roasted corn and basil…and a lovely bottle of crisp Sauvignon Blanc! And now I can’t wait to make more. Next year, Cannellini beans are definitely on my short list of veggies to grow in our garden.

 

Take the road less traveled, Beth

For more simple goodness, take a look at Wanderfood Wednesday!

Filed Under: Food Tagged With: canellini beans, Farmers Market, One Leaf Farm

One leaf is all it takes

June 13, 2012 by Beth Shepherd

Arugula

I love vegetables. When I was a little girl my father had an enormous garden behind our home in upstate New York. He grew it all: carrots, corn, asparagus, raspberries, tomatoes, lettuce, onions, cabbage, cucumbers, radishes, dill, peas, beans, squash, pumpkins, rhubarb, apples, pears. And we ate it all.

Some of my earliest memories are of accompanying him to the garden, plucking berries warmed by the sun and eating them right then and there. My sister and I would always sneak five into our mouths for every one that made it’s way into the basket.

As a gardener myself, I imagined introducing Baby Bird to the magical world of edible greenery. We would nibble our way from one end of the yard to the other.

So imagine my chagrin upon observing her reluctance to eat anything green. Squash, pumpkin and most things in the orange category were fine, as long as they came in the unrecognizable form of baby mush. Anything green? Spinach, peas, kale? NA-NA-NA-NA-WAAAA [baby speak for no freakin’ way].

Which is why I was supremely delighted when Rand, my favorite farmer at the Friday Madrona Farmers Market, offered Baby Bird an arugula leaf. And…she ate it.

Eating arugulaBaby Bird’s first fresh greenery was arugula. Arugula from One Leaf Farm.

Thankfully, I had my phone (albeit a Blackberry with less than stellar camera capability) with me to capture proof! Here she is chomping happily on a leaf. First one and then another and another.

I will say–sadly–it’s been a challenge to repeat this performance at home. But it happened once so I know it can happen again.

I have hope. One leaf is all it takes.

Want to munch on more deliciousness? Check out Wanderfood Wednesday!

Filed Under: Food, Garden Tagged With: arugula, Farmers Market, One Leaf Farm, Rand

This little piggy went to market

May 19, 2010 by Beth Shepherd

This little piggy went to the Madrona Farmers Market. This little piggy stayed home (to tend to the garden). This little piggy ate grass-fed roast beef. This little piggy had none (vegetarian). And this little piggy went “wee, wee, wee, wee” all the way home (to the Urban Cabin).

Madrona Farmers MarketLast Friday was this season’s kick-off for the farmers market in our neighborhood and this little piggy was one happy camper. I’m a sucker for farmers markets wherever they may be, but when it’s less than a mile from the Urban Cabin, well that’s nothing short of nirvana in my book.

Oh farmers market how I love thee. Let me count the ways. First there are all the yummy farm fresh veggies. How can you possibly go wrong with home grown greens? Whether it’s my favorite ‘Samantha’ lettuce or tasty lemon cukes, there’s nothing like just-picked-off –the- vine goodness. The only thing better is when the food is coming from my own back forty.

fish guysThen there are all the friendly market folks who sell a diverse selection of deliciousness: Michelle, the “potato lady,” who plies potatoes for Olsen Farms and is also an adoptive mom; Tim and David, the “fish guys” from Wilson Fish who offer up the biggest smiles and some of the freshest, best tasting salmon I’ve ever had; the sweet dynamic duo from Whidbey Island Ice Cream who are the reason all the kids (and many adults) within fifty feet have faces covered with ice cream; and, newbies like lovely Lucy who sells sensuous teas with kicky packaging and healthful benefits.

I actually look forward to seeing the same sellers on a weekly basis. Giving my money to hardworking people I “know” is, in my opinion, the best possible way to part with my dollars. It feels like a big extended community and I’m sure that’s one of the reasons anything that comes home with me from the market tastes oh-so-much better.

You scream, I screamWatching the other market goers who, just like me, have huge grins on their faces is another reason I get giddy about going to the market. We swarm around like a big school of fish grabbing our cheese here and our eggs there as we fill up our sustainable shopping bags until they are brimming with bounty. It’s a chance to gather your grub while enjoying a local adventure all wrapped up into one earthy package.

Seattle is blessed with farmers markets aplenty. There are probably at least a dozen on the west side of the pond (Lake Washington) and a number of markets on the east side too. I’ve visited several of them and they each have their own unique features and charm, but of course there’s something pretty cool about having a farmers market that’s practically in your own backyard.

Veggie startsOpening day for the Madrona Farmers Market was as perfect as it could be. The sun warmed my shoulders. I got to catch up with old friends (hello Wilson Fish!) and make some new ones (nice to meet you, Lucy). A couple tomato plants accompanied me home and are now enjoying their new digs in one of our raised planter beds, and Big Papa and I enjoyed the fruits from my market foraging all weekend long. Summertime and market memories here I come. A fine way indeed to spend a Friday afternoon.

Eat your veggies and more on Wanderfood Wednesday!

Filed Under: Food, Garden Tagged With: Central District, Farmers Market, Herbal Philosophy, Madrona, Olsen Farms, Whidbey Island Ice Cream, Wilson Fish

Some might fend off a mid-life crisis by leaving the comforts of their corporate salary to jet off to a deserted island. Others might buy a Jaguar. I’ve chosen to dive head-long into my 50s and beyond by becoming a first-time parent. At any given moment you might find me holding a camera, a spade, a spatula or a suitcase. Or my little girl's hand. Adopted from Armenia, she puts the Pampers and Paklava into my life.

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