Smoked pork neck bones in combination with pork spareribs made a very flavorful stock, and... I do not know if for some Cubans this is "sacrilegious" but what made this one different and added a really nice touch was using smoked hot Louisiana hotlinks, a type of beef sausage that was flavored with spicy chili peppers, they come in hot and mild. They are very popular in Mexican stores down here in which the Spanish label for them is "Salchichas Picantes Ahumadas" which I used because they are inexpensive and readily available in any latin store I go to here, as opposed to having to drive a little further to the "Bodeguita" or ordering online and always having to pay a hefty price for smoked Spanish chorizo which isn't close to as good to what's available in Spain...
One of the things you guys might like about it, is that everything is thrown in one pot, and cooked together you won't have to cook the sautee the sofrito in a separate pan, and brown the chorizo's, everything in one pot with very good flavorful results here goes
Ingredients:
-1 lb. dried red kidney beans
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-1 lb. smoked pork neck bones (wash em under running water)
-1 1/2 lbs. pork spareribs (wash real well under running water, cut the meat you can into 1 1/2 inch chunks and the ribs seperate them into segments with a knife)
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-1/2 green bell pepper minced
-1 onion minced
-1/2 head of garlic minced
-1 can 8 oz. tomato sauce
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-3 small bay leaves
-2 tsp salt (atleast more to taste)
-1/2 tsp dried oregano
-1/2 tsp ground black pepper
-1 tsp ground cumin
-1 tsp. sweet smoked spanish paprika
-1 lb. banana squash or butternut or kabucha squash cut into 2 inch pieces
-3 potatoes cut into large 2 inch chunks
-3 medium louisiana hotlinks (smoked hot sausage/ salchichas ahumadas picantes) or spanish chorizo
-2 tablespoons of apple cider vinegar
Directions:
(1) In a large pot throw red kidney beans, wash them twice in running cold water, then cover them with water about 1-2 inches submerged. The next day they should have swelled and look like this
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(2) Bring the pot with the red kidney beans and water to a boil on high heat, skim off the white foam if it forms, add pork spare ribs, smoked pork neck bones, bring back to a boil and skim off any impurities that might form (don't stress just skim off what you can) add minced onion, garlic, bell pepper, tomato sauce, extra-virgin olive oil, salt, and bay leaves and bring back to a boil. Cover and lower heat to medium low. After 1 hour it should look like this.
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NOTE:
Here's a link to other posts of red bean stews I've done and other's have made. I remember for a long time my family hated this musty hint they had, and I've experimented many ways with them and learned to make them pretty well :)
http://nathanscomida.blogspot.com/2010/09/potaje-de-frijoles-colorados-que.html
3 comments:
This looks very yummy and easy to prepare. I'll include this in my list other than my own canning salsa recipes this holidays. All the best!
Looks really good Nathan. I'm been making stews for the past few weeks because it's so freaking cold here. Have my frijoles en remojo now.
Chef Jay,
Sounds cool :) we go through Salsa's so fast in my house (3 days) lol. and if for some reason a particular salsa is taking to long to finish we brown whatever meat with salt and pepper and some onions and simmer it in the spicy sauce.
Ivonne,
You gotta share your Potaje's :) the weather is getting perfect for those Potaje's, Arroz a la Chorrera type dishes, and caldos. I swear I don't know what it is I just love making Potaje's with Colorados and experimenting with them, because it's a bean my family didn't like much ha ha. It's like hmmm I'ma make you eat it LOLZ. I'm going to try a variation later that uses Malanga in combination with Calabaza and flavors it with some cumin, and culantro leaves. Sounds very "Santiaguero" to me lol.
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