
To confirm your suspicions, I admit that yes, the month of May has wiped the floor with my good blogging intentions.
Somewhere between finals, Final Friday, Memorial Day, two "part-time" jobs, graduations, birthdays, and road trips to exotic locales like Winfield and Kansas City, I lost grip of my cooking. My eating became nomadic and feral; I survived on oranges, iced coffee, brownies, quesadillas, and microwave curries from the Eastern food store.
I did cook a little this month, and by "little" I mean "a minuscule number of dishes." I baked polenta fries and sliced tomatoes for a Memorial Day cookout, baked boxed Ghirardelli brownies t.h.r.e.e times, and occasionally remembered to bring a salad of lettuce, almonds, and cranberries to work. But mostly, I flitted about between engagements, munching on Snickers Dark bars and drinking cold coffee.
By this Friday, I felt like I no longer knew how to cook, or what to cook, or whether I owned any recipes that worked. Whatever I cooked should be as simple to make as, say, a peanut butter sandwich, since in times of great duress, I've been known to screw up plain rice or hard-boiled eggs. After re-reading Molly's post on Cook Burn-Out and finding my mental happy place, I reached wayy back, parted the curtains of my mind, and found a dish I've been making since college.
Beans and rice.

"Beans and rice?" you say. "There are 5,393,471 ways to make beans and rice, and they are all superior to your method." That may be, but I still love my way of cooking beans and rice; it's evolved with me for at least eight years.
Back in the dorms, I had a 25% success rate of cooking kidney beans without welding most of them to the bottom of the saucepan. I used canned beans and I flavored the mess with packets of Taco Bell hot sauce. (Was my mother the only mother who hoarded fast food sauce packets?) Because I was "watching my figure," I wouldn't use more than a tablespoon of butter in the whole mess, yet I loved my beans and rice.
By 2005, when I was living briefly in Seattle, I got the hang of cooking rice on a stove top, to the relief of every pan I've used since then. Around that time, I ditched the Mexican hot sauce in favor of Sriracha chili sauce.
In 2007, I learned to salt the rice, and in 2008, I fell in love with avocados. Cheddar cheese migrated into the dish organically.
I don't know how the recipe will have evolved 20 years from now, but I do know it'll still be good comfort food.
Beans and rice and cheese
Soak the beans overnight, covered, in a pan of cold water. The next day, drain the soaking water and cover the beans with 6-8 cups of fresh water. Bring the beans to a boil, then reduce the heat to a simmer. The beans will need to cook this way for about an hour.
Once the beans are simmering and covered, start the rice. Rinse the rice in cold water to wash away any dust or sand, then pour the rice and 2 1/2 cups of cold water in a sauce pan. Bring the rice to a roaring boil, and, without ever stirring it, reduce the heat to a simmer, just like the beans. Let the rice cook either covered or with the lid slightly askew for about 40 minutes, or until the last spoonful of water is almost absorbed into the rice. Toss a 1/4 to a 1/2 teaspoon of sea salt in the pan and fluff the rice with a fork.
By now, the beans should be about 10-15 minutes away from being tender and done. This is a great time to stir a few tablespoons of chili sauce into the bean broth. When the beans are done, spoon them into the rice pan using a slotted spoon. Don't worry about draining them completely; some drippiness is good. Add more chili sauce if you wish, then serve hot, with sliced avocados and cheddar cheese. This recipe makes three main dish or four side dish servings (unless you have seconds.)
- 2 small handfulls (or about a cup and a half) of kidney, Anasazi, or pinto beans
- 1 cup long-grain brown rice
- 1/8-1/4 cup Sriracha hot sauce
- sea salt
- 1/2 an avocado
- 1/2 cup shredded cheddar or pepper jack cheese
Soak the beans overnight, covered, in a pan of cold water. The next day, drain the soaking water and cover the beans with 6-8 cups of fresh water. Bring the beans to a boil, then reduce the heat to a simmer. The beans will need to cook this way for about an hour.
Once the beans are simmering and covered, start the rice. Rinse the rice in cold water to wash away any dust or sand, then pour the rice and 2 1/2 cups of cold water in a sauce pan. Bring the rice to a roaring boil, and, without ever stirring it, reduce the heat to a simmer, just like the beans. Let the rice cook either covered or with the lid slightly askew for about 40 minutes, or until the last spoonful of water is almost absorbed into the rice. Toss a 1/4 to a 1/2 teaspoon of sea salt in the pan and fluff the rice with a fork.
By now, the beans should be about 10-15 minutes away from being tender and done. This is a great time to stir a few tablespoons of chili sauce into the bean broth. When the beans are done, spoon them into the rice pan using a slotted spoon. Don't worry about draining them completely; some drippiness is good. Add more chili sauce if you wish, then serve hot, with sliced avocados and cheddar cheese. This recipe makes three main dish or four side dish servings (unless you have seconds.)


