Border Beans
- 2 lb. Mexican pinto beans
- 1/2 lb. salt pork, cut in chunks
- 2 Tbsp. salt
- 6 pods garlic
- 2 tsp. oregano or 9 chili pequins
- In a tall, narrow ware pot (Mexicans call it a jarrow), the beans nestle closely together and pack while cooking and it means the heat seeps gently through the jarrow as it should in cooking beans.
- In order that the beans pack right, you should use enough to almost fill the pot when they swell, never less than 2 pounds. Use Mexican pinto beans.
- Wash the beans; put them in the pot and fill the pot about half full of water.
- Never soak pinto beans.
- It causes them to be mushy.
- Using a medium flame, bring the water to a boil while stirring the beans to keep them from burning.
- When the water boils, turn the fire low so it can barely simmer.
- It is best if you see a bubbly oozing out now and then.
- Throughout the cooking, keep the water level barely covering the beans.
- It makes them pack.
- Be sure any water you add is boiling.
- After an hour of cooking, add several chunks of salt pork.
- Some people put a lid on the beans, but I do not.
- It chokes off those fine odors and sometimes it causes the juices to boil over.
- At the end of the second hour, cut the garlic fine (I use 6 pods).
- At the end of another hour, add the oregano and chili pequins, mashed up (I use jalapeno peppers, 2 small ones, with seeds taken out).
- Cook another hour.
- At the end of 4 hours of cooking, add salt, one level tablespoon per each pound of beans.
- Simmer 1 more hour.
pinto beans, salt pork, salt, garlic, oregano
Taken from www.cookbooks.com/Recipe-Details.aspx?id=621003 (may not work)