Posts Tagged ‘barbeque’
Simple Summer Salad

I recognize that it’s not quite summer, but when we have a bout of fine weather there are certain foods that just scream al fresco dining. My aunt Dolores has a beautiful backyard in Portola Valley, filled with flowers and blooming trees, and throughout the warm months she hosts the most amazing barbecues. She and her family spent many summers in Tuscany, so there’s always a touch of Italy on the menu. One of her staples, and the thing I look forward to the most (in addition to her killer grilled ribs!) is a colorful tomato salad – something I could fill up on alone it’s so delicious. I hesitate to call it a Caprese salad as there are always additional ingredients that push it just beyond the usual tomato-basil-mozzarella boundaries: pine nuts, red onion, avocado or Kalamata olives…sometimes it has it all.
In addition to fresh ingredients, there are three keys to making this simple salad beyond fabulous: excellent ripe tomatoes and really good, high-quality olive oil and balsamic vinegar. How beautiful is the simplicity of a vibrant and fresh salad! This one is a mouth-pleaser for sure.
Fresh sliced tomatoes, as red as you can get them!
Lots of fresh basil, sliced into ribbons
Fresh mozzarella, sliced
Pitted and sliced Kalamata olives, or any good-quality olive
High-quality extra virgin olive oil
High-quality balsamic vinegar
Cracked black pepper
Toss, serve and sit back to enjoy the mmmmmm’s.
Possibly Related Posts:
- Friday Fun Links
- Young Winos
- The 2,000 Pound Rib Feast
- Kabocha and Ginger Squash Soup
- How I Slaughtered a Chicken
| Categories: | Italian • Salads • Uncategorized | Leave a Comment |
| Tags: | barbecue • barbeque • basil • BBQ • caprese • kalamata olives • mozzarella • olives • salad • Summer • summer salad • tomatoes |
Good Beans
Editor’s Note: We are happy to welcome Tracy Sarich as a new contributor to the Foodista blog.

Photo: Lucianvenutian
For many, family recipes are secrets – passed down father to son, mother to daughter – preserved for only the intimate few. But there are a few family recipes so precious that they are passed only to those family members who understand – the chosen few. I know of one such secret – held tight-fisted by my friend Michelle – who has entrusted me to be named the godmother of her children but unworthy of the secrets of the sauce. Somehow – this makes sense to me – though I am on a perpetual quest to impress her with my barbecue sauce…. I’ve gotten close a few times. I have never quite reached the heights of Jack’s 4th of July sauce.
Last 4th of July, I was invited to the family barbecue and given the task of bringing – THE BEANS. The pressure was on. I was nervous. I knew that it would be eaten by a long line of experts, who knew. Girl. Boy. Whoever you are. I was about to enter a 4th of July BARBEQUE THROWDOWN. There would be judges. I’d know by the silence if I’d failed. And while there would be love in the room, we’d all know they might have been good, but not necessarily GOOD.
So when my 4 year-old godson, the boy who teethed on short ribs drippin’ with sauce, took a bite and said “Good beans, Tracy”… I knew I had been to the mountaintop. I had arrived. Tastee!
1 pound dried small pinto beans
4 ounces bacon – diced
1 medium onion – diced
5 medium garlic cloves – minced
1 cup strong black coffee
¼ cup packed dark brown sugar
1 tablespook molasses
1 ½ tablespoon mustard (I think that prepared brown mustard works well, though any good mustard will do)
1 teaspoon brown mustard seeds
1 teaspoon ground cumin (or to taste)
1 teaspoon coriander seeds
½ teaspoon ground coriander (or to taste)
½ to 1 cup of a good – I mean it – barbecue sauce (I like Bone Suckin’ Sauce – http://www.bonesuckin.com – we think it’s the best sauce in a jar on the market)
Hot sauce to taste
8 cups chicken broth (you may use water – but I think the chicken broth adds nice richness)
Salt/Pepper to taste
1. Soak your beans – or – if you’re like me and forget to soak the beans, boil your beans in water for 2 hours. I like to add a chopped onion and a few crushed garlic cloves to the water. Do not add salt at this stage.
2. In a large pot, brown bacon.
3. Add onions and garlic in the bacon grease until lightly brown.
4. Add beans and the remaining ingredients.
5. Simmer low for at least 4-5 hours – this can sit on a low simmer for quite a while and works very well in a slow cooker/crock pot. Just be sure that you don’t burn it with a heat that is too high.
This recipe requires you to adjust several ingredients to taste. The hot sauce, barbeque sauce, salt, pepper, and mustard are items that you should adjust after a few hours – again, taste it – play with it – and you’ll have Good Beans, too.
Possibly Related Posts:
- Kabocha and Ginger Squash Soup
- Winter Squash is Delicious, Healthy, and in Season
- Moorish Badenjan Dip
- Eating Local in the Northwest
- How Does One Suddenly Go Vegan
| Categories: | Veggies | 5 Comments |
| Tags: | barbecue • barbeque • BBQ • beans • Food • foodista |





