PeacefulHugger said:
So here's the bean soup my family has eaten forever.
In a large pot (2gal at least) add the following -
2 large onions, chopped
2 or 3 large carrots, scrubbed and chopped (no need to peel)
3 stalks of celery, chopped
2 cloves of garlic, chopped (can be just quartered, no need to finely dice, they pretty much melt into the broth)
A meaty ham bone (1.5 lbs)
1Tbsp black pepper
Half tablespoon of salt (check it later, may need to add more)
Sort (no rocks!) and rinse (at least twice) 2 lb of beans. Use Navy beans for long simmering soup. Use baby limas for quicker, brothier soup. Or use a mix if you like half of the beans to be disintegrated into the broth [emoji3].
Add water to fill the pot. Put a lid on it and bring it to a boil. Once boiling, turn it down to low/simmer and keep the lid on. If it starts boiling over your heat may be too high - either turn it lower or set the lid slightly offset so the steam can be released. If you do crack the lid, check the liquid level frequently and add water if needed, because if you forget it may all boil away.
For Navy beans - simmer 6-8 hours. Start checking at 6 hours.
For baby limas - simmer for 3-4 hours. Check them at 3 hours.
When the beans are done sample the soup liquid and add the spices (s&p etc.) you like if it needs any.
I've made this on a barrel stove, over a camp fire in both a stockpot and directly touching the coals in a Dutch oven, in a crockpot, even in a covered roaster pan in the oven.
It goes well with homemade biscuits or bread. Some people like to top each bowl with a teaspoon or so of apple cider vinegar. I like it that way or with a half teaspoon of sambal oelek (Thai chili paste). I have a cousin who puts a spoon of sour cream in each bowl.
It is much better with a ham bone, but if you don't have it, don't worry about it too much. It's still good.
As with most soups/stews, it's even better the next day.
Stay warm my friends,
~angie
Oh, and recently I tried freezer meal prepping this and it turned out awesome. I bought a ham and had used most of it so I cut the leftovers in half (about two lbs each) and put them in a gallon freezer bag. I cut and chopped all the rest of the veggies and put them in each bag too. Added the S&P and a couple cups of water (thinking this would guard against freezer burn), squeezed the air out and froze the bags. The last time I made bean soup I sorted and rinsed the beans and added one bag of prepped meat and veggies and water to fill the pot. I think that if you had a freezer for it this could work well on a camping trip or road trip.
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