Black Bean Salad

My eldest son loves black beans.  Whenever I make tacos they must have black beans, though refried pintos will suffice in a pinch.  I buy mostly canned beans as I find my timing is such that bean cooking is not in my schedule.  I will try when things get back to more of a routine once school begins, but in the meantime I use organic canned beans.  I never thought I’d be making bread routinely before I found this recipe, so things can actually change. 

Well, summer is the season for salads and a favorite is this black bean and corn one that my husband taught me to make.  I use avocados if they’re in stock (at home) but it does fine without. 

 

Black Bean, Corn and Avocado Salad

one can of black beans

2-3 cobs of corn cooked (you can use fresh uncooked corn, but I prefer cooked)

one large tomato or several smaller ones (I used a small handful of orange cherry tomatoes and a half of a small red tomato) chopped

one avocado chopped

1/4-1/2 of one Serrano, Habanero or Jalapeño pepper minced (Habanero gives nice kick and sweetness but it is very hot and you should be careful with the kids)

handful of fresh cilantro chopped

1/2 green onion (scallion) chopped

1/4 red onion diced

one lime

sea salt and ground pepper to taste

Dressing:

1/2 tsp cumin

1/8 cup red wine vinegar

about 1/2 cup olive oil

1 garlic clove

 

Mix together the beans, corn off the cob, tomatoes, green onion and red onion then squeeze half the lime over it.  Add the hot pepper in small amounts and taste to your heat preference. The pepper should be very tiny pieces so that it doesn’t overpower the other flavors by its heat.  I sometimes divide my salads and salsas into two bowls when adding hot pepper so that the kids get less and adults get more pepper.  Add avocado last since it’s delicate.  Put in fridge while you prepare dressing or make dressing first. 

FYI: The proper ratio of oil to vinegar in dressing is 3 to 1.  I used a mini food processor but you can use a blender or immersion blender.  Put in peeled garlic clove, cumin (toast it if you have a moment), juice of other half of lime and vinegar.  Chop, blend, etc.  then add olive oil through top hole while on (slowly if using another machine) until its got a thick consistency and its taste maintains the sharpness of the vinegar.  Use as much as needed to give a nice coating to salad.  You can always keep the rest for another salad.  Serve chilled or room temperature. 

 

This salad can be used as a dip with chips, served with grilled chicken (a favorite for backyard parties), grilled shrimp or on its own.  I also discovered a new way just yesterday at lunch.  Served on top of a quesadilla with shredded lettuce and salsa.  Yum!  The boys were eating cheese quesadillas with Cabot’s Seriously Sharp cheddar cheese and I made one for myself with Cabot’s Hot Habanero cheddar for an extra kick. My eldest tried it (spicy quesadilla) with the bean salad on top and liked it.  Love finding new foods to make that they like. 

Taco Night

My sons love tacos!  But they prefer the way I do them.  When my eldest got tacos at school one day he told me how they weren’t very good because they didn’t have all the “things” we have on tacos at home- “No vegetables! Not even lettuce! It was just meat and cheese.”  Ugh, school lunches…another topic for another time

I set up a taco bar on our island in the kitchen.  The offerings at the bar can change according to what’s in the fridge or cabinet.  Mostly on the bar are bowls with shredded lettuce, black beans, rice, shredded cheese, chopped avocado and/or avocado salsa, tomato salsa, tomatoes, chopped cilantro, cabbage if we’re having fish tacos,  most often I serve beef but sometimes other meats or fish.  I give them hard and soft tacos- corn shells and flour tortillas.

Last night’s was organic beef (no hormones, antibiotics, etc) made with shallots, garlic and tomatoes and a pre-packaged spice mix from Trader Joe’s (careful— I used only 1/2 the packet and it was very spicy for the kids), but you can mix chili powder, cumin, garlic, oregano, paprika and black pepper to get a good taco seasoning.  I also put out the left over swordfish and my eldest jumped at the chance to have in a hard corn tortilla.  I used up the black rice too.  If the kids don’t want all the stuff in the tacos I serve some things on the side.

It really doesn’t take long to prepare, mostly time spent chopping, and they get a well-rounded meal that they absolutely love!

FYI- you can get organic corn tortillas.  I don’t like to buy conventional corn as most corn in the US is genetically modified. 

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