Beans and Rice

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Mostly noodles, LOL. All kinds of noodles, ramen noodles, bean noodles, rice noodles, sweet potato noodles, etc. If it is like soup (like ramen) I don't eat it, but dry noodles I will. Chicken feet, which I DO NOT EAT, PERIOD. She cooks home cooking types of things like Chinese meatloaf (uses ground pork, onions and tofu), Oxtail pot roast (pretty close to American pot roast but with Chinese spices). Fried rice, Hakka eggs (scrambled eggs cooked with bean paste.) She is Hakka, which is the second largest Chinese group in Taiwan behind the Taiwanese.

I use the rice cooker for steaming potatoes, pork buns, dumplings, etc. I even use it to "boil" eggs.
I would probably love her cooking , well except the chicket feet...lol. Those go to the dogs. I Love Chinese food , especially dumplings ( with pork and cabbage in them)
 
I could ‘google’ but curious what ya all think about rice.

And yes - I listen to Dave Ramsey. I like the way he sees things, and on multiple levels. So… I get that the two are prescribed as a cheap diet. And, good for prepping, but he doesn’t go there.

I’m fine with beans, and the high protein agrees with me an my high metabolism… but the only rice I like is egg fried rice.

A few years ago I bought a 10lbs bag of rice - cheap. It went to waste.

So anyway, looking for thoughts on storing rice for a prep, and what to do with it, and what it’s good for.
I am trying to understand how rice went to waste. Was it brown rice? Brown rice will go rancid.
I store rice in 5 gallon buckets and in half gallon canning jars. Add an oxygen absorber and it should last for at least 30 years.

I honestly do not eat much rice, but I use it for special meals, certain foods, such as red beans and rice, or when I do my New Years meal of black eyed peas, collards, rice, smothered steak and corn bread. The rice is good as the first thing on the plate, and then the steak and gravy over that, or even the black eyed peas with it.
 
I am trying to understand how rice went to waste. Was it brown rice? Brown rice will go rancid.
I store rice in 5 gallon buckets and in half gallon canning jars. Add an oxygen absorber and it should last for at least 30 years.

I honestly do not eat much rice, but I use it for special meals, certain foods, such as red beans and rice, or when I do my New Years meal of black eyed peas, collards, rice, smothered steak and corn bread. The rice is good as the first thing on the plate, and then the steak and gravy over that, or even the black eyed peas with it.
That was way back when I didn't know much about it. It might have still been good, I didn't check it. It was stored in a broom closet and I wanted to use that space and didn't know what to do with it. Now I know that being white rice, it was probably still good.

Since that post - I've learned to cook rice and liked it every time.

EDIT: Now that I know how big a 10 pound bag of rice is, or rather how small... It was much more. It was the size of a 40lbs bag of salt.
 
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I could ‘google’ but curious what ya all think about rice.

And yes - I listen to Dave Ramsey. I like the way he sees things, and on multiple levels. So… I get that the two are prescribed as a cheap diet. And, good for prepping, but he doesn’t go there.

I’m fine with beans, and the high protein agrees with me an my high metabolism… but the only rice I like is egg fried rice.

A few years ago I bought a 10lbs bag of rice - cheap. It went to waste.

So anyway, looking for thoughts on storing rice for a prep, and what to do with it, and what it’s good for.
Its good for soups, stews, stuffings, pudding, and beans or black-eyed peas. you can also poach eggs on top of it or fry it with eggs, you tube has hundreds of recipes.
 
I eat lots of rice myself. I use it as a filler in about everything: soups, stews, stuffing, grits substitutes, and cat food.

Now I have this recipe for bean patties that's really great in winter.
three cups of mashed pinto beans, very dry.
A cooking spoon of bacon lard.
2 eggs.
1 cup of Bisquick.
1 cup of meal.
1 cup of minced red onion.
2 Jalapeno peppers, minced.
Slowly mix and add bean broth back to it until you have something like biscuit dough.
Dust your kneading surface with flour and roll out the dough until 3/4 an inch thick, then cut out your patties with a tuna can and fry in lard until brown.

They go great with Mackerel/Tuna patties and potato pancakes.
 
I like rice. Maybe I should use it more often than I do, but I don't. Fried rice, rice and veg, with fish, in soups, I've even used it as filler for meatloaf (I don't do gluten so no breadcrumbs). When my dog was sick I used it as part of his dog food recipe. I like the versatility of rice and I do store some. Last summer I finished a bag bought around 2020, it was a 20lb bag, so I don't go through a ton but it does get rotated through, very slowly.
 
I like rice. Maybe I should use it more often than I do, but I don't. Fried rice, rice and veg, with fish, in soups, I've even used it as filler for meatloaf (I don't do gluten so no breadcrumbs). When my dog was sick I used it as part of his dog food recipe. I like the versatility of rice and I do store some. Last summer I finished a bag bought around 2020, it was a 20lb bag, so I don't go through a ton but it does get rotated through, very slowly.
we go through a 20 lb bag in about 2 months ( 3 adults)
I actually like rice better than pasta

I use leftover rice to make soup, it's just rice boiled until it dissolved, add chicken boulion cube, and some chopped green onion and a egg.
( this is soup before the main meal, not the full meal)
 
Just beans, black beans. My LH made a black bean soup that was so tasty. He would cook the beans to the point of done, take about half of them and puree them, then add together again the whole beans and the pureed beans. Any seasoning, onion or garlic would also be minced and cooked down. It is one of the best soups I ever had.
If you think you'd like the recipe I'll have to see if I can find the cookbook he used.
 
So we have on hand at all times 40lbs of short grain and long grain rice(yeah you read that right 80lbs). We also have about 50 lbs total of 10 different varieties of dry beans that we also can a fair amount of every few months as we use them. Dry peas, garbanzo beans, cornmeal, and rolled oats are also in fair quantities. 200lbs of flour, and various pastas to round out the bulk of the bean and grains part of the cellar. You have to be deliberate to cook from scratch with any of these things and we do that by keeping a well stocked in a mess of spices. I am careful to rotate stock especially the beans since old beans are not as nice to cook with. Beans were the thing that I never knew I was missing out on. Every variety is a texture and flavor profile unlike the next bean. I won’t touch a navy bean now that I’ve had Roman, Myacoba, and any number of other heritage beans. One cup of dried beans cooked in any kind of broth or well seasoned water with a variety of spices and other vegetables on hand and a side of fresh cornbread is a great way to warmup after a day in the cold. Living in a desert and having a massive cellar that stays at 35% humidity and 65 degrees year round makes storage super easy. We swore off traditional grocery stores seven years ago now, and I think we are healthier and wealthier for it. I figure between dry goods including a mess of dehydrated food from the garden, canned, and frozen food, we could feed ourselves well balanced meals for two years without worrying about the rest of the world.
 
So we have on hand at all times 40lbs of short grain and long grain rice(yeah you read that right 80lbs). We also have about 50 lbs of 10 different varieties of dry beans that we also can a fair amount of every few months as we use them. Dry peas, garbanzo beans, cornmeal, and rolled oats are also in fair quantities. 200lbs of flour, and various pastas to round out the bulk of the bean and grains part of the cellar. You have to be deliberate to cook from scratch with any of these things and we do that by keeping a well stocked in a mess of spices. I am careful to rotate stock especially the beans since old beans are not as nice to cook with. Beans were the thing that I never knew I was missing out on. Every variety is a texture and flavor profile unlike the next bean. I won’t touch a navy bean now that I’ve had Roman, Myacoba, and any number of other heritage beans. One cup of dried beans cooked in any kind of broth or well seasoned water with a variety of spices and other vegetables on hand and a side of fresh cornbread is a great way to warmup after a day in the cold. Living in a desert and having a massive cellar that stays at 35% humidity and 65 degrees year round makes storage super easy. We swore off traditional grocery stores seven years ago now, and I think we are healthier and wealthier for it. I figure between dry goods including a mess of dehydrated food from the garden, canned, and frozen food, we could feed ourselves well balanced meals for two years without worrying about the rest of the world.
I try to rotate the kind of beans that I cook as well. I keep dry beans as well as canned ones. I like to add a couple different kinds when I make a vegetable soup and opening a couple cans is great.
I do like navy beans. Last week I made bean soup with northern beans and ham hocks, onions, garlic and seasonings. It was delicious. This week I am eating Indian dal.
 
It’s always fun to tell my menfolk to grab beans and let them choose what kind. Sometimes it’s a rainbow. We keep all the bones from any meal we have where bones are involved and make broth to cook the beans in. Tonight it was small red beans with a few black beans sprinkled in with a ham rind and bone for the broth. Half an onion, handful of dry celery, thyme, red pepper flakes, a bay leaf. Perfect for a day like today when it was a bit brisk outside! Definitely a ham and bean kind of day.
 

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