It seems like fall is here all of the sudden. Nights are cool, complaints coming from east coast relatives about it being cold and it's almost Halloween! The latest meal I have been making regularly is a Black Bean and Chorizo soup. I might even be making it more often than Curried Lentils. I make in it in a Breville Pressure cooker, which is similar to an Instapot. From recipes I see on the web, I am guessing the Breville cooks at a slightly higher pressure, as most things will cook faster than called for in a Instapot. In my opinion, this is the biggest challenges to using a pressure cooker is figuring out the cook time. Soaked beans will cook much faster (5-6 minutes for soaked black beans vs 22 minutes for unsoaked), fresh beans cook faster than old beans, and different pressure for different cookers. But you can always just cook some more if you need (and use the quick release, as the natural release is what takes the most time in this recipe). Also ... this is just a version of my Vegetable Bean and Sausage Stew, which is cooked on the stove... On the stove, I would recommend soaking the beans first, and it probably would cook in about the same total time (my guess is the soaked beans would need to cook for an hour or a bit more on the stove at a gentle simmer).
I like a lot of greens in my soups... this is just one bunch from the Marcella's Farm stall at the Coronado Farmers Market. You could use a lot less if you want.
When I made this batch, I found I only had a 1/2 pound of black beans in the panty, so I mixed in a 1/2 pound of pinto beans. The soup is normally darker brown.
Black Bean and Chorizo Soup
Makes 5-6 servings
1-2
tablespoons olive oil
6 ounces
Mexican chorizo sausage
1 large
onion, chopped
1 or 2
carrots, sliced
1 or 2
celery stalks, sliced (if you have them around)
2 cloves
of garlic
1 jalapeno
chili, or some chili flakes
1 pound
black beans, rinsed (pinto beans also work)
6 cups
water
Salt
(about ½ - 1 teaspoon) and freshly
ground pepper
1 bunch of
greens (kale, mustard, chard), stalks removed, chopped (or baby spinach)
Garnish: Sour cream or Greek yogurt, cilantro,
avocado, chili slices, fresh corn, grated or crumbled cheese
In the
pressure cooker, heat the oil (using Sear setting). Slice the chorizo if it is in a casing, or
make little balls if not, and cook in the hot oil until brown. Add onion, carrots, celery, garlic, chili. When onions are translucent (5 minutes or
so), add beans, water, salt and pepper.
Pressure cook using the “bean” function (high pressure) for 22 minutes
(note – may be longer with an Instapot).
Let pressure reduce naturally.
When done, taste the beans and make sure they are cooked (if not, cook
under pressure for a few more minutes, and OK to manually release the pressure).
Also taste for salt and add more if
needed. Turn cooker to slow cook, high setting. Add chopped greens. Kale or mustard greens need to cook about 5 minutes;
baby spinach is done as soon as you have stirred it in.
Serve with
a garnish or two. Freezes
well.
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