Post by noboundaries on Aug 24, 2013 15:25:20 GMT -5
Black Bean, Corn , Smoked Chicken and Drippin's Soup
In the freezer I always save my drippin's from smoking or roasting to make bean soups. I especially like to save the drippin's from "crutching" beef or pork on the smoker or grill. Crutching is wrapping the cooked meat in heavy duty aluminum foil or sealing in a roasting pan then adding some liquid like apple cider to braise the meat until it is tender. During the Crutch the drippin's will pick up the meat flavor and flavors from the BBQ rub. The liquid in the foil after the Crutch makes an amazing bean soup stock addition.
Be sure to scrape the fat off your frozen drippin's once it has thawed a little. You can save the fat and use it to make gravy. The fat in the drippin's from BBQ and smoking makes unique and AMAZING country gravy for potatoes and roasted meats. Just a suggestion if you feel like being creative.
I like to grill or smoke two whole chickens on a Saturday or Sunday and use the meat for lunch and dinner during the week. We rarely finish all the chicken by the following weekend so I use what is left to make bean soup. It is actually an easy "taste" recipe to make so make liberal use of the amounts of spice to match your desired flavor profile.
What follows is a recipe that really never tastes the same twice, but it is always delicious with a smoky goodness. Easy to make year-round. You really can't screw this up except to make it too salty, so don't worry about being exact with measurements.
You can use any dried beans you desire, even a bag of 15 bean soup. The reason I use black beans is that they have substantially less of the explosive enzyme that causes your gut to contribute volumes to the global warming dilemma.
Ingredients
1 lb black beans, soaked and drained
2 smoked chicken carcasses, complete with skin and any drippings
2 large sweet onions, diced
2 (14 1/2 ounce) cans diced tomatoes. Used fire roasted canned tomatoes or Rotel (3 cans of Rotel)
1 Tbs cumin
1 Tbs garlic powder
2 tsp fresh, cracked black pepper
2 cups drippin's from a previously smoked, BBQ'd, or roasted chicken, pork, or beef dish.
2 cups apple cider
Salt as needed
2 large baking potatoes, cubed (optional)
2-4 cups frozen sweet frozen corn
Directions
1. On Friday night I start soaking a bag of black beans.
2. Saturday morning I throw the two chicken carcasses in a stock pot, pulling them apart so they fill the bottom of the pot, then cover them with cold water. I add whatever drippings were left in the chicken dishes too. Then I simmer the chickens covered for 2 hours until the meat falls off the bones. I dump the contents through a strainer into another pot, pull out the bones, then cut up any large pieces of chicken. Once I have discarded all the bones, skin, and cartilage, I begin making the soup.
3. In your soup pot add the drained black beans to the smoked chicken stock and chicken meat.
4. Add the onion, tomatoes, spices, apple cider, and 2 cups of left over drippings from any previous smoking/grilling adventure. Don't worry if it is still a little frozen, that won't last long.
5. Stir well, and taste to make sure spices are how you like them. Usually it will need salt. Add any additional spice or salt as needed, just don't over salt if you can help it.
6. Simmer with a tilted cover 1 hour to allow some of the liquid to boil off. Then simmer covered for the next hour.
7. Add frozen corn and potatoes (optional) with about 30 minutes left. Cover and simmer for the last half hour. The potatoes are good if the soup is a little too salty. They will absorb salt. You can either take them out when the soup is done and eat them or leave them in the soup. Your choice.
8. Serve with crusty bread and butter.
Servings: 12
In the freezer I always save my drippin's from smoking or roasting to make bean soups. I especially like to save the drippin's from "crutching" beef or pork on the smoker or grill. Crutching is wrapping the cooked meat in heavy duty aluminum foil or sealing in a roasting pan then adding some liquid like apple cider to braise the meat until it is tender. During the Crutch the drippin's will pick up the meat flavor and flavors from the BBQ rub. The liquid in the foil after the Crutch makes an amazing bean soup stock addition.
Be sure to scrape the fat off your frozen drippin's once it has thawed a little. You can save the fat and use it to make gravy. The fat in the drippin's from BBQ and smoking makes unique and AMAZING country gravy for potatoes and roasted meats. Just a suggestion if you feel like being creative.
I like to grill or smoke two whole chickens on a Saturday or Sunday and use the meat for lunch and dinner during the week. We rarely finish all the chicken by the following weekend so I use what is left to make bean soup. It is actually an easy "taste" recipe to make so make liberal use of the amounts of spice to match your desired flavor profile.
What follows is a recipe that really never tastes the same twice, but it is always delicious with a smoky goodness. Easy to make year-round. You really can't screw this up except to make it too salty, so don't worry about being exact with measurements.
You can use any dried beans you desire, even a bag of 15 bean soup. The reason I use black beans is that they have substantially less of the explosive enzyme that causes your gut to contribute volumes to the global warming dilemma.
Ingredients
1 lb black beans, soaked and drained
2 smoked chicken carcasses, complete with skin and any drippings
2 large sweet onions, diced
2 (14 1/2 ounce) cans diced tomatoes. Used fire roasted canned tomatoes or Rotel (3 cans of Rotel)
1 Tbs cumin
1 Tbs garlic powder
2 tsp fresh, cracked black pepper
2 cups drippin's from a previously smoked, BBQ'd, or roasted chicken, pork, or beef dish.
2 cups apple cider
Salt as needed
2 large baking potatoes, cubed (optional)
2-4 cups frozen sweet frozen corn
Directions
1. On Friday night I start soaking a bag of black beans.
2. Saturday morning I throw the two chicken carcasses in a stock pot, pulling them apart so they fill the bottom of the pot, then cover them with cold water. I add whatever drippings were left in the chicken dishes too. Then I simmer the chickens covered for 2 hours until the meat falls off the bones. I dump the contents through a strainer into another pot, pull out the bones, then cut up any large pieces of chicken. Once I have discarded all the bones, skin, and cartilage, I begin making the soup.
3. In your soup pot add the drained black beans to the smoked chicken stock and chicken meat.
4. Add the onion, tomatoes, spices, apple cider, and 2 cups of left over drippings from any previous smoking/grilling adventure. Don't worry if it is still a little frozen, that won't last long.
5. Stir well, and taste to make sure spices are how you like them. Usually it will need salt. Add any additional spice or salt as needed, just don't over salt if you can help it.
6. Simmer with a tilted cover 1 hour to allow some of the liquid to boil off. Then simmer covered for the next hour.
7. Add frozen corn and potatoes (optional) with about 30 minutes left. Cover and simmer for the last half hour. The potatoes are good if the soup is a little too salty. They will absorb salt. You can either take them out when the soup is done and eat them or leave them in the soup. Your choice.
8. Serve with crusty bread and butter.
Servings: 12