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Рецепт Navy Bean Soup
by Eliot

Are you getting tired yet? I am still cleaning out the pantry and freezer but I had a home run with this recipe.

We are going to be at work until 7:30 p.m. a couple of days this week for conferences, so I decided to make some soup for the staff since they basically would not be getting a break all day.

Thanks again to Mom. She brought some smoked ham for sandwiches at Thanksgiving and I found the remainder of that ham in the freezer. Mom was also adamant during Thanksgiving that we had to have stuffed celery. I also found the leftover celery that she had chopped and stuck in my freezer.

Mom taught us well. We always had a freezer full of home-grown meat, frozen cherries, and veggies and a pantry full of home-canned green beans, tomatoes, peaches, pears, dilled okra, and pickles. Nothing went to waste. Carcasses from roasted chickens and turkeys were turned into noodle soups. Ham bones were turned into a navy bean or pinto bean soup. Everything was used and I know that mom learned this from her mother and that this practice goes back ad infinitum.

Can I blame my mother for the current state of my overflowing freezer and jam-packed pantry?

No.

Mom taught us to save and plan. My failure has been to use the produce that I have put up. It is easier to grab take-out or just run to dinner. We may save some time that way, but we are missing out on a nutritious hardy meal. Although this recipe takes four hours to cook, it is an easy recipe to let simmer on the stove (and that is exactly what I did this past Sunday). I am sure this could be adapted to the crockpot easily.

Navy Bean Soup

Wash beans, cover with three inches of water and soak overnight (at least 6-8 hours). After beans have soaked, drain and rinse.

Place beans in a large stock pot with water. Heat to boiling.

In the meantime, heat olive oil in a skillet and saute garlic, onion, celery, and carrots. Saute until onions are limp and veggies are aromatic.

The carrots and celery came from the freezer. (The carrots actually came from our garden.)

Add to beans.

Add tomatoes, bullion, Worcestershire, and spices.

I gave these home-canned tomatoes a rough chop. That parsley survived in a pot on our kitchen step---that is until last weekend when it finally froze out.

Bring to a boil and then reduce to simmer. Simmer for two hours.

Add more 3 cups more water and add ham. Simmer two more hours. Remove bay leaf and serve.

If anything, this Clean Out has helped reinforce our commitment to eating local, healthy, and more frugally.

The dried beans came from the pantry, the garlic and frozen carrots came from our garden. Even the bay leaf came from the bay tree in the green house. I had canned the tomatoes this summer. (Unfortunately, the tomatoes had come from the Farmers Market and not our own garden.) I grabbed the last of the parsley from the pot on the kitchen step. (Yes, it finally bit the dust with this final HARD freeze.)

The celery and ham came from the freezer (and from mom).

In an ideal world, I would have used homemade chicken stock, but I did find a box of bullion cubes in the pantry so they did need used!

I did finally break down and go to the store for a real onion.

Warm soup for a cold day.

This recipe could easily become vegetarian and still be fabulous.