The Beans of 2012
I set out in 2012 to grow a lot of beans, including lots of dry beans. I did this for a couple reasons. 1) Beans are gorgeous and varieties are often followed by fascinating histories. 2) If you're going to try to grow a balanced diet on a little piece of land, beans, especially dry, are a good choice as they feed both the soil as nitrogen fixers and our bodies as good sources of vegetable protein. (I wrote earlier about the bean varieties' growth here.)
As far as snap beans went, I had plentiful crops and enjoyed Blue Coco and Goldmarie, both regular attenders in my summer gardens, immensely. I ate copious quantities of them fresh and blanched and froze plenty of both, too. They both freeze nicely. I did not, however, like the new addition to snap beans Jeminez. It is a beautiful, highly-blushed, romano-shaped snap bean, and a very productive grower, but I didn't like the texture of the pods. Even with just a flash steaming, they seemed mushy to me. Despite their productivity and beauty, I won't grow them again. As for long beans, the garden favorite Red Noodle made me happy once again. The long pods are such a pretty maroon color, they're so long and floppy, taste so good dry fried with chile and garlic, and the plants grow so well in the heat once the snap beans slow down; there isn't anything not to like about them.
What was new in 2012 was my focus on dry beans. Here is a snapshot of each of the beans grown for the seed rather than the pod.
This variety is traditional to the Lenape tribe, who carried it along as colonization and violence pushed the Lenape further and further west. The variety is first recorded as appearing in communities near Philadelphia.
The seeds I received from a Seed Saver's member were gorgeous, a deep shiny black. A few of the plants, as they grew, displayed signs of mosaic bean virus, so I rogued them out, but the rest grew very well and set pods in unbelievable quantities. I've never seen a plant grow so many pods. As the small pods matured, they changed color from green to deep maroon, then finally to dark purple as they dried completely. Upon harvesting the beans from the shells, the younger not-quite-dried beans were a shocking cobalt blue, and the drier ones a deep indigo. Once completely dried, they ranged from blue-black to black. I saved a good bit for seed stock, but we've already eaten the rest, cooked slowly then mashed with some pork fat to be the best refried beans ever. This is a winner and will be in my garden again.
2) Lynch Collection Butterbeans:
I received this seed from a fellow Seed Saver's member.
I have a hard time tracking down the history on this bean, but it appears to be a landrace, a looser collection of genetic material than a single variety. The diversity is just beautiful: each plant produces a slightly different color pattern on its beans. Though slow to get going, once Lynch Collection began flowering, it flowered and set beans until the first frost a couple weeks ago, and a couple of the vines are still trying to grow. The beans are small limas, flat, quick-cooking. I didn't try them as a shelly, but they're quite tasty dried. It was fun to try my hand at limas, and the fact that this variety produced in the heat once my other beans (with the exception of the long beans) slowed down made it a valuable addition to the bean party. I'll grow it again.
3) Blue Coco:
Blue Coco is a French heirloom that is first recorded in the 18th Century.
I know I just sang the praises of Blue Coco as a snap bean, but it is also an amazingly creamy dry bean. It doesn't hold its shape well as it cooks as a dry bean, which is part of the reason I love it. It almost dissolves into a creamy mess of goodness. Cook these with garlic and drizzle them with truffle oil and you will think you're eating the most luxurious, dairy-laden bowl ever.
4) Flagg:
Flagg is an Iroquois heirloom grown frequently in Vermont.
Flagg struggled in my yard and had a hard time spitting out pods. I am not sure why, but I think it may just prefer a cooler climate than what my yard can provide. The pods it did produce were large and romano-shaped. The early, not-quite-dry beans were mottled cobalt blue and white, and as they have dried, they've turned blue-black and white. They're really beautiful beans. I haven't cooked any of the dry beans yet, so I cannot speak to their texture or flavor. I'll decide whether or not I'll grow these again after I've tried eating them. Because of their lack of productivity, they may not be worth the garden space.
5) Hidatsa Shield Figure Bean:
The Hidatsa of North Dakota cultivated this bean along the Missouri River Valley. It is listed in Slow Food's Ark of Taste.
Hidatsa Shield Figure did not get a fair shake in my garden. I received the beans through Bean Buddies, an awesome Rancho Gordo home-test-drive program for their beans, but many of them were crushed in the mail service, even after a second try. (Side note to anyone who saves seeds or participates in seed exchanges: Please always mail seeds in bubble mailers or wrap seed packets in bubble wrap before placing in an envelope. The mail rollers crush seeds and make them nonviable.) I ended up with only six viable seeds, and I planted them in April, much later than I usually plant seeds in my climate. I ended up with only about a half-cup of dry beans total. Since my genetic population was so small, I was not able to save seed for seed stock, either.
Despite all that, these are absolutely beautiful beans, with round bird-like bellies and vibrant orange and rust markings. I haven't eaten them yet, but if I enjoy them as an eating bean, I'll make sure to buy them from another source.
6) Tarahumara Dark Purple
This bean originates from the Tarahumara peoples of Chihuahua, Mexico. I have grown it for several years now, and originally bought the seed from Native Seed Search.
As a half-runner, the bean grows well on a short trellis. This year, however, I discovered that it is more productive when allowed to sprawl. I had some vines growing on trellises, but I also had a few volunteers from last year's beans that I allowed to sprawl over the edges of the veggie bed, twisting among sweet potatoes and chiles. The volunteers produced madly with lots and lots of beans. The trellised plants produced well, but not as furiously, though they were easier to harvest.
The beans are purple, ranging from mid-purple to nearly black. They're very good cooked, with a natural pleasing sweetness and a tendency to hold their shape.
7) Jeminez:
Jeminez is a former-commercial variety that is now offered only through various seed-saving organizations.
I bashed Jeminez above as a snap bean. Since I didn't enjoy the green beans, I let most of the pods dry. Though I have yet to taste it, I have read that it makes a good dry bean. We'll see. It certainly is productive. Even if it makes a good dry bean, its history isn't interesting enough for me to keep it around when I could be growing other tasty dry beans with stories that are more compelling to me. I won't be growing it again.
Lynch Collection Butterbean
Hidatsa Shield Figure
Winners in productivity:
Blue Shackamaxon
Tarahumara Dark Purple
Winners (so far) in taste:
Blue Shackamaxon
Blue Coco
Tarahumara Dark Purple
Last Note:
I didn't grow Rattlesnake this year, because I thought Jeminez and Rattlesnake were just too similar, and I had read such good things about Jeminez, I wanted to give it a try. Rattlesnake, I'm sorry I ignored you this year. Next year, you'll be back in my yard, you massively productive, tasty bean-making machine, you.
Comments
And you are so right about protecting seeds in the mail. I've had seeds sent me that wound up crushed too. Sunflower seeds are no match for the mailing machines.
It sounds like I need to investigate Rattlesnake. I've got Cherokee Trail of Tears and Good Mother Stallard ordered, but there's always room for one more bean, isn't there?
I'm getting ready to put in tomatoes. Also have the strawberry guava in a pot. A Mission Fig and Pomegranate at the ready. I love fig yogurt which everyone seems to drop after a brief period. Thinking about learning how to can.
Will: Thanks for commenting! And never, ever apologize for getting technical. I'm married to a rocket scientist, after all . . . Okay, I always tell myself that I'm going to weigh all my crops, and I never do. But, I harvested about 10 cups total of dry beans this year. That isn't enough to get us through the winter, beanwise, but it is enough for a few delicious meals. I usually grow 10 plants up each cylindrical (14" diameter) trellis I've built from concrete reinforcement wire. It doesn't take much space to grow pole beans. Bush beans, on the other hand . . . I'll try to take pictures and diagram out my garden sometime, but in the meantime, there is a picture of my trellises in this article: http://altadena.patch.com/articles/xxx-be7bcaf1 My garden isn't really anything very fancy.
PA: Fig yogurt equals yum. I can give you a crash course in canning this spring/summer, if you feel like visiting and sipping a cocktail over jars.
Sophie: Thanks!