Snap Beans and Potatoes

My grandmother’s southern flair snuck out in her accent, adding syllables to seemingly short words. (can=cay-yun, Laurel=La-uh-rel), you get the gist. She always wore her pink lipstick and always combed her hair into a perfectly blond coif…well, she had a little help from the neighborhood beauty shop. And she cooked with heart, love, and butter. But she was pretty health-conscious, so she made lots of vegetables and low-fat dishes, unlike her seven sisters-in-law, who I swear are somehow related to Paul “Queen of Butter” Dean.


One of my grandmother’s standard sides for a big dinner was “Snap beans and potatoes.” Now, I don’t think “snap beans” are technically a vegetable, but they’re green beans with big chunks of red potatoes mixed in. You can add bacon fat, but why mess with nature? It’s easy simple, and really filling. I’ve changed her recipe a little, using a wok instead of a soup pot, so the beans don’t overcook (which is easy to do).



Mama’s Snap Beans & Potatoes
Serves 4; 20 minutes to make


2 cups water
3 red/new potatoes, cut into slices or chunks (peels on)
Salt and pepper
1/2 pound of “snap beans,” ends popped/cut off
1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
Dash of smoked paprika or Italian seasoning (optional)


In a large wok or large saucepan with a lid, preheat at medium high heat. Add a dash of salt, the water and the potatoes. Cover and cook for 6 minutes. 


Uncover and add the green beans, using a spoon or spatula to make sure they are halfway submerged in water. Cook for 6 more minutes, or until beans are bright green and cooked (but not soft and mushy). Drain and season with salt, pepper, and garlic powder, to taste. Serve hot. Top with smoked paprika or Italian seasoning for color and extra flavor, if you like.


This side works with most every meat or main dish, and it even works as a room temperature side at a picnic. Hope you enjoy this southern side from my grandmother’s kitchen to yours.

Happy eating!
Laurel

~Laurel~

Matt’s Incredible Tenderloin

Before I met my husband, pork was not a food I’d had much of, with the exception to the wonderful food that is crispy bacon. His home had some gourmet dinners and always homemade deliciousness. One of his family’s favorites is pork tenderloin. He makes a marinade his dad used to make, but Matt loves to mix it up and start new creations. (The great thing for me…I’m his taste tester, and–unlike in my cooking–he is 100% successful in making tasty creations.)

 Here is a dinner he made this week…yum! I haven’t been eating much meat, but this was too tasty to pass up. We bought this Mucho Mango Dipping Sauce from Dilorio Farm in Houston. I thought it would be fun to drizzle it over the pork for added flavor. Turns out…the pork was too tasty to add a sauce to it! Matt’s rub, marinade, and sauce brushed on during the grilling process was one of the best I’ve ever tasted! Seriously, it would have been a travesty to add extra sauce to such a good thing. But I did drizzle the sauce over the green beans with Italian sweet peppers. It was fruity with an instant taste of apricots and mango. And I didn’t expect the crushed red pepper throughout…it had some heat!

Matt was sweet enough to remember the ingredients that he put in his rub and then in the sauce for the pork tenderloin.

Spiced Rub for Pork Tenderloin
By: Matt

ground black pepper
garlic powder
dried rosemary
dried basil
sea salt
*Rub each ingredient thoroughly on tenderloin, adding layer by layer. Roll in saran wrap and put in fridge for a few hours.  

Matt’s Amazing Sauce (for Pork Tenderloin)
1/2 cup Stubb’s mesquite pecan bbq sauce (or a sweet/nutty bbq sauce)
1/2 cup regular bbq sauce (Sweet Baby Ray’s)
1/4 cup teriyaki sauce
1/3 cup red wine
2 TB olive oil
Juice of 1 lemon 
1 t. fresh grated ginger
1 1/2 t. spicy brown mustard
1 clove crushed garlic
Shaving (1 t.) fresh parmesan
Dash of each: rosemary, basil, black pepper, cayenne pepper, cinnamon
Combine all ingredients and brush onto tenderloin before, during and after grilling. *Very flexible, make it to your taste!* Truly, this was so tasty and well worth the time and care that went into the meal. 





So there you have it…a meat and potatoes kind of meal. But it’s a lean meat with fresh flavors and ridiculously mouth-watering tastes. I even tasted one bite of the pork with an unexpected taste at the end…ginger! Thanks, Matt!

~Laurel~

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