NEW YORK (AP) - Stop by Steve Sando’s house for dinner and, if you’re lucky, he might hand you a shot glass with a warm, murky liquid topped with a little onion, oregano and lemon juice. Bottoms up! You’ve just knocked back some bean broth.
Steve Sando’s bean revolution advances with a new cookbook showing their versatility
NEW YORK (AP) - Stop by Steve Sando’s house for dinner and, if you’re lucky, he might hand you a shot glass with a warm, murky liquid topped with a little onion, oregano and lemon juice. Bottoms up! You’ve just knocked back some bean broth.
"If you've cooked beans, you already have a sort of free soup," says Sando from his home in Napa, California. "It’s just this little hot thing to start the meal. It's like you're starting out on a good foot."
Sando is something of a bean evangelist and has found a flourishing national appetite for his dried heritage beans, which are preserved in the Americas and passed down through generations. They are favored for their flavor, variety and even the broth they kick off.
Once a niche market, sacks of his heirloom beans fetch up to $8 a pound and have attracted 30,000 people on a waitlist to get quarterly shipments via his company, Rancho Gordo.