Kind of "charro beans went to Santa Maria." Except Anasazi beans. Which end up tasting a whole lot like pinto beans, but look cool and cost more.
This was on Friday, and the start of five days off through the Fourth. It is nice to have a pot of beans to snack on when you are home at the house just doing time off kind of things.
Started with four Weber briquettes in a mini-chimney. The price at HD for the Weber briquettes went down to 14-something so I thought to try them out. They worked very well, burning pretty hot and pretty long in a non-scientific use.
Bacon cooked first, just set into the top of the basket. I did throw a handful of lump fragments on top of the briquettes to bump the heat up for the bacon/onion/garlic portion of the cook.
My sous chef, "Ivory", is handing me the ingredients.
Then pull the bacon, leave the bacon grease and cook the onion and garlic.
And then the rest of the stuff goes into the pot. Anasazi beans, ham, crushed tomato, salt, pepper, ground guajillo, ground cascabel (not much), cumin. Bacon back in. The remainder of the charcoal basket is filled with unlit charcoal. Finish cooking in the basement of my little 18 with the lid on.
The beans went in dry, which you can cook in a couple of hours at a steady simmer with the lid on the pot, but this cook was slow. I wanted to cook very low and slow so that the ham was broken down and the beans had the texture of red beans and rice. That took about four hours. The lid was off the pot for the first two. The Weber briquettes I thought did very well, I counted 18 used, plus the little bit of lump shards used at the beginning.