The One Plant Everyone Should be Growing for Food Security

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  • Опубликовано: 19 сен 2019
  • Beans are the one food every culture has relied on for food security for millennia. We are growing dried beans for winter storage and dry bulk food. Check out our new clothing line! http:www.freshpickedapparel.com

Комментарии • 936

  • @airinbone
    @airinbone 4 года назад +241

    I've been growing beans for over 35 years and they are always the crop I can count on succeeding.

    • @darrendjc1
      @darrendjc1 4 года назад +9

      Yeah I grow and eat the whole pod early as I simply have not got time to shell or peel them takes too long unless u have other suggestions.

    • @goosemoade5813
      @goosemoade5813 4 года назад +3

      Darren James Cooper I have found that with broad beans you can eat the pod and the beans, I’m not sure if you would be able to dry the pod and eat it though

    • @airinbone
      @airinbone 4 года назад

      @Saltyyy Kush420 you could cull some of them or use extra fertilizers to help with that situation some.

    • @petinachambersmcvay8482
      @petinachambersmcvay8482 3 года назад

      Everytime 🤗

    • @ziazia9489
      @ziazia9489 3 года назад +2

      Nice to know that you have been growing beans for such a long time. I just planted beans in recycled icecream containers in UAE. Am just wondering is this the right time to grow that. It is 38-42 Celsius degrees here.

  • @ritabeitz487
    @ritabeitz487 4 года назад +29

    Also, after you harvest the beans of the plants, let the plants compost back in the soil. Beans rejuvenate the soil and return lots of nitrogen back in the area they are planted. So not only is growing beans smart for a food source, but the soil is then enriched again, so it can be planted with something else. This is a great crop to grow, just to get a planting spot ready for a different more feeder hungry vegetable.

  • @inbetweenmeetings
    @inbetweenmeetings 2 года назад +21

    Beans are so resilient! I soaked a big bowl of garbanzo beans to sprout and grow in my garden. I sprouted way too many so I tossed the leftover beans in my flower bed thinking they would eventually break down. Boy was I WRONG lol I now have hundreds of garbanzo bean plants and green pea plants growing in my beds!

    • @judybutler5129
      @judybutler5129 Год назад

      Wow! I hope you put all those extra beans to good use! 😅🤭

  • @Clarissadc
    @Clarissadc 4 года назад +26

    I love beans, but I'm Mexican lol. When I moved out of my mom's house I got excited to start buying canned" beans. I thought 'it's easy and quick'. My mother always thought canned beans were a waste of money. Then after months, I realized on how much we do consume beans, she was right lol. Now I buy the 25-pound bags of pinto beans from Costco. I personally love making black bean soup. But, I will eat them with just about everything or alone topped with fresh tomatoes, onions, and a dollop of sour cream. Now, I'll learn how to grow them myself, thank you.

    • @elenna_alexia
      @elenna_alexia 2 года назад +1

      I wish beans were readily available in bulk here, but I've never seen that in stores either in Germany where I grew up or in Austria where I live now.

    • @jenarutberg9323
      @jenarutberg9323 Год назад

      Topped with tomatoes, onions and sour cream sounds so good!

  • @joescott3393
    @joescott3393 4 года назад +16

    Also the dried plant can be fed to your animals as legume hay. Sheep, goats, horses, cattle will all eat it and so will your chickens. Not much hay but if you grow a large quantity as we do we make many bales of hay from the 5 acres of beans that we grow.
    God Bless Joe

  • @53peace
    @53peace 4 года назад +111

    I have been growing beans for as long as I can remember and leave half my crop on the vines. Come late September and October I start collecting of all varieties of colourful dried beans from Bartolli , Lab Lab to Runner beans which are an awesome purple! Leave them for a few weeks in trays to dry and then store them. Absolutely delicious in any dish from stews to fried rice. Nutrition dense food. You are so correct in saying they are neglected! In fact you are the first person to ever talk about dried beans on You tube as far as I know! Excellent work!
    I tell my fellow growers, not to panic if going on a vacation. Just leave the beans on the vines and forget about them. Harvest them late.
    Such a great tip! Thanks for your brilliant videos as I love watching them.

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 3 года назад +1

      Are Lab Lab beans/hyacinth beans edible? Are their fresh pods edible raw like snap peas and green beans?

  • @TheDcraft
    @TheDcraft 4 года назад +293

    Hi, I just planted like a lb of Skittles, hoping for a good harvest.

    • @gaylefynaut562
      @gaylefynaut562 4 года назад +9

      Borslaw Lol 😂😂😂😂

    • @margeryrichardson4752
      @margeryrichardson4752 4 года назад +21

      taste the rainbow 😆🌈

    • @TazHall
      @TazHall 4 года назад +2

      Ha!

    • @donberry6079
      @donberry6079 3 года назад +19

      Try planting M & Ms. The blue ones are hardest to grow though. Must have perfect soil.

    • @bri4real
      @bri4real 3 года назад +17

      @@donberry6079 you need a neutral soil with exactly 6.8 hours of sun everyday. Oh and make sure to play some slim shady to them before the sun sets

  • @cogitoaprendo1017
    @cogitoaprendo1017 4 года назад +21

    I use beans in my garden as a survival staple. I grow for seasonal consumption as well as winter consumption. Nothing better than enjoying your own food you produced.

    • @cogitoaprendo1017
      @cogitoaprendo1017 4 года назад +1

      When I plant my beans, I put 2 or 3 in each hole. I do not thin them, amd have never been held back in production. Black beans dehydrated well and lasted through the winter. Green beans blanched and frozen lasted a long time as well. You said growing in bundles, right? What do you mean? How many plants are all together in your bundle?

  • @rachelball1174
    @rachelball1174 4 года назад +87

    I've been growing and drying beans for over 50years. Some I leave dry, and some I can. They are a staple in my pantry. There's nothing like a pot of ham and bean soup on a cold winter's day.

    • @frankstockton4480
      @frankstockton4480 4 года назад +5

      rachel ball what is your bean to harvest ratio? I have a family of three and want make sure I plant enough.
      Thank You

    • @rachelball1174
      @rachelball1174 4 года назад +16

      @@frankstockton4480 Eight pounds per person yields about 6 pounds per 10 foot row. I space them about 6 inches apart, in rows about 2 feet apart. If you are just beginning, your local cooperative extension service has a wealth of growing knowledge that is specific to your area.

    • @rachelball1174
      @rachelball1174 4 года назад +12

      @@frankstockton4480 sorry Frank, I meant to say 8 plants per person. It was a rough night lol.

    • @frankstockton4480
      @frankstockton4480 4 года назад +2

      rachel ball Thank You for the information and the speedy reply.

    • @gailarnold2660
      @gailarnold2660 4 года назад +3

      How do you store them Rachel ball? (the dried ones)

  • @michaelcollier5277
    @michaelcollier5277 4 года назад +11

    I've been a vegetarian for the past 17 years, so beans are a staple in my diet! The important thing is to soak beans or any type of legume before eating them, even going so far as to sprout or ferment them and other grains. This reduces the amount of phytic acid in them and makes them more digestible!
    I couldn't pick a favorite type of bean, but for people who live in the desert I'd recommend they try growing tepary beans. Tepary beans are extremely heat and drought tolerant, as well as being extremely healthy and easy to grow. They're such an underrated crop it's ridiculous.

  • @bigray2859
    @bigray2859 4 года назад +17

    Pinto beans with rice and tortillas. The greatest meal in the world!! I grew up on the stuff!

  • @vickijacksonmcgaugh6629
    @vickijacksonmcgaugh6629 4 года назад +40

    Best book ever on cooking beans, even using it as flour for baked goods!
    Country Beans by Rita Bingham

    • @levintry8812
      @levintry8812 4 года назад +9

      oh my gosh, thank you so much! I had no idea I could turn beans into flour! I have Celiac and cannot eat gluten flour and gluten free flour (the yummy kind) is quite expensive, so I will have to try turning beans into flour!

    • @junebug5390
      @junebug5390 4 года назад +5

      That's a great tip. Thanks so much, now I will hunt this book down for purchase.
      💯🙂

    • @volition51
      @volition51 4 года назад +3

      Thank you, just ordered this from my library.😊

    • @vickijacksonmcgaugh6629
      @vickijacksonmcgaugh6629 4 года назад +2

      @@levintry8812 Black bean brownies! Yum.

    • @carolhamilton5164
      @carolhamilton5164 4 года назад +3

      Levintry you can make flour out of dehydrated squash too.

  • @berri5769
    @berri5769 4 года назад +24

    We have been growing pinto beans, it just makes 1-2 big pots (we have a big family) but they taste so different from the store versions! They grow so easily, 3 months or so and they are ready. Slowly learning about more bean varieties.

  • @ivanafrank9592
    @ivanafrank9592 4 года назад +31

    I buy dry beans all the time and literally never had the thought that I could grow them instead! Seriously thank you for flipping that light on in my head haha! 🙏🏼

  • @allyyyyyyp
    @allyyyyyyp 4 года назад +48

    Beans really are versatile. They absorb a ton of flavor and provide so many nutrients + fiber. Interesting analysis of having Americans incorporate them more into our food. In Latin American culture they really are huge and act as small purveyors of protein + other minerals. Good stuff to think about. Thanks for sharing so much of your knowledge!!

  • @flipstep
    @flipstep 4 года назад +64

    they also put nitrogen into the soil!!!

    • @patrickkirwan3353
      @patrickkirwan3353 4 года назад +10

      The leaves take nitrogen out of the air and leave it in the soil.

    • @Apostate_ofmind
      @Apostate_ofmind 4 года назад +9

      Patrick Kirwan also the rizobium bacteria in the roots helps out

    • @corruptedteka
      @corruptedteka 4 года назад +2

      This is interesting to know :0

  • @mamamoon65
    @mamamoon65 4 года назад +32

    Thanks for the effort you put forth to help others! Keep it rocking!

  • @adinapotatowarrior907
    @adinapotatowarrior907 4 года назад +29

    I have two favorite beans that I don't think I could ever choose from.
    Anasazi beans: These beans are gorgeous, their skin is white with dark and vivid red splotching. I adore them mostly for color, as I only have a few seeds and haven't gotten a harvest yet. They are quite interesting with their growth as well, as they climb and wind up other things. I would call them runner beans, but I do not know if that's accurate as I am not as familiar with beans.
    Lima beans: I love Lima beans. There are many colors to them, I love the shape and I especially love their flavors and how well they do in soups. Even if they're just boiled and then coated with a bit of butter, they're amazing.

  • @UtahSustainGardening
    @UtahSustainGardening 4 года назад +4

    I didn't read the description and was prepared for the "superfood" of the moment to be recommended. But you clearly have thought this out because beans are exactly what you say they are!

  • @stoverboo
    @stoverboo 4 года назад +12

    We find that shelling beans in the evening while we watch tv is relaxing and satisfying. We grow Cherokee Trail of Tears beans because they make the best green beans we've ever eaten. We were happy to find that they dry nicely and taste great in recipes calling for black beans.

    • @nelliekampmann9354
      @nelliekampmann9354 4 года назад +3

      I triesd growing those for the first time this year and couldn't agree with you more. They were deliicious right off the vine. I haven't cooked the ones tha I dried yet, but am glad to hear that they are great for that, too.

  • @VickiBowers
    @VickiBowers 4 года назад +29

    Favorite beans for me - probably a tossup between pinkeye purple hulls, and Crowder peas. My fella’s favorite for sure is Crowder peas, and we have had one kind of a time finding any of them in the store at all. I keep a little garden, so I found some place that could sell me some mail order Crowder peas for seed and planted some just in time to get a small crop before the freeze. I don’t know if we’ll get enough this year to make him one good bowl of them, but I grew them, and have more to plant come spring. If I do things correctly we won’t ever have to worry about where we’re going to find Crowder peas again.
    My fella has said to me more than once, “Why in the world would anyone work that hard at keeping a garden when it’s so easy and inexpensive to just run down to the store?” What I usually tell him is that I enjoy it, like a hobby. But the larger truth is the idea lurking in the back of my mind, that we never know what can happen, to shut things down so that even if you could get to the store, they might not have what you’re looking for. Big storms, flooding, winter storms. Seems like winter storms have been the worst for that.
    I’ve had a few disappointing garden years, and when I do have a disappointing garden year, I’ll bring that slender produce in and say, “if we were depending on this poor harvest to get us through the winter we would be in trouble.” I feel like I’m really learning a lot from you, Luke, someone young enough to be my grandson. I appreciate your videos. Thank you.
    Yes, dried beans are an excellent idea.

    • @x-xxx-xxx-xxx
      @x-xxx-xxx-xxx 4 года назад +1

      Crowder peas sure are nice, I haven’t been able to find any at local stores recently so I might try to grow my own

  • @superunknown314159
    @superunknown314159 4 года назад +22

    I love the soft jazz! Can you please talk more about different types of dry beans to grow??

    • @judyhowell7075
      @judyhowell7075 4 года назад +2

      AKLADY87 grow purple hull in the south

  • @plants4ever48
    @plants4ever48 4 года назад +11

    Such an important video! The amount of shelf space dedicated to dry beans in the supermarket is pretty minimal!!
    They taste so much better than canned too! Thanks Luke.

  • @tahimiabreu4284
    @tahimiabreu4284 4 года назад +4

    I live in Florida and the ONLY time I buy canned beans is for hurricane preparedness due to a possible electrical outage. I am actually even looking into saving up to get a pressure canner so that I can preserve my own beans because a bag of dry beans from the dollar store (if you don't much care about organic) can give you several pints of cooked beans. Ounce per ounce the home canned beans are a fraction of the price of store canned beans. For $1 you can have 6 or more home canned pints vs 1 can of store bought.

  • @1992jason2
    @1992jason2 4 года назад +5

    I planted your red beans and they did really well. Thank you. I will definitely be ordering and planting lots more next year.

  • @sherrycallaway
    @sherrycallaway 4 года назад +6

    Being from the south dried pinto beans and blackened Peas have always been a staple. A meal can be peas, salad and cornbread

  • @angiekalas-caldwell8825
    @angiekalas-caldwell8825 4 года назад +8

    Canadian here, love your channel! You've helped me to have the confidence to grow my own food and the knowledge to actually keep it alive. As for beans, oh man.. beans are the best during the long cold winters, just fills you right up. I normally use red kidney beans (but i am open to all beans) in soups, stews, or veggie burritos!

  • @McSnicker55
    @McSnicker55 4 года назад +10

    I always grow Navy, Great Northern, Light and Dark Kidney beans for dried beans. This year I added in a few more varieties. Love the great mix you can grow and dry for soups,

  • @cruciferousvegetable
    @cruciferousvegetable 4 года назад +6

    I practically live on dried beans as a main staple of my plant based diet. I grew a 100 ft row of Roman beans., harvested as green beans then let the rest dry. It was incredibly labor intensive to pick and especially to shuck 15 lbs of them. There are plans out there to convert a wood chipper into a mini combine to dehusk the beans.
    I have found the number one crop for food security is winter squash like butternut. Easy to grow, pull them out of the garden, rinse, dry and store in a dark dry place that doesn't freeze. They will last about a year and they have all of the nutrients. Very little work.

  • @Satans_lil_helper
    @Satans_lil_helper 4 года назад +17

    Great advice! Thanks for all you do.

  • @MegaIheartme
    @MegaIheartme 4 года назад +5

    My grandmother who was from New Mexico said they would put the dried pods and bean plants in a big paper bag or gunnie sack and step on it to separate the beans from the plant material.
    She grew up on pinto beans so they grew a lot of them and saved time by doing this. The beans actually would be at the bottom due to their weight.
    Hope this might help a few who are looking to harvest a lot of dried beans.

  • @SasuNaruJunkie
    @SasuNaruJunkie 4 года назад +6

    Love your videos! Thanks for all the information, wish there was someone closers here to help me like you do!

  • @mezmariahz109
    @mezmariahz109 4 года назад +20

    Dragon Tongue beans are my fav. Gorgeous white and purple beans and buttery flavor. I think peas belong on the underrated list too!

  • @prepperskills7223
    @prepperskills7223 4 года назад +5

    When I lived in southern California, my Kentucky wonder beans did great. I picked fresh green beans off them for a while, and since I’m a bad gardener I forgot about them then came back to harvest some dry beans. A really multi purpose plant.

  • @susanjohnson9991
    @susanjohnson9991 4 года назад +1

    Thank you. You have made me rethink growing dry beans.

  • @pamquick9037
    @pamquick9037 4 года назад

    Thanks for the video Luke! I always enjoy your tips!

  • @jawjagrrl
    @jawjagrrl 4 года назад +5

    This is something we got into this season for the first time! We trialed 2 kinds of beans for Baker Creek this year and loved both. Good Mother Stallard is a beautiful one we trialed - I got over 6lbs of dried beans from 13 plants! Looking forward to making baked beans, white bean chili and soups with them this winter.
    We also grew Fort Portal Jade, also lovely but not as happy with the high humidity we have in GA. Rabbits thought they were the tastiest plants too :) lovely green. jade-like beans once dried. Seeing these along with the purple hull cow peas in the pantry makes me smile every time I go in!

  • @KaleidoscopeJunkie
    @KaleidoscopeJunkie 4 года назад +7

    Thank you - -
    Reminds Me of shelling beans at my Grandparent's picnic table.

  • @mancavegamingandgardening9901
    @mancavegamingandgardening9901 4 года назад +6

    I love growing dried beans for exactly the reason you listed- something to remind you of your garden in the deepest of Winter.
    Never enough Cattle Panels to grow the amount and varieties of beans I would like to however. The 87-bean soup will have to wait.

  • @kathynunnery7326
    @kathynunnery7326 4 года назад +3

    great music choice towards the end. I'm definitely adding pinto beans to my growing list this spring. thanks

  • @GoshenPrepping
    @GoshenPrepping 4 года назад +5

    I'm with you! Not to mention the various amino acids we get in beans that we rarely get in other garden items.

  • @kariloughrey1653
    @kariloughrey1653 4 года назад +41

    Red beans and rice with sausage is a fav. My favorite bean is black beans😊.

    • @Social_Pugatory
      @Social_Pugatory 4 года назад +1

      Kari Loughrey the south has never stopped appreciating beans. Especially being southern and growing up poor, red beans and rice with cornbread were eaten at least once a week.

    • @butterluttuce2867
      @butterluttuce2867 3 года назад

      Yes yes yes yes yes

  • @markemyshibukawa9254
    @markemyshibukawa9254 4 года назад

    Thank you for your videos. Thank you for reminding us about doing something simple to provide food security for our families. Blessings to you & your family.

  • @babyroot3479
    @babyroot3479 4 года назад

    I love your videos! I always learn things from you and I appreciate it greatly.

  • @TheDiscountVegan
    @TheDiscountVegan 4 года назад +10

    I love dry beans. They are so easy to keep and prepare. Im actually cooking son chickpeas for the week rn.

  • @Crazycatlady-g8m
    @Crazycatlady-g8m 4 года назад +20

    My favorite beans are chickpeas, just because my son makes AMAZING hummus with them.

    • @pebblepod30
      @pebblepod30 4 года назад +1

      Awesome......would he/ you want to share the recipe?

    • @Crazycatlady-g8m
      @Crazycatlady-g8m 4 года назад +2

      @@pebblepod30 I wish. It's a secret recipe. I don't even know it and I'm his mom! LOL!!!

    • @lisasmith516
      @lisasmith516 3 года назад +3

      @@pebblepod30 Go to Refika's Kitchen on RUclips, see if she has one, she has awesome Turkish and some "fusion-style," and USA "dupe" Fast Food Recipes. Plus, she's comical and fun!

    • @pebblepod30
      @pebblepod30 3 года назад

      @@lisasmith516 ok thx

    • @pebblepod30
      @pebblepod30 3 года назад

      @@Crazycatlady-g8m ok

  • @akitachristian
    @akitachristian 4 года назад +5

    Runner beans are nice. They have beautiful flowers bees love and they grow in vines so you can save space in small gardens by growing up.

  • @nicolesobol936
    @nicolesobol936 4 года назад +36

    Split pea soup is my favorite meal! Growing beans in my garden next year for sure!

    • @carolparrish194
      @carolparrish194 4 года назад +1

      How do you dry the peas? Is it the same way as beans? Good idea.

    • @VickiTakacs.
      @VickiTakacs. 4 года назад +3

      I love those too and wanted to know if any peas can be used as split peas if dried.

  • @DancingCrittersAcres
    @DancingCrittersAcres 4 года назад +4

    Luke thank you, never really thought about dried beans from a garden. I'm have gained a lot of information from your channel. We do a 7 bean soup and white beans and ham. Again thank you, take care and best wishes

  • @jomiller4397
    @jomiller4397 4 года назад +7

    This year while I was canning pinto beans from the store I got a silly hair and decided to plant one bean for fun. it was super satisfying to get that harvest! One bean 100 percent germination on that guy. and that one bean turned into about 50. I should have counted or weighed them. Next time.
    The plant took up about as much space as a bush bean. the one thing I did not hear you mention is that with dried or soup beans
    it is a MUST to let then dry on the plant!
    Great video Thank you for your time
    Good Gardening

    • @jomiller4397
      @jomiller4397 3 года назад +1

      @@howtomoo Thank you I did not know that.

  • @markallstatt189
    @markallstatt189 4 года назад

    I cannot LOVE your opening statement and why you do this. Thank you Luke. You are very informative and quite entertaining. Thank you again.

  • @TheMixingBowlHomestead
    @TheMixingBowlHomestead 2 года назад +1

    Awesome. Will definitely be growing beans. I remember my grandmother harvesting her beans by pulling the entire plant, then running her hands down to pull all the pods, then sifting the beans. Can’t wait to harvest mine.

  • @melkrist
    @melkrist 4 года назад +6

    My favorite green beans are White Half Runners. My favorite dry beans are probably Kidney Beans. A close second would be Great White Northern Beans. We eat loads of beans in our diet. I live in far western NC. Beans are a very common staple in most pantries and in almost every garden here.

  • @pattiloster6136
    @pattiloster6136 4 года назад +4

    Awesome video my family grew up on beans I still love them !!! You should do a video on types of beans that are good for drying !!

  • @stephanier1336
    @stephanier1336 4 года назад +2

    This is so true! Thanks for this!

  • @tessie652001
    @tessie652001 4 года назад +1

    I love growing all kinds of beans to keep them for the next yr planting .

  • @movinon04
    @movinon04 4 года назад +5

    beans are so versatile also-- bean burgers- soups --pastes--refried beans-- dips- and most people dont realize you can make Hummus out of any kind of beans and herbs and spices you like-- my daughter makes an awesome buffalo dip using white navy beans instead of chicken and it is amazing- thanks for the bean share-- blessings....

    • @jelatinosa
      @jelatinosa 4 года назад

      That sounds great!

    • @Navajosun
      @Navajosun 2 года назад

      What’s Buffalo dip?

  • @heliomayer
    @heliomayer 4 года назад +56

    In Brazil, beans and rice are the basis of our nutrition.

    • @dumbledoor9293
      @dumbledoor9293 4 года назад +2

      Helio Cezar de Oliveira Mayer isn't that nuts? 😏

    • @cadenrolland5250
      @cadenrolland5250 4 года назад +3

      And that's true for Central and South America as well.

    • @gotchabitch4844
      @gotchabitch4844 4 года назад

      Does that cause obesity?

    • @Junzar56
      @Junzar56 4 года назад +3

      Beans and rice, rice and beans... yum!

    • @joediblasio1846
      @joediblasio1846 4 года назад +12

      I love me some beans and rice and I'm Italian but grew up around mixed cultures in my hood, it was a good hood.

  • @wilheys.6224
    @wilheys.6224 4 года назад +1

    Brilliant!! Thanks again, Luke! 👍👍👍

  • @gracielamelgoza4112
    @gracielamelgoza4112 4 года назад +1

    I’m a new fan and subscriber love all your videos. I use beans almost on a daily basis. I’m so glad you’re doing a video on this..

  • @blookieblay
    @blookieblay 4 года назад +3

    Food security...something we all need to keep in mind these coming days. Love all types of dried beans. They can be prepared and eaten in so many different ways. Dry canning beans is nice for long storage.

  • @shanesanders2255
    @shanesanders2255 4 года назад +13

    Try anasazi beans. Beside being very tasty bean similar to pinto beans. It's a very pretty bean. And has a interesting past story. Believed to have gone extinct centuries if not a millennia ago. Found in a cave and brought back

    • @blookieblay
      @blookieblay 4 года назад +4

      Shane, I too love those beans...any tips on where I can find seed for next year? Organic of course.

    • @shanesanders2255
      @shanesanders2255 4 года назад +5

      @@blookieblay I know a friend of mine googled anasazi bean seeds and had great luck. I planted the beans from the store and grew them that way.

  • @Just-Nikki
    @Just-Nikki 4 года назад

    Just got my homestead bean packs from y’all two days ago. I am surprised how much I’m enjoying growing beans but they are a quick and easy to grow. I’m trying to grow 80% of our food.

  • @kimberlyamaclaren9933
    @kimberlyamaclaren9933 4 года назад

    OUTSTANDING ! I am so glad I found you , dried beans are a STAPLE in my house ❤️. I have not tried to grow them yet , my pap always did .

  • @jackjohnson4148
    @jackjohnson4148 4 года назад +6

    Food prep is very smart, as it doesn’t take much to upset the apple cart.

  • @Melissa0774
    @Melissa0774 3 года назад +4

    I just put some cooked red kidney beans in my dehydrator as an experiment to see what would happen. I coated them in Sriracha sauce, smoked paprika, and a drop of liquid smoke. They turned out so good! Crunchy barbecue flavored beans. I forget what it's called, but they sell some kind of barbecue flavored bean snacks in the health food section at the store and they're ridiculously expensive. My recipe turned out just as good and it's way cheaper to make. If you don't have a dehydrator, I'm sure you could do it in the oven as well.

  • @flutterbydragonfly
    @flutterbydragonfly 4 года назад

    I love beans! I will be growing some next year. Thanks!

  • @rebeccawallace4240
    @rebeccawallace4240 4 года назад

    Luke we love dry beans around my house but I've never had enough room to grow them for ourselves but that's a plan I have coming up,great information to put out there

  • @nancyskinner5207
    @nancyskinner5207 4 года назад +3

    Don’t cut your hair! It looks great. I am shelling Kentucky Wonder beans and Scarlet Emperor beans. My grandfather used to grow these as part of his winter bean mixture. I wish I knew all the other varieties he grew, but I’m making my own mixture. I grew 1500 year old cave beans this year and they did great. Also purple pole and yellow wax pole. Can’t wait for next year to use what I learned this season. A lot of what I learned came from you. Thank you!

  • @tammyhanson7843
    @tammyhanson7843 4 года назад +4

    I wished I’d payed more attention to my dads dry bean gardening. He would plant them in every nook and cranny, any spare space in his flower gardens. 🦋💜

  • @SuttonsDaze
    @SuttonsDaze 4 года назад +2

    Excellent video!

  • @deborahoakey3560
    @deborahoakey3560 2 года назад

    Loved this and your lovely calming music

  • @growwhereyoureplantedhomes9166
    @growwhereyoureplantedhomes9166 4 года назад +4

    They are a staple here in the south . cornbread beans taters onion don't get much better. You're Loved more than you know.

  • @ninamoler1880
    @ninamoler1880 4 года назад +4

    Sakes, grow your hair. You look great! Thanks for the info. I've never grown beans for drying and it looks so easy!

  • @morgana8620
    @morgana8620 4 года назад +1

    Thanks for making the video this way - I wouldn’t have grown beans because it’s not a part of our diet but would like to practice and store for food prep!

  • @janetohara2524
    @janetohara2524 4 года назад

    Awesome video. Thx. Ya have a great way of presenting

  • @elizabee8273
    @elizabee8273 4 года назад +5

    I love hummus but it can be so expensive. I'm going to try growing my own chick peas. Thanks for the awesome advice.

  • @TalkingThreadsMedia
    @TalkingThreadsMedia 4 года назад +3

    Hi, Luke. Yes, I grow dry beans... My two favorites are Haudenosaunee Skunk Bean (aka Iroquois Skunk Bean) and Orca Bean (aka Yin-Yang bean). Best wishes from Kate in Olympia, WA - 9/20/2019.

  • @jeanscruggs812
    @jeanscruggs812 Год назад

    I'm 68 and have never planted or considered planting anything until this year. I want to be prepared for if/when SHTF and have been researching container gardening tubers. Light bulb moment with this piece of info. Brilliant idea I had not considered. Thank you so much for sharing!!! ❤❤❤

  • @traceyfrugoli8973
    @traceyfrugoli8973 4 года назад

    I've been wanting to learn about this, thanks.

  • @MrPudd420
    @MrPudd420 4 года назад +50

    Beans, beans.
    The magical fruit.
    The more you eat, the more you toot.

    • @kenbellchambers4577
      @kenbellchambers4577 4 года назад +13

      The more you toot the better you feel, so eat some beans with every meal.

    • @magischepflanzen758
      @magischepflanzen758 4 года назад +6

      That's a popular misconception. Most of the people don't toot at all when eating beans, and almost all of them won't have flatulances at all after some days/weeks of eating beans regularly.

    • @kenbellchambers4577
      @kenbellchambers4577 4 года назад +5

      @@magischepflanzen758 I dare you to have a large bowl of borlotti or salugio beans. If you don't blow your blankets off the first night, I'll send you a whoopee cushion. I consider these beans to be dangerous weapons.

    • @paulneri835
      @paulneri835 4 года назад +2

      @@magischepflanzen758 this one-tin-a-day-for-25-years-chilli-bean-eater agrees!

    • @teekotrain6845
      @teekotrain6845 4 года назад +1

      More you toot, better you feel. Beans, beans, every meal

  • @B.Y.O.
    @B.Y.O. 4 года назад +7

    I love making pinto bean soup topped with cheese onions cilantro and a dab of sour cream.

  • @TheHebrew
    @TheHebrew 4 года назад

    Great information, keep up the great work.

  • @markkristynichols845
    @markkristynichols845 4 года назад

    Always love your knowledge and POSITIVE energy! Continue that for us as we love it! I know sometimes you get trolls, but you have WAY more fans, just wanted to let you know you are appreciated for all you share!! And, you are a great father!! Kristy in MIssouri :)

  • @RunaaSteinamrk
    @RunaaSteinamrk 4 года назад +74

    Please make 2020 the year of prepping! That would be so much fun 😀

  • @Kermittreefrog
    @Kermittreefrog 4 года назад +36

    Under appreciated unless you are vegan. As a vegan I eat LOADS of them. They are my main source of protein.

    • @garethbaus5471
      @garethbaus5471 4 года назад +5

      And can taste very good.

    • @magischepflanzen758
      @magischepflanzen758 4 года назад +7

      True! I never knew how wonderful chickpeas & soy beans are, before I went vegan. Tofu, tempeh, soy milk, hummus, falafel etc. Great stuff!

    • @BatmanPwnage
      @BatmanPwnage 4 года назад +2

      >.> you have never been to a korean household. My rice! My family puts every kind of bean in there cause its "healthy and i need it". Lima beans are the worst. They disintegrate into the rice.
      Then my family eats bean encrusted rice cakes. I do like red bean paste tho.
      I eat every form of soybean. Natto. Tofu. Fermented soybean paste. except fried tofu skins. Its too sweet for me.

    • @magischepflanzen758
      @magischepflanzen758 4 года назад +4

      @@BatmanPwnage Yeah right, I was talking about the western diet (west europe (germany in my case) / USA). In Asia & South America it's different (propably one of the reasons, why you have lower heart attack & cancer rates^^).
      I plan to make some korean oder japanese candy with red bean paste, I love the idea!

    • @traceyfrugoli8973
      @traceyfrugoli8973 4 года назад

      You said, hence my search to grow my own.

  • @bonnieparker1238
    @bonnieparker1238 4 года назад

    You are such a well spoken knowledgeable person. Thank you! My favorite is the chic pea. I have many recipes for hummus; too many to share. Happy Gardening😊

  • @MusicLover-mk4ol
    @MusicLover-mk4ol 3 года назад

    Such a great idea and a new perspective of why we need to grow dried beans. Awesome. Thanks for all your tips and knowledge 👌👏👏

  • @thathobbitlife
    @thathobbitlife 4 года назад +61

    Love Lima Beans! Especially with ham and ham bones, slow cooked 😉😁

    • @RADARTechie
      @RADARTechie 4 года назад

      I like to eat peas and beans raw, and ate the first few lima beans raw. Then I read somewhere uncooked they have the most cyanide of all beans. Then I realized that yes, I was having stomach issues after eating them.

    • @bluebutterflywellness2273
      @bluebutterflywellness2273 4 года назад

      Amen! 😋

  • @joshuachristian3102
    @joshuachristian3102 4 года назад +52

    Can't beat some good ham and kidney beans on a cold winter day!! Thanks for all you do Luke!

    • @DancingCrittersAcres
      @DancingCrittersAcres 4 года назад +2

      Joshua I will have to try ham and kidney beans, we make white beans and ham with cornbread. Thank you for a new meal idea. Take care and best wishes to you

    • @airinbone
      @airinbone 4 года назад +4

      Make ham n beans using several types of beans. They all work.

    • @carolhamilton5164
      @carolhamilton5164 4 года назад +3

      Joshua Christian my dad really liked bacon and kidney beans. He also loved baked great northern beans with salt pork. He really wasn’t into sweet baked beans.

    • @DancingCrittersAcres
      @DancingCrittersAcres 4 года назад +2

      @@airinbone most things are better with ham lol

    • @Just-Nikki
      @Just-Nikki 4 года назад +4

      Joshua Christian don’t forget the cornbread

  • @discoanna7578
    @discoanna7578 4 года назад

    Thanks so much for these inspiring videos! I like beans...now I’m going to try growing them!

  • @michellelogreco3351
    @michellelogreco3351 4 года назад

    I live dried beans! Use them always!
    Never thought about growing...
    Thank you!!

  • @myxinautix8320
    @myxinautix8320 4 года назад +4

    My favorite bean is Fort Portal Jade, a small round bean that dries a pretty blue-green. I grow a ton of cow peas each year. I'm looking at growing succotash beans, yardlong beans, and Cherokee Trail of Tears next year.

    • @dianapiccoli4103
      @dianapiccoli4103 4 года назад

      Myxinaut IX , hi can you please tell me where you get your beans from?

    • @myxinautix8320
      @myxinautix8320 4 года назад +1

      @@dianapiccoli4103 Baker Creek a few years ago, but it looks like they're not in stock now. I've noticed that the Fort Portal Jade tends to come and go. You could try Etsy and Ebay for seeds. My own supply is short currently, otherwise I'd send you some.

    • @dianapiccoli4103
      @dianapiccoli4103 4 года назад

      Myxinaut IX , that is so kind of you even for the thought. Thanks for the reply!

  • @sarahbower628
    @sarahbower628 4 года назад +27

    What kind of varieties would you recommend?

  • @Webber404
    @Webber404 4 года назад

    Great video. Thanks for the information, I will definitely be trying to grow beans next year :)

  • @essentialcomforts2166
    @essentialcomforts2166 Год назад

    I loaded all the plants on my kitchen table and the kids loved helping me open the pods to save..super fun!

  • @kathylove2561
    @kathylove2561 4 года назад +11

    I love Pinto beans and blackeye peas myself. I keep loads of it stashed in my pantry.

  • @marietaylor4468
    @marietaylor4468 4 года назад +34

    A lot less sodium to use dry vs canned. It’s the primary use for my instant pot.

    • @jrheiselt
      @jrheiselt 4 года назад +4

      Yes, I love how much quicker it is with an instant pot. Though a slow cooker also does well.

  • @bethjackson316
    @bethjackson316 4 года назад

    I grew some of the pinto and black beans this year because of the long term food security. Glad you made this video.

  • @josephtastic
    @josephtastic 4 года назад

    Some really good points made. God bless your success brah