What is time?

A man is silhouetted in front of a bright clock with Roman numerals.
Is daylight saving time really about capitalism? Charlie Riedel / Associated Press
A man is silhouetted in front of a bright clock with Roman numerals.
Is daylight saving time really about capitalism? Charlie Riedel / Associated Press

What is time?

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This is your official reminder that daylight saving time ends this Sunday! Our panelists, City Cast Chicago podcast host Jacoby Cochran and Vocalo’s “Jill Afternoons” host Jill Hopkins, have things to say about clocks and capitalism. Jacoby, Jill and Greta also unpack the recent New York Times piece “Should Classic Rock Songs Be Toppled Like Confederate Statues?”.

Then, Harvard professor Arthur C. Brooks shares some hard truths from his recent Atlantic article, “A profession is not a personality,” including his belief that everyone should go back to the office. Our panelists Jill and Jacoby weigh in too.

Plus! Farmer and chef Abra Berens schools us on how to make beans interesting every day of the week. Her new book on beans and grains is called Grist. Follow along with her week of beans without boredom below! 

A WEEK’S WORTH OF BLACK BEANS WITHOUT ANY BOREDOM

Cook ’em once; eat ’em five times. Stretch one big pot of black beans into a workweek’s worth of distinct meals.

day one – basic black bean boiling recipe

¼ cup [60 ml] neutral oil

1 tsp smoked paprika

1 tsp cumin seed

½ tsp chili flakes (optional)

2 cups [400 g] dried black beans, soaked or not, depending on your state of mind

½ tsp salt

In a medium saucepan, heat the oil over medium heat. Add the spices and fry to bloom until fragrant (1 minute). Add the beans and toss to coat, then cover with cold water by 2 in [5 cm], bring to a boil, turn down to a simmer, and cook until tender, adding more water if needed.

When the beans are tender, add the salt and let the beans cool in the cooking liquid for at least 10 minutes (like soup, they get better the longer they sit—ideally, overnight). (You can reserve the cooking liquid for various uses, if you like.)

Make it more than just a pile of beans with one of these additions:

Add a starch: Combining protein and starch makes a complete meal. I usually assume half as much starch to the volume of beans I have on hand. Very optional, but a starch can also help flesh out a bowl of beans: rice, fonio (a millet-like grain), chickpea pancake, farro, bulgur, and on and on.

Add a vegetable: Adding a pile of roasted carrots and delicately dressed radicchio to a bowl of rice and beans lifts the dish from age-old staple to contemporary $14-small-plate status. Consider roasted carrots, sweet potatoes, stewed peppers, raw tomato, shaved radishes, roasted broccoli, shaved cauliflower, and of course greens, raw or cooked, in addition to any other veg or on their own.

Add some fat: Vitamins and micronutrients in beans are fat-soluble, so adding a dollop of sour cream or mashed avocado is not only delicious but also increases absorption of the healthful side of beans. Try sour cream, avocado, cheese, olive oil, chili oil, nuts, tahini, or vinaigrette.

Add something acidic: Beans are rich and provide the base of flavor for a great dish. That base is accentuated by an acidic foil. Top your bowl of beans with a spoonful of vinaigrette, spoonful of mustard, squeeze of lime, or spoonful of fermented vegetables to add dynamism and contrast.

Add something crunchy: Speaking of contrast, beans are often cooked until creamy and comforting. Adding a sprinkle of some­thing crunchy means your mouth won’t get too comfortable (read: bored). A handful of chopped nuts or a crumble of potato chips, tortilla chips, fried chickpeas, or crisped-up buckwheat will enliven the enveloping succor of a bowl of warm beans.

day two

Fill a quesadilla with a spoonful of black beans and serve with a cabbage salad dressed in Mojo de Ajo.

day three

Use reserved bean cooking liquid to make a soup.

day four

Beans for breakfast! Warm a couple of big scoops of cooked beans and top with a soft-boiled egg and a handful of greens dressed with a spoonful of Lemon Parsley Mojo.

day five

Blend the last of the black beans with a couple glugs of olive oil to make hummus. Use that hummus to make any number of things: a BBLT (black bean, lettuce, and tomato) for lunch, or serve the purée with a dollop of Harissa and any array of veg for a snack platter. Or schmear the hummus onto Chickpea Fritters and top with some fresh greens for a light dinner, or transfer the purée to an ovenproof dish, cover evenly with a melty cheese, and bake until warm and bubbly, then serve with toast or chips for scooping, or . .. the options are endless.

Reprinted from Grist: A Practical Guide to Cooking Grains, Beans, Seeds, and Legumes by Abra Berens with permission from Chronicle Books, 2021.