Pinto Beans and Corn
Folks on limited budget should know that they can stretch their food pennies with a tasty, nutritious combination of pinto beans and corn, Recipes.
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Pinto beans, cornbread, tomatoes, onions and milk.
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by JUANITA KEITHLEY SCOTT
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Folks on limited budgets should know that they can stretch
their food pennies with a tasty, nutritious combination of
pinto beans and corn. Such a diet is not the marginal bill
of fare you might imagine, either. Rather, as generations
of poor people throughout Mexico and the southwestern
United States have proven, it can supply a fair amount of
the body's daily requirements of vitamins and minerals and
a goodly portion of the necessary proteins.
Neither beans nor corn alone, of course, is such a complete
food . . . chiefly because neither is a complete protein.
Beans, however, contain all the essential amino acids but
one (methionine) . . . which just happens to be the amino
acid that corn does have. Together, a mixture of
two parts corn and one part beans is almost equal in
protein quality to fresh milk. Add some fruits and
vegetables to supply the vitamins and minerals that beans
and corn lack and top with some real milk . . . and you've
got a fairly well-balanced diet that is both tasty and very
economical. The further addition of fresh wheat germ and an
occasional egg should round this menu off a lot closer to
nutritionally perfect than the "average" American diet
without raising the total cost too many pennies.
Now I'm not recommending that everyone completely switch
from sirloin steaks (or even hamburger) to a morning, noon
and night diet of pinto beans and corn. However, when
money's short or you're trying to save every extra nickle
for the down-payment on that farm, it is nice to know that
a regular substitution of corn and beans for a meat dish
can spin the old budget out by a rather large factor.
For instance, in New Mexico—where pinto beans are
dryfarmed in semi-arid fields—they may be purchased
in bulk at minimal cost. Even after the beans are shipped
half-way across the country, they usually sell at a
super-low price of 15-20¢ per pound (less than
10¢ a day per person) that will fit almost anybody's
food budget. (Ibought 10 pounds of bulk mixed
beans in West Virginia recently for only 10¢ a
pound.—JS) Dry corn is just as inexpensive . . .
making the combination much more economical than meat, milk
or any other source of protein.
The following traditional recipes from the southwestern
section of this country will rapidly introduce you (if you
need an introduction) to both dried corn and pinto beans.
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