Edible Skinny was in San Francisco last week and while there we checked out the foodie haven the Ferry Building Marketplace!
One
of the stands that struck our eye was Rancho Gordo’s Heirloom Beans out of
Napa, California. Focusing on “New
World Specialty Food” the brand also sells exotic dried chiles, prepared
hominy/pozole, extra fancy California wild rice, and new world grains such as
quinoa and amaranth.
Rancho
Gordo began as a search for a decent American grown tomato, which lead to
growing beans, which lead to growing one heirloom bean (Rio Zape, similar to
the pinto bean, founder Steve Sando noted how the heirloom varietal had “hints of chocolate and
coffee mixed with an earthy texture that made his head spin") which lead to
warehouses full of heirloom beans such as Eye of the Goat, Scarlet Runner Beans,
and Mayocoba Beans.
A
press darling, Rancho Gordo’s beans been featured in the New York Times, Wall
Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, Chow, Sunset, Bon Appetit, Gourmet, Food
& Wine, Country Home, San Francisco Chronicle, and Chile Pepper.
Heirloom
Beans tend to have a lower yield and can be much more difficult to grow but the
pay off is in the unique flavors and textures that you don't find with bland
commodity beans. But the result is worth
the fuss, for IRL Rancho Gordo’s fans flock to
its Ferry Building location!
The stand even has a tub of “touching beans” coaxing you (“you know you want to!”) to thrust your hands into a half of foot’s depth of heirloom beans and run the rainbow of magic through your fingers!
The stand even has a tub of “touching beans” coaxing you (“you know you want to!”) to thrust your hands into a half of foot’s depth of heirloom beans and run the rainbow of magic through your fingers!
Thanks so much for this really sweet valentine. It seems in life you don't always get to work hard and get rewarded for it, but we've managed to pull it off, with support from people like you.
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