Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Pinto Bean Nopales Pita Burger

Brothers and Sisters! Welcome to the first post of the International Kitchen, located on the corner' of the rich and flavorful lower International Blvd, Oakland! I am going to be honest with you man, this is not really a recipe blog. You won't find a whole lot your going to want to make here. No high class vegan cuisine, no lemon creme lozenge filled cupcakes, not even those tiny ominous spare ribs next to an empty 40oz that could be the neighbors cat.

You might be grossed out, but don't poop in a bag after eating this stuff, run to the toilet. Don't be lazy, and lets eat.

Last night I did some adventure cooking. Free-form recipe less, hungry after work blender raging. I tried to hit up the Lucky's by the lake, but I was discouraged by no baskets, high prices, and long lines. Fuck that, bike on brothers and sisters! After getting home, I walked to Supermercado Los Pericoso a nice market and Mexican restaurant just past the International Aquarium.

This place is surprisingly big, especially if you include the restaurant connected to it. It has a deli, produce, essentials, a huge array of canned Mexican goods and spices, and giant jarritos to water-board yourself with on guacamole night.

INGREDIENTS:
For my dinner tonight I picked up a white onion, a bag of chopped nopales, can of pinto beans, a carrot, and one ripe avocado. I think my total was around five dollars. As I put my groceries on the counter, I take check of what I have in my food cabinet. I have a redbull from Thailand, 2 pita pockets, pasta, a bag of white rice, a half empty can of Italian bread crumbs, and a pristine jar of crunchy peanut butter. Whats going to mold, has got to go! I take the pita pockets and plump it on the counter. Taking a fridge check I notice a container of taco tuck salsa from almost a week ago, and also put that on the counter.

COOKIN':
First I blend the onion and the nopales together in a blender. Smells a little interesting, but I'm going to wait till I get some beans in there before I sweat it. I put the rinsed pinto beans in and blend, going from a mean green to a mild green brown medley. Hm. Interesting. I take a cheese grader and shred the carrot into the mixture, adding just enough to add some orange highlights to the musky goop.

Well, we got something. I take about a quarter cup of flour and mix it in, attempting to make a kind of dough. Frankly, its not really coming together man. I question weather to switch over to bean dip and scoop out a chip full. Nope! I toss in some garlic powder and steak seasoning, you know, its a burger. Sweat starts to form on my brow, as I think of the only saving throw I got here, I got to fry the shit out of it. I pour it onto a heated skillet with olive oil, and form it into a patty shape with a spatula.

While that's sizzlin', I cut up an avocado into pieces, and stuff a little bit of it into the pita bread. I check the bottom of the bean patty and see that its still pretty soft, and not too cooked. My roommate asks me how its going.

I entered my cooking adventure with a clean kitchen. I looked at my blender, carrot shreds on the counter, bowl of bean mixture, garlic powder and salt containers open, and I remain optimistic. "I think it will be edible."

I flip, cook and stuff the patty into the first pita pocket, in pieces.I topped it off with some avocado, and take a look at what I've created. Partly curious, skeptical, I take a first bite, making sure its loaded with extra avocado. I am not outright disgusted, or really in love with what I made.

I am starting to think that the bland, highly questionable, Pinto Bean Nopales Pita Burger I have made is a representation of the bland, highly questionable routine that my life has become. Sleep, Eat, Work, Groceries, Taco Truck. God dammit, we were supposed to stay young, right? That's when I remember the taco truck salsa.

I pop open the little Styrofoam container and give a generous pour onto my now Pinto Bean Nopales Pita Burger. I start to have a sensation that I am eating some profane version of re-fried beans, scraped off the bottom of a Rosarita factory from 1970. The ingredients were mostly Mexican, but I felt like this didn't really belong to any culture. And whats up with that pita bread? I could have at least used a tortilla. I was left with even more questions then when I started. Stay tuned to the next episode.