Anonymous wrote:I like it. Maybe you should be banished to hell!!
Anonymous wrote:I like it. Maybe you should be banished to hell!!
Anonymous wrote:We make green bean salad instead. It's superior because:
1. It's served cold. You can (and should) pre-make it.
2. It adds acid to the meal.
There isn't a recipe. My mom makes it and it changes slightly each year.
Trim and cook fresh green beans. Blanch them so they don't continue to cook. You don't want them mushy.
Once cooled and drained, add-
red onions
grape tomatoes, sliced in quarters
black olives - sliced
feta cheese
roasted red peppers - jarred is fine
Mix with a bit of olive oil, balsamic vinegar, salt, pepper, maybe a dash of garlic powder if you'd like.
Put it in the fridge overnight. Then give it a good toss before serving.
She may sprinkle some parmesan cheese in there too. I'm not positive. I just know it's a huge hit and refreshing when you have lots of heavy/warm food on the plate.
If you don't like olives, or peppers, or onions, that's fine. Leave them out. We use grape tomatoes instead of cherry or regular, because they are bit sweeter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like it once a year.
+1. Same. Plus my picky eaters will eat plain green beans, so it's easy to do both.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love green bean casserole. I love the too salty mushroom soup. I love the weird fried onions. I love the melted cheese. My one change to the recipe is to use fresh green beans, instead of canned, because the canned gets too mushy when you bake it.
It's every holiday meal and church potluck from my childhood in one hotdish.
What is this talk about cheese? I've eaten my share of various green bean casseroles over the years and not one included cheese. Tell me more please!
Anonymous wrote:I serve green beans almondine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love green bean casserole. I love the too salty mushroom soup. I love the weird fried onions. I love the melted cheese. My one change to the recipe is to use fresh green beans, instead of canned, because the canned gets too mushy when you bake it.
It's every holiday meal and church potluck from my childhood in one hotdish.
What is this talk about cheese? I've eaten my share of various green bean casseroles over the years and not one included cheese. Tell me more please!
Anonymous wrote:All of these people saying they make theirs with fresh green beans and scratch components are taking away the intended essence of the dish. The taste of a canned green bean is intrinsic to the green bean casserole, as are the french's fried onions and the canned cream of mushroom or cream of chicken soup. You can Ina it up with "good quality" ingredients and make it a different thing or you can let it be the comfort food it is for people who grew up with it on their table. No shame in that, it's ok! Now do canned cranberry sauce.