"Leather Britches", Beans
Playhouses are for Sissies
by Jeannie Travis
“Leather Britches”,
Beans
I use white half runner beans but you can use whatever type of bean you
like. Pick them straight from garden when they are full, tender, nice
and clean ( not after a rain) when they might be muddy. Nub
(break off ends) and string ( pull strings off the outsides of the
pods) of the beans, don't break them up, don't wash them, just wipe off
any dirt with your hands and then string or sew them up on the thread.
Get a spool of quilting thread from Wal-mart or fabric store because it
is a little heavier then regular thread. Thread a long slender
sewing needle with about 2 foot of thread. Put the needle through
the center of a long bean first and tie the thread around it to make a
sturdy base. Avoid putting needle through an actual bean but just
through the long bean fiber or pod. Continue until you have a long
string of beans. Leave some extra thread at top of string so you
can tie it off and make a loop to hang it by. Hang over a clothes
hangar and hang up in kitchen to dry or on sunny days you can take it
outside and hang the clothes hanger of beans from nail on the porch or
over the clothes line. Just let them dry up and they will shrink
and end up about half of what you put on the string....
Another old timey way is to break them up, put them on a clean sheet
and take outside and lay them over a patio table or the like on sunny
days and they will dry. Just bring them in at night. After they
are totally dried and brittle I have put mine into container
or bag and put them in freezer so no bugs can get into them.
To cook, take them off the string, wash the dried beans and then soak
them overnight in water. Drain water, wash and then cook as you
would regular beans...adding a big ham hock or piece of salt bacon as
seasoning. They take awhile to cook so you must keep adding water
and they do swell up to make a big pot of beans. They do have a
very unique flavor. Bake up a big pone of corn bread, fry up an iron
skillet of taters and you are in business...enjoy!
Playhouses are for
Sissies
Boys played at farming, and girl's had play house, that is if they were
'normal' girls. Mama told me years later that she finally gave up on
getting us interested in play houses...she would set them up for us,
look out awhile later to see how we were doing and we would be climbing
trees, etc.
An 'elderly', At least 35 or 40, neighbor lady that didn't
know about this helped us set up a playhouse near her driveway
once...nice ditch , bank etc...She put dry dock seed on a hollowed out
sand rock for coffee grounds - little round stones were potatoes, etc.
She really got into it and had a great time but we lost interest and
never played there again - 'Miss' Mariney Beasley - a wonderful
neighbor.
We made stilts, walked on the cans when we could find them...etc ,but
back then folks ate home canned foods mostly. The canned milk was left
setting out on the table to pour into grownups coffee. Remember how it
had 2 little holes poked in the top? Never knew of it spoiling. My
thrifty ex Mother in law would pour a small can of Pet milk into a
quart milk bottle then fill it up with water to use in coffee...this
was refrigerated between uses.