Hidatsa Shield Figure Bean The Hidasta Indians were experts at raising crops of corn, squash, beans and sunflowers in the Missouri River Valley of North Dakota. Dual crop of beans climbing up the corn stalks were often grown in their gardens. The Shield Figure bean was grown in Buffalo Bird Woman's Garden. Pole habit, 90 days The Hidatsa Shield Figure bean is called Ama'ca ita' wina'ki matu'hica in Buffalo Bird Woman's language. Maxi'diwiac (Buffalo Bird Woman) (ca.1839-1932) recounted her life and gardening and it is in the book Buffalo Bird Woman's Garden. I believe you can read it in full at http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/buffalo/garden/garden.html or possibly check it out at your local library. How To Cook Dry Beans Before Cooking - There are several accepted ways of preparing dry beans for cooking. All start with a thorough washing in cold water and inspection for damaged beans and foreign material. If you have time to cook the variety you have chosen until it reaches the desired tenderness, soaking is not essential. However, most cooks prefer some method of soaking to shorten cooking time and to improve either flavor, texture, appearance or digestibility. In either of the soaking methods below, it is recommended that the soaking water be discarded and the beans rinsed and cooked in fresh water. Soaking Tips -Recent studies have shown that bringing beans to a boil, then soaking for 12 or more hours makes them more digestible. Therefore, the revised method for traditional soaking is given here. The quick method is acceptable for occasions when time is limited. Traditional Method: Wash one pound dry beans. Add to 10 cups boiling water; boil 2 minutes. Remove from heat; cover and soak 12 hours or overnight. Drain, rinse and cook. Quick Method: Wash one pound dry beans. Add to 10 cups boiling water; boil 2 to 1 minutes. Cover and soak 1 to 4 hours. Drain, rinse and cook. Be sure pot is large enough to allow beans to expand 2-1/2 times. Cooking/Storage Tips Cooking Method: Drain and rinse soaked beans; put into large kettle. Add 6 cups hot water, 1 to 2 tablespoons shortening or oil and 2 teaspoons salt. Boil gently with lid tilted until tender. Cooking time will range from 30 to 60 minutes, depending on variety of bean. * Simmer beans slowly. Cooking too fast can break skins. * Cook enough beans for more than one meal at a time. For storing a day or two, cover and refrigerate. For longer storage, freeze in airtight plastic bags or freezer-proof containers. Bean Equivalents - One pound of dry beans equals about 2-1/4 cups dry or 5 to 6 cups cooked beans. One can (15-1/2 oz.), drained, equals about 1-2/3 cups. Boston Baked Beans (Dry K Yield: 100 Servings Ingredients 2 1/2 ga water; cold 1 qt water; hot 1 lb bacon; sliced fz 9 lb beans kidney #10 1 lb sugar; brown, 2 lb 1/4 c vinegar cider 2 1/3 tb salt table 5lb Instructions 1. PICK OVER BEANS REMOVING DISCOLORED BEANS AND FOREIGN MATTER. WASH BEANS THOROUGHLY. 2. COVER WITH WATER. BRING TO A BOIL. BOIL 2 MINUTES. TURN OFF HEAT. 3. COVER; LET SOAK 1 HOUR. 4. BRING BEANS TO A BOIL; ADD MORE WATER IF NECESSARY TO KEEP BEANS COVERED. SIMMER 1 1/2 HOURS OR UNTIL TENDER (NOT MUSHY). 5. DRAIN BEANS. RESERVE LIQUID AND BEANS. 6. COMBINE SALT, MUSTARD FLOUR, BROWN SUGAR, VINEGAR, MOLASSES, RESERVED LIQUID AND WATER, AND BACON. ADD TO BEANS; MIX WELL. 7. POUR ABOUT 20 LB 2 OZ (7 1/2 QT) BEAN MIXTURE INTO EACH LIGHTLY GREASED PAN; COVER. IF CONVECTION OVEN IS USED, BAKE AT 325 DEGREE F, 1 HOUR TO 1 HOUR 15 MINUTES (OR UNTIL SAUCE IS JUST BELOW SURFACE OF BEANS) ON HIGH FAN, CLOSED VENT. UNCOVER; STIR; BAKE ADDITIONAL Native Ways that Buffalo Bird Woman had beans Ama'ca Di'he?, or Beans-Boiled. The beans were boiled in a clay pot with a piece of buffalo fat, or some bone grease. If the beans were dried beans, they were boiled a little longer than squash is boiled-a half hour or more. Spring salt, or other seasoning, was not used. Green beans, shelled from the pod, were sometimes prepared thus boiled with buffalo fat or bone grease; but green beans did not have to be boiled quite as long as dried beans. Green Beans Boiled in the Pod. Green beans in the pod we boiled and ate as a vegetable from the time they came in until fall; but we did not plant beans, as we did corn, to make them come in late in the season, that we might then eat them green. Green beans in the pod were boiled in a clay pot, with a little fat thrown in. Pods and seeds were eaten together. But a green bean pod has in it two little strings that are not very good to eat. At meal time the boiled pod was taken up in the fingers and carried to the eater's mouth. At one end of the pod is always a kind of little hook; the unbroken pod was taken into the mouth with this little hook forward, between the teeth; and the eater, seizing the little hook between thumb and finger, drew it out of his mouth with the two little strings that were always attached to the hook. Green Corn and Beans. Pounded green shelled corn was often boiled with green beans, shelled from the pod. tenzicut