Your Email:
Your Name:
To:
Subject:
Message: O’odham Pink Bean The O’odham Pink Bean is a bush bean native to the desert borderlands of Sonora and Arizona. This bean has been an important resource for the O’odham people since the early eighteenth century. Reports from the early 1900s indicate that, as a staple crop of the Tohono O’odham, nearly two million pounds were produced annually. Unfortunately, this highly cherished crop?that was once widely cultivated across the southwest?has few remaining producers. The bean is a medium-sized, uniformly colored, pink bean that is moderately drought resistant and heat tolerant. When the late summer rains come across the Southern Arizona desert, this tasty, creamy-textured bean ripens and is ready for harvest. A traditional harvest includes uprooting the entire plant, leaving it out to dry and then threshing the plant with sticks to remove the pods before they are winnowed in the wind. Once harvested, the protein-rich beans are boiled or baked with meat or other animal fats. To read more, follow this link: http://www.slowfoodusa.org/index.php/programs/ark_product_detail/oodham_pink_bean
Please enter the word you see in the image below:
Find out about open positions and internships as Slow Food USA.
Find out more.
68 Summit Street, 2B Brooklyn, NY 11231 Tel: 718 260-8000 or 877 SlowFoo(d) Fax: 718 260-8068
© 2010 Slow Food USA - All Rights Reserved