CATEGORY |
CUISINE |
TAG |
YIELD |
Vegetables |
|
Holiday, Southern, Texas |
1 |
Servings |
INGREDIENTS
2 |
c |
Shelled black-eyed peas |
1 |
c |
Vegetable oil |
1/3 |
c |
Wine vinegar |
1 |
|
Clove garlic |
1 |
t |
Salt |
|
|
Ground black pepper, to |
|
|
taste |
1 |
T |
Parsley, minced |
1 |
|
Onion, thinly sliced |
1 |
ds |
Tabasco sauce, optional |
INSTRUCTIONS
In a medium saucepan, cover shelled peas with salted water. Bring to a
boil, then simmer for 30-40 minutes or until peas are tender but firm.
Prepare marinade while peas are cooking. Combine oil, vinegar, garlic
clove, salt, pepper and parsley (I add Tabasco sauce). When peas are
done, drain and toss, while warm, with sliced onion. Pour marinade
over both. Refrigerate for at least 2 days and up to 2 weeks. Remove
garlic clove after the first day. Drain before serving. Makes 4 salad
servings or 6-8 condiment servings. NOTES : From the recipe
introduction: "About 75 miles southeast of Dallas lies the small town
of Athens, Texas, where the best black-eyed peas around are grown.
In July, when the peas reach perfection, the people of Athens hold
their annual celebration, the Black-eyed Pea Jamboree. This is a good
time to make up a batch of Marinated Black-eyed Peas -- some to enjoy
right away and some to put away for later. They make a delightful
change-of-pace summer salad and a savory condiment on into fall and
winter." This dish (and some variations) are also known as Texas
Caviar or Hill Country Caviar. Recipe by: Cooking Texas Style, 1993,
p. 45 Posted to recipelu-digest Volume 01 Number 422 by Lou Parris
<lbparris@earthlink.net> on Dec 30, 1997
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