Succotash – Old Fashioned Butter Beans
with Fresh Corn
A country dish I
remember from my childhood in southern New England is succotash, a combination
of baby lima beans simmered with fresh corn kernels. It turns out the
combination of corn and beans goes back much further, to the indigenous peoples
of the New England region. It was adopted into the earliest cuisine of the
European colonists, and showed up at many Thanksgiving dinners. Its name
derives from a word in the language of the Narragansett people, who once
inhabited what’s now Rhode Island.
I was reminded of succotash recently when writing an article about Brunswick Stew, a Southern dish in which the two succotash vegetables, cooked together, show up prominently. And then I had occasion to actually make succotash after all these decades when I was tasked with cooking butter beans (w
hich are in fact small lima beans) for a family gathering and thought about adding corn off the cob. It was a big hit with several in the family, and gave me a twinge of nostalgia. Though it’s no longer familiar to a lot of people, especially outside New England, succotash is still a good dish.
Here’s a recipe that
will serve six as a side vegetable.
1 (12-ounce) bag frozen
butter beans or baby lima beans
1/2 cup water, plus more
as needed
1/2 teaspoon salt, plus
more to taste
1/4 teaspoon ground
black pepper
2 large ears fresh corn
on the cob
2 tablespoons olive oil
or vegetable oil
Heat a small pot with
1/2 cup water. When it boils, add the frozen beans, salt and pepper. Stir well.
When the pot comes a boil again, reduce the heat to low, cover the pot and
simmer/steam the beans. Stir frequently and add a little water as needed to
keep 1/4 inch or so in the bottom of the pot. Cook until beans are tender, 10
minutes or more.
While the beans are
simmering, shuck the corn and remove as much corn silk as possible. With a
sharp knife slice off the kernels, holding each cob upright in a shallow bowl
to catch the corn as it’s cut off.
When the beans are
tender, add the corn kernels and bring back just to a boil, adding a little
water if needed to keep 1/4 inch or so in the bottom of the pot. The corn
should simmer 1 1/2 to 2 minutes. Taste a few kernels to check that the corn is
done. Do not over cook.
Remove from the heat.
Holding the lid on the pot, tip the pot above the sink to drain off most of the
cooking water. Add oil to the beans and corn, mix well, and taste. If salt is
needed, mix it in.
Serve now, or after
cooling, reheat it in a casserole bowl in the microwave before serving.

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