Free: Anasazi beans - Living History - Gardening Seeds & Bulbs - Listia.com Auctions for Free Stuff

FREE: Anasazi beans - Living History

Anasazi beans - Living History
A member of Listia gave this away for free!
Do you want FREE stuff like this?
Big yes    Big no
Listia is 100% Free to use
Over 100,000 items are FREE on Listia
Declutter your home & save money
La times

"Listia is like EBay, except everything is free" - Los Angeles Times
Techcrunch

"An Awesome Way To Give And Get Free Stuff" - Michael Arrington, TechCrunch
This Stuff is Free Too:
Description

The listing, Anasazi beans - Living History has ended.

Free Shipping - 15 beans

Anasazi beans are small, kidney-shaped, purple and white beans in the same family as pinto beans. They are used in Latin American and Southwestern cuisines, and have a mild, sweet flavor that pairs with a mealy texture. The beans cook much more quickly than regular beans, and they appear to have been a part of the human diet in the Americas for thousands of years. They are also marketed as New Mexico cave beans, Aztec beans, New Mexico appaloosas, and Jacob's Cattle beans.

The story of Anasazi beans varies, depending on who is telling it. In popular mythology, the beans were uncovered by an anthropologist, who discovered a 1,500 year old tightly sealed jar of them at a dig in New Mexico. Some of the beans germinated, and the new variety of bean entered cultivation again. Since most botanists agree that most beans are unable to germinate after approximately 50 years, it is more probable that the beans remained in constant cultivation in the Southwest, probably in Native American gardens, and that they were picked up by companies looking for new “boutique beans.”
Questions & Comments
Picture?type=square&access token=105469222550%7cd qfyki0ggnddypmnoq3ykmtsyq
may I ask if you have a native american heritage and if so what nation? mine is Cherokee
Dec 22nd, 2013 at 1:45:32 AM PST by
Picture?type=square&access token=105469222550%7cd qfyki0ggnddypmnoq3ykmtsyq
Actually, we're not sure. There were rumors but the great and great great grandparents kept it quiet. Just by looking at my sister and I you would think so. The dentist said I have the scooped incisors that marks native americans. But my European family's been on this continent since the early 1600's so anything's possible.
Dec 22nd, 2013 at 3:09:18 PM PST by

Anasazi beans - Living History is in the Home & Garden | Gardening | Gardening Seeds & Bulbs category