Not because it's vegan but because it has too many ingredients. People don't want a recipe with 20 to 30 ingredients.
A reader e-mailed that and I was thinking, "Green Bean Casserole is a popular dish, sure this could be interesting." Then I saw all the ingredients and could picture the e-mails, "Trina, I'm a beginning cook. What the heck are you trying to do to me?"
But I will note this one with less than 10 ingredients:
2 cups onion, chopped
1 1/3 cups green pepper, chopped
1 14 ounce) can stewed tomatoes
3/4 cup salsa
1/2 tablespoon garlic
2 tablespoons cumin
2 (15 ounce) cans black beans, drained
8 corn tortillas, divided
1 1/2 cups shredded vegan cheese, divided
1.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. In a large skillet over medium heat,
combine first 6 ingredients (through cumin), bringing the mixture to a
boil. Reduce heat and simmer uncovered for 5 minutes.
2. Stir in beans. Spread 1/3 of the bean mixture over the bottom of a 13x9" pan. Top that with 1/2 the tortillas, overlapping as necessary and 1/2 the cheese.
3. Add another 1/3 of the bean mixture, then remaining tortillas and bean mixture. Cover and bake for 30 minutes or until heated through.
4. Sprinkle with remaining cheese and let stand for 10 minutes. Garnish with shredded lettuce and chopped tomatoes.
For more of a Mexican flair, add slices of avocado on top or your favorite guacamole. This is wonderful if you're in a south-of-the-border mood. Add a little Spanish rice and a glass of your favorite sangria for a complete and tasty meal.
2. Stir in beans. Spread 1/3 of the bean mixture over the bottom of a 13x9" pan. Top that with 1/2 the tortillas, overlapping as necessary and 1/2 the cheese.
3. Add another 1/3 of the bean mixture, then remaining tortillas and bean mixture. Cover and bake for 30 minutes or until heated through.
4. Sprinkle with remaining cheese and let stand for 10 minutes. Garnish with shredded lettuce and chopped tomatoes.
For more of a Mexican flair, add slices of avocado on top or your favorite guacamole. This is wonderful if you're in a south-of-the-border mood. Add a little Spanish rice and a glass of your favorite sangria for a complete and tasty meal.
Preparation Time:
15 minutes
Cooking Time:
Servings:
8
If you missed the news, Best Buy has announced they're going to fire another 2,400 people. This on top of the awful jobs report released this morning by the Labor Dept. If you think you understand how bad it is, click here and look at NPR's charts and read Lam Thuy Vo's article which really illuminates.
Meanwhile remember the Barclays issue? Well Stephen Beard (PRI's Marketplace) reports London fears it will mean it's no longer the center of the financial world and that Wall St. will become that. This despite the fact that Bob Diamond who was running Barclays is an American citizen. Add in that there are e-mails and this goes beyond Barclays and probably includes the US as well.
This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot" for Friday:
Friday,
July 6, 2012. Chaos and violence continue, Moqtada al-Sadr delivers a
major speech on Iraqi television, Osama al-Nujaifi calls out the
slander State of Law's tossed at him, and more.
Starting with peace. In the US, the Iraqi & American Reconciliation Project is planning a dinner to honor Iraqi-American Sami Rasouli who has done much work for and in Iraq. As the director of Muslim Peacemaker Teams, he has worked in Iraq with Iraqi refugees. The dinner in his honor is planned for July 17th at the Crescent Moon banquest hall in Minneapolis. And you can click here for a January 2010 interview with Sami Rasouli that Matthew Rothschild did for Progressive Radio.
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Reuters notes
a Ramadi car bombing claimed 7 lives and left twenty people injured and
quotes an unnamed police officer stating, "Bodies were scattered
everywhere and some houses were destroyed." Alsumaria reports 1 person was shot dead outside his Baquba home by an unknown assailant using a machine gun and police shot dead a supect on a highway leading into Baghdad from the south. Anwar Msarbat (AK News) reports a Hit car bombing which claimed 3 lives and left six people injured. All Iraqi News reports on the Hit bombing but insists it was a roadside bombing. In addition, AK News reports
that Shahla Omar Aziz set herself on fire Thursday night, buring 70% of
her body, after learning her husband had sold their home to pay of a
debt.
The political crisis continues in Iraq. As a result, Moqtada al-Sadr gave a major address today at 8:00 pm Baghdad time and it was carried by satellite TV.
al-Sadr is a Shi'ite cleric whose followers include 40 MPs in
Parliament. He has has had a long and difficult relationship with
both the Bush White House and the Barack White House.
All Iraqi News reports
he declared that three presidencies should be limited to two terms.and
that this is needed to ensure that Iraq does not experience another
dictatorship. The three presidencies are the President, the Prime
Minister and the Speaker of Parliament. Such a limit would mean Jalal
Talabani, current Iraqi President, would be done as would Nouri
al-Maliki. Only Speaker Osama al-Nujaifi would be elegible for another
term. When the Arab Spring swept through the MidEast in early 2011,
Nouri al-Maliki swore that he wouldn't seek a third term. A day later,
his spokesperson modified that statement to insist he wouldn't seek a
third term if he had not achieved in his second term. Then, almost a
year later, his attorney declared there is nothing preventing Nouri from
seeking a third term. Moqtada stressed that the Iraqi people need
security and that means there needs to be a Minister of Defense,
Minister of National Security and Minister of Interior (the article
actually says Intelligence but it is Interior and this second article makes that point clear).
Nouri was supposed to nominate people to be heads of the security
ministries and have them confirmed by the end of December 2010.
Instead, Nouri has failed to do so and with violence continuing to rise,
that's a serious failure. Moqtada also discussed how Iraqis need
electricity they can count on and water they can drink and jobs, they
need jobs. Those are three demands Iraqis made when they protested
in the streets in February 2011. For those who have forgotten, this is
not just when Nouri announced he wouldn't seek a third term but also
when he announced that, if Iraqis would give him 100 days, then he would
address these issues. Moqtada asked his followers to give Nouri the
100 days. After 100 days, Nouri failed to deliver and pretended as
though he'd never made the promises.
In
addition, Moqtada spoke about Iraq needing to get along with neighboring
countries. Nouri has alienated Turkey -- in fact, Nouri's constant
verbal attacks and constant lies about Turkey have resulted in the
Turkish government becoming much closer to the Kurdish Regional
Government and more and more distant from the Baghdad-based government.
He's alienated the Arab neighbors and this was on display during the
Arab League Summit. Dropping back to the March 30th snapshot:
There are 22 countries in the Arab League. Hamza Hendawi and Lara Jakes (AP) put
the number of Arab League leaders who attended at 10 and they pointed
out that Qatar, Saudi Arabi, Morocco and Jordan were among those who
sent lower-level officials to the summit. Patrick Martin (Globe & Mail) explains
that Sheik Hamad Bin Jassem Bin Jabr Al Thani (Prime Minister of Qatar)
declared on television that Qatar's "low level of representation" was
meant to send "a 'message' to Iraq' majority Shiites to stop what he
called the marginalization of its minority Sunnis." Yussef Hamza (The National) offers,
"Iraq has looked to the summit, the first it has hosted in a
generation, to signal its emergence from years of turmoil, American
occupation and isolation. It wanted the summit to herald its return to
the Arab fold. But the large number of absentees told a different
story." That's reality.
And let's deal with reality such as when people talk about things that they don't know s**t about. Social Media Queen Jane Arraf Tweeted with her male followers about the speech:
That
second one? If you click "expand" you'll find a man (of course,
Twitter's nothing but online dating apparently who ridicules Moqtada's
idea about a corruption.
He has to ridicule it
because, see, he wrote an 'analysis' that was published today and it
turned to s**t the minute Moqtada started speaking. Again, these
so-called 'experts' really aren't experts. They don't what they're
talking about, I have no idea how our world got so screwed up that these
people get to speak.
But did Moqtada say what Jane says he did?
No.
Jane, you should embarrassed and ashamed of yourself.
The fact that you have X number of characters in Twitter is no excuse.
What
Moqtada stated about corruption was that it needed to be addressed with
a full government assault -- including executive orders, including
judicial committees, including Parliament and new bodies that are not
about partisanship, ethnicity or ideology.
I'm
sorry that someone offered masturbation in text form and it was
published today and that their hypothesis about Moqtada -- not "theory,"
theories can be tested with certain expected results -- turned out to
be trash. And if you'd own that, I wouldn't even be mentioning it. I
saw that piece of garbage this morning and chose to ignore it. But if
you're going to make little jokes implying that Moqtada doesn't know
what he's talking about, you're begging for someone to say you're full
of s**t.
And Jane Arraf did an awful job in
'reporting.' This was a major speech. We'll be returning to it on
Monday. Two Tweets? That's embarrassing. That the second one leaves
the wrong impression, distorts what he said, that's bad journalism.
In other political news, Karwan Yusuf (AK News) reports
that rumors of Saleh al-Mutlaq replacing Ayad Allawi as the leader of
Iraqya have been called "baseless" in a statement Iraqiya sent out which
notes that the false rumors are meant to weaken Iraqiya. The rumors
never should have had traction. Allawi is Shi'ite. al-Mutlaq is
Sunni. Iraqiya is a mixed slate but with the crisis in Iraq having a
Shi'ite as a leader gave them a credibility with other blocs that
al-Mutlaq wouldn't have. In addition, al-Mutlaq was not allowed to run
in 2010 because Nouri's Justice and Accountability Commission was
calling him a Ba'athist. (His name was only cleared at the end of
2010.) Saleh al-Mutlaq as a leader could easily be dimissed as he
unfairly was in 2010. As we've noted many times before, Nouri's State
of Law excells at rumors. Little else.
They use rumors to attack and distract. From yesterday's snapshot:
We
haven't covered this but, as usual, State of Law tries to distract. So
they've got a 'movement' to question Speaker of Parliament Osama
al-Nujaifi who they have spread rumors about (specifically he allegedly
has millions -- over 20 million dollars -- and they want to know where
it came from). That they want to distract with. And they may succeed.
Nouri has a lot of enablers in the press and certainly in the United
States. But you really don't expect to see the always
screaming-their-heads-off-about-what-Nouri-just-did-to-them Communist
Party rush to prop up Nouri. This is truly a very sad moment but it
does explain why the Communist Party is and has been meaningless in
Iraqi politics. 'They opposed Saddam Hussein!' Yes, they did. With
the same sort of weak-spined opposition they've offered Nouri. They
apparently exist solely to mislead the Iraqi people into believing there
is a token of opposition in the country.
First off, it's twenty billion, not twenty million, I was wrong. This evening All Iraqi News reported
that Osama al-Nujaifi's office has issued a statement calling out the
slander and distortions about him and that he may resort to the court to
stop malicious slander. All Iraqi News notes he did not
identify what the slander was. He may be referring to the twenty
billion rumor. He may be referring to something else. State of Law has
a made a point to spread one rumor after another about their political
rivals.
The last weeks have seen some achievements for Iraq on the world stage. Zakaria Muhammed (Kurdish Globe) reports
Ahmed Maeed, whose professional name is Ahmed Rambo, now holds the post
of president of the World Amateur Body Building Association branch of
Iraq. Muhammed explains:
Majeed, 37,
began lifting weights in 1988. He didn't tell his parents who had taken
a dim view of the sport, regarding it as alien to Kurdish culture and
tradition. Within two years, Majeed had won gold in the Iraqi
Bodybuilding Championships in the 75 kilo category.
By
this time, he had earned his nickname for resembling Sylvester Stallone
and wearing bandanas on his head like the American actor's Rambo
character.
Majeed left Iraqi Kurdistan in
1995 to escape the bitter Kurdish civil war, but continued to compete
successfully in Germany. He returned in 2004, and led a group of
Kurdish bodybuilders to the 2009 Asian Bodybuilding Championships in
Thailand.
That's one. The second is Shene Ako. Rudaw notes, "Last week, Shene Ako, 19, was crowned Miss Kurdistan 2012 at Erbil's Rotana Hotel. Chosen from 12 contestants." Rudaw has the first interview with Shene Ako.
Rudaw: What do you want to tell Ranya and its women?
Shene:
To all women in Kurdistan, not only those in Ranya, I want to say that
we are very pretty and smart women. Don't hide that. Step forward. Care
about your beauty but also care about your inner self. If you are
beautiful inside, then you will look beautiful on the outside as well.
Everybody is beautiful.
Rudaw:
Do you feel that Kurdish women cannot advance because of tradition?
What do you tell parents who do not allow their girls to step forward?
Shene:
I want to say I am very proud of my parents because they allow me to do
many things. I want to open the road for Kurdish girls because I know
that, if the road is opened for them, they will feel proud about their
parents and advance.
Rudaw: Have you had any plastic surgery?
Shene:
No. There was a plastic surgeon at the contest (judge panel). But I
have not had any plastic surgery, and I believe if I'd had even a small
amount of surgery, I wouldn't have won.
Al Bawaba observes,
"Beauty pageants have been absent from Iraq for decades. During the
time of the monarchy, which was overthrown in 1958, they were held in
social clubs, especially in the southern port city of Basra."
Going back to the United States, Saturday, Austin, Texas will see a parade. Tara Merrigan (Austin American-Statesman) reports,
"The parade, which will start at 9 a.m. at the Congress Avenue Bridge
and end at the Capitol, will include the 36th Division Infantry Band
from Camp Mabry, a Reserve Officers' Training Corps color guard from
Westwood High School, motorcycle clubs, muscle car clubs and a roller
derby club. The event will feature veterans from the Iraq War and
previous wars." This will be followed by a veterans jobs fair. The
following day it's Portsmouth, New Hampshire's turn. Laurenne Ramsdell (Foster's Daily Democrat) notes,
"The Welcome Home Parade will proceed from Junkins Avenue onto
Pleasant Street, then onto State Street, Wright Avenue, Daniels Street
and then through Market Square. The parade will continue onto Congress
Street and Fleet Street before it loops back toward Junkins Avenue."
This Sunday parade will also be followed by a jobs fair, held in "the
lower parking lot at City Hall." These are among the many parades that
have been taking place across the country. If you know of one in your
area, feel free to note in an e-mail and it will be included here. A
parade in Alabama did not go so well recently and it's thought that one
of the reasons was lack of awareness that it was taking place.