Cuban Black Beans
Cuba (Spanish colonial sofrito tradition with African bean cookery)
Frijoles negros — Cuban black beans — are the island's most culturally loaded preparation: black beans slow-cooked with a sofrito of green pepper, onion, garlic, cumin, and oregano, finished with a splash of dry sherry and a final 'refrito' of raw sofrito stirred in just before serving to provide a layer of fresh aromatics over the long-cooked depth. The beans must be cooked from dried — canned beans produce a thin, insubstantial sauce without the starchy cooking liquid that gives authentic frijoles negros their characteristic thick, syrup-like consistency. The finish of the dish is as important as the cook: a final spoonful of sofrito stirred through at the last moment brightens the dark, slow-cooked base.