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I was told two things from my people's . It's good luck when cooked for new years .the other is something about helping out with blood pressure not too sure about the second half
Black eye peas and collard greens on your stove for the New Years for “Wealth & Prosperity”!!! Not sure if it’s true but it’s something that I was raised with and I always do it
We eat black peas for the New Years first meal to bring in the year with the hope of prosperity and peace… after cleaning the house for the New Years as well. It’s a black American tradition.
We always had blackeyed peas cooked with hog jowls - smoked. and collard greens for New Years day . . . for luck and good fortune the next year. I grew up on the farm around Raleigh NC , , , We also had a thing about who would come into your house first on the new year - a man? good luck. A woman, look out. My dad took this seriously and got mad at my aunt for coming over early one new years day.
AB , you know you can burn, I like how you simplify all your dishes. I am 76 years old, so I know how to fix some black eye peas and collard greens but you make it sound and look so easy and delicious. Continue to make things simplified for the beginners and you help us old people sometime too. May God continue to bless you and your family for the new year I am so happy I ran up on your channel you are an excellent chef, not a cook but a chef. I can see you on the food network . Peace!!! 😋
I’m fixing this recipe today for my 82 year old mother in law who says she doesn’t like them. I’ve made them before and they were tasty but never grated the onions or used butter. I’m sure this is gonna take the flavor over the top! Thanks AB for all your pro tips you give us! Your recipes never fail!
Great BLACK EYED PEAS AB! The older people taught me that black eyed peas on New Year’s Day meant GOOD LUCK and a young lady at work today also reminded me that any GREEN VEGETABLES 🥬 means MONEY all year as well! 😊 Personally I just like how they taste all year long! 😋😋
The only thing that I do differently is to add 3 cloves of garlic, also add your favorite - garlic butter, and a medium-sized smoked ham hock. DEE-licious!!
AB … Oh my goodness!!! I gained two pounds just watching this video!!! Beyond outstanding!!! Would I have used a different meat? Respectfully, yes. Equal parts smoked ham and peas PLUS the ham hock along with three cloves of minced garlic added to the onions when they were about 3/4 ready for the broth. Serve this with collard greens cooked with lean smoked jowl and a plate of sliced tomatoes and cucumbers plus cornbread and shucks, I just gained another pound!!!! Arrrrgh! Happy New Year!!!! God bless!!! Chuck Knight from Buffalo, Texas. 🤠🐩✝️🙏🎄🎅☃️
If a person don't know how to cook they will certainly learn from you ab as I have learned a lot thanks from the soul of my heart keep up the good works. Truely blessed. It's like when your taste testing at the end of each presentation I know it's good by your. You make it simple for everyone that's what I love about it. I tell everyone about you.
This white girl whose not a very good cook yet has learned so much from you this year. I love how you explain why you do all the things you do because it really helps. Happy New Year to you and your family. Please don't stop making these videos.
I’m a Ghanaian of the Erveh/Ewe tribe. My people brought the cultivation and consuming of black eye peas to not only the Ghanaian culinary culture, but it was also popularized all across the West Afrikan Coast by many of our kinsfolk who settled in the Yoruba lands, Benin and Togo. In fact I smiled all through your video because, you proved my late grandmother ‘👑Akuyo Mansa’ right, about those stories she told us under the Afrikan moonlight, about the Sons and Daughters of Afrika in the the Americas and Islands being of Hebraic descent. 🤔 Seeing how important cooking this dish for the New year is to my people in the American diaspora, made me realize that nobody can obscure who you Truly are. In Ervehland, this dish is prepared and eaten thick, drizzled with spiced palm oil and pre-toasted or instant cassava grits, aka ‘gari’, with a side of fried ripe plantains… Our history runs deep as a people, and no amount of oppression and revisionist history can ever change that. 🤗Just watching you cook these beans so thick like an Erveh tribesman and using the recipe we call ‘Veh-yi’ in the Ewelands of West Afrika was astonishing. The seasoned meat is surely an American adaptation but I know you are aware that Afrikans brought these beans to the Americas. These wonderful beans sustained us on our Journey from the land now called Israel, where we Trekked after decades of invasions, which led us to flee and settle in Abyssinia (Ethiopia), then in the Nile Valley, Msraem (Egypt) Aka Keme also spelled Kemet, and thence to Mali, Sudan, then finally settling along the Gold Coast of Afrika. I am not preaching the so-called Hebrew Israelite doctrine at all, because my people owned that land long before 1946 when that nation was created. If you want to hear anything closest to the most ancient form of the Hebrew language in this world, speak to any West Afrikan of Erveh/Ewe origins. During our Exodus from the land now being fought over (which still sits on Mother Afrika’s tectonic plate), we were the only tribe obsessed with growing and harvesting these same beans my people hold so dear in the USA as a bringer of good fortune and that is because, it sustained our, Afrikan Ancestors centuries ago, after the people now known as the Jews and others like the Assyrians, left us no option but to flee after decades of invasions. My parents are Ghanaian and believe it or not, the most authentic Hebraic history, language, and culture can be found along the West Afrikan Coast aka ‘ The Gulf of Guinea.’ I hope you are not overwhelmed by my comment; but I had to do this because the evidence was far too glaring to ignore… We are not Israelites but rather the descendants of the real owners of that land being fought over… Have a very happy and prosperous New Year. 🙏🏾👌🏾
Great camera work ... Don't allow minor distractions to deter you from achieving MAJOR GOALS Know what to ignore and what to focus on Use your energy WISELY remain calm... 2022
I love your cooking I will be coming to Cali and will stop in to Rancho Cucamonga to try your bbq can't wait. I have been hooked since seeing your Rueben grilled pastrami love that
I love to make mine with the ham bone left over from Christmas. The salt from the ham is perfect. I’ve used a honey baked ham bone too and that adds a smoky sweet and salty flavor to it. My great grandmother used to add okra on top but I don’t like mushy okra so I don’t do that. I have never started with butter and onion so I’m going to try that this year. Love your videos!
He done taught me how to make the beans and I’m excited to try it. I’m gonna make some oven baked turkey wings with rice, black eyed peas, and collard greens ❤❤
I love the tradition of greens for cash and black-eyed peas for luck. I eat this anyway, so it is a good excuse to start the year off with a great meal. He's right about cornbread and sweet tea goes with this. Happy New Year everyone!
Years ago, I had an uncle who grew fresh black eyed peas. Let me tell you, I’ve eaten dried black eyed peas my whole life, but there is nothing more delicious than the fresh. Oddly enough, I found fresh frozen black eyed peas for a few tears after that but not in a very long time. I don’t know why but my Mama always said we had to have them on New Year’s Day (she was born and raised in the south). Thanks for everything you do to share your expertise!
Love black eye peas. And this recipe is amazing and easy. Will be making these for the traditional New Year's Day dinner. Pork chops (symbolizing to look ahead at the future, because a pig can't look back). Collard greens (symbolizing good fortune and money). Black eye peas (symbolizing to see a good future).
I was raised that BEPeas stood for pennies and greens stood for dollars. Pork is a must like chits, ham hocks, chops, BBQ ribs, 🐔 wings fried or BBQ'd,and 🐟 🐠 🎏 cooked any way, tuna salad, salmon patties, fried 🐟 🐠 fish . Just seafood.
Made this tonight straight from your recipe with smoked turkey wings Southern fried chicken wings rice collard and turnip greens and buttermilk cornbread muffins.
And that’s how we eat ours is with rice 🍚 that’s why I love your channel. You definitely know what you’re doing. Remind me of my great grandmother, and great aunts and I learned from them and I’ve learned some things from you. Thanks for sharing all of your delicious recipes
This is how I cook my black eye peas. This year, I will try the butter with the onion. I don't cook mine that low. I have a little more juice. God bless you and your family. Have a great new year. Keep making those recipes. You have a fan for life.
I make mine almost the same. I always cook my meat overnight and the broth from that meat is so good. I also add onions, and trio Peppers ( green, yellow, red) I like my peas with some juice so not so thick so I can SOP!! it up with that good buttery cornbread. But yes yours look scrumptious also
I cooked the recipe on New Year's Eve, 12/31/2021, and the Black Eyed Peas were delicious. This was my first time soaking beans overnight. I plan to use this method again. Also, no bean splitting LOL! Everybody loved them! Thanks for sharing.
I made this with a smoked chicken, thank you for this recipe!!!! Even my wife went back for seconds and my son and the rest of my family ask for it with some cornbread, thanks AB
I was raised in Georgia, and we ate a lot of beans, especially. Black eye peas, and. Corn 🍞 bread, sweet tea, and rice. Do not forget the greens. Thank you AB.
A.B. I’m born and raised in Mobile Alabama… my parents are both from Lowndes County Ala… superstitions and tradition is what country people grow up on… don’t get me wrong, CHRIST gets all the glory!!! But them black eyed peas on new year’s are believed to usher in the season of Prosperity, which includes wealth, favor, and good health!!! It’s been a southern tradition for many decades as you already know. Thanks for the awesome cooking videos 🙏🏾 GOD Bless!!!
We always used hog jowls with our black-eyed peas, but I bet that turkey is a mouthful of goodness! I noticed you were using the Swanson's stock-- they also make an unsalted version. If you were using hog jowls, that's the version I would use to balance out that salt. I also put a bay leaf or two in mine, with some savory and thyme-- the two best herbs for beans and peas. MMM-mmm! Here's to a happy and prosperous New Year to you and your family! :-)
It's tradition to start the new year with black eyed peas for good luck. I'm so grateful you're teaching these time-honored recipes. Thank you! Much love.
Blackeye peas for good luck & collards for money. I really love your videos AB. Not from the South but having these for New Year just for tradition. If good luck comes to me nice. Life is bad times and good times for all of us. Good times for you AB.
I was brought up for New Years to eat black eye peas and fresh greens a new blessing the greens was for money and the black eye peas was for blessing for the new years.
Eat some black eyed peas on New Year’s Day , for good luck in the new year 🙌🏻💯🥳. Thank you for sharing your recipe. I’m excited to try it. I never thought about using smoked turkey.
I like a little black pepper sprinkled in mine. My grandma added black pepper to all her beans and peas: Large lima beans, great Northern beans, pinto beans, baby lima beans, string beans, black-eyed peas, june peas,....lol. My fav is great Northern beans with smoked ham cooked in them. 😋
LOOKING GOOD 👍👌 THANKS 😊 FOR BRINGING US NEW IDEAS AND NEW FLAVORS ON THE RECIPES. THANKS FOR TAKING THE TIME OUT OF YOUR PRECIOUS DAY AND SHOWING US AMAZING RECIPES. HAVE CONTINUED SUCCESS AND A JOYOUS AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR TO YOU AND YOUR FAMILY.
As a child my parents my grand parents great grandparents always cook black-eye peas for the New Year. It was never stated why, but to me it was a Southern thing. Now I hear that it’s for good luck? I just make them because it’s a tradition along with other dishes for the New Year
This is one of my favorite meals my mom makes. My favorite way to eat it is to mix in the cornbread with some Louisiana hot sauce. Hands down one of the greatest comfort meals of all time, especially during a cold winter.
We eat black eye peas on new years because they are suppose to bring you good luck all year, the rest of the year we eat them because they're delicious.
This has always been a must-have for New Years. I make mine with spicy sausage and add white pepper and crushed red pepper flakes. It’s spicy but that’s how my Grams rolled. Doesn’t anyone call it Hoppin John anymore?
I don’t think anyone knows…it’s all mythology at this point. The first I heard was a one legged man came hoppin when his wife said peas were on…who knows?🧐🧐
@@sondranelsoncrosier9701 I should have said I don't recall who taught me to call it that. lol The bit about the one legged man has piqued my curiosity though. I guess I know what I'll be doing today.
I love black eyed peas with rice. I add the rice towards the end of the cooking, thus the starch from the rice thickens it. Learned that from my grandmother who was a professional cook. Happy blessed new year to you and your family. Btw, it don't have to be New Year for me to cook this southern staple. 😋
Omg lord I couldn’t stand eating black eye 👁 peas growing up, but with this video my GOD I want to make some right now! Looks delicious and simple. Thank you!👍🏾
Man love all you do and all you teach us!! Love to watch you do your thing!!! Thank you so very much! Jeff Davis, Moss Point, Mississippi. God Bless!!!
We make black 👀 peas on New Years to bring in prosperity for the year. I understand it's a hoodoo tradition but yall can let me know if it's just tradition or a cultural thing.
This takes me back to my childhood when my granny and auntie were making black eyed peas. Always was told if u make them for the New Year u will have good luck
..bout to make this right now ..thank you AB💥👊🏼💯💥💥 The symbolism behind black-eyed peas tradition for New Years is twofold. First, the peas are said to resemble coins, symbolizing wealth and financial abundance in the year ahead. Second, their hearty nature represents resilience and sustenance during challenging times. Happy New Year everyone & please BE SAFE out here✨️🙏🏼🖤✨️✨️
That looks ridiculously good! I had already planned and set out some black eyed peas, and smoked turkey necks for New year's Eve dinner(and for some good luck). Definitely gonna try this method. If I were to add greens, it would be collard greens to go with.
I always grate my onions in my beans and greens…..because I love love onions,I eat them raw…..never saw anyone else do that til I ran across your channel…..yummmmmmy🦶🏽
I eat blacked eyed peas because I love them. There is no particular time to eat what you love. I make them about every 3 months. And if I eat at a soul food restaurant, I always order themm.. yum yum ... great video! I'm watching now because I'm making them now with smoked ham hocks.
I am loving your new kitchen!!!! So many details flat screen in background your name etched in the cutting board … been a follower for years now. Congratulations
Been watching your channel for two years now! Taught me how to make so many things, including collard greens that everybody loves. 😏 Really enjoy your channel.
Thanks AB! I'm doing mine like this for New Year's Day! I have always been told the Black-eyed peas were for good luck throughout the rest of the year! My daughter posts the meals on Instagram!
You’re doing a fabulous job my brother and your method is very simple easy and quick I like quick and you’ve given me a lot of great tips this is your buddy Rob from Ohio I will continue watching you enjoy you very much.
Man this reminded me of how my grandmother used to do it. No mashing just low and slow until they thicken up on their own yea AB I know what I’m making this weekend.
When I was a little fellow my Mom used to put a dime in the bottom of our bowl for luck. Maybe it was to get us to eat all our food but maybe I’ve been lucky to make it 44 years on this earth.
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AB did you used to work at Guardian?
What kinda pot that is.
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Looks delicious Never cook dryer black eye peas maybe I tired them today and I always boil my Turkey necks separately Happy New Year's ✌🏽🙏🏼💞
I was told two things from my people's . It's good luck when cooked for new years .the other is something about helping out with blood pressure not too sure about the second half
Black eye peas and collard greens on your stove for the New Years for “Wealth & Prosperity”!!! Not sure if it’s true but it’s something that I was raised with and I always do it
Me too! Glory Collard Greens lol
Black eye peas for New Years absolutely! I'd rather have the collards but for some reason my family always insisted on cabbage.
Every New Years!
thats a bunch of crap! OK! just another excuse for the grocery store to sell more !
@@lesdavis1586 add a little vinegar and sugar 😋
We eat black peas for the New Years first meal to bring in the year with the hope of prosperity and peace… after cleaning the house for the New Years as well. It’s a black American tradition.
Yep yep!
I'm Italian and we always did the same thing. Thanks for a great tradition!! Have a very happy and prosperous new year!
@@mrmac123 You too Tony! I am glad that our traditions align on this! :)
That's right!
Didn't know this will hopefully adopt the tradition here in my house. Watching from Kenya
We always had blackeyed peas cooked with hog jowls - smoked. and collard greens for New Years day . . . for luck and good fortune the next year. I grew up on the farm around Raleigh NC , , , We also had a thing about who would come into your house first on the new year - a man? good luck. A woman, look out. My dad took this seriously and got mad at my aunt for coming over early one new years day.
AB , you know you can burn, I like how you simplify all your dishes. I am 76 years old, so I know how to fix some black eye peas and collard greens but you make it sound and look so easy and delicious. Continue to make things simplified for the beginners and you help us old people sometime too. May God continue to bless you and your family for the new year I am so happy I ran up on your channel you are an excellent chef, not a cook but a chef. I can see you on the food network . Peace!!! 😋
I can see him on the Food Network too.
Perfect personality & skills for the food network! Agreed.
It would be nice if that happened.
I'm 70 and I agree with Willie. Black eyed peas for good luck and greens for wealth. Best for you in 2022.
BALCK EYED PEAS , CORN BREAD , AND MAYBE SOME DEEP FRIED CATFISH ! OR EVEN SOME HUSH PUPPIES ,SOUNDS GOOD TO ME , AND I DON'T WANNA OVER TALK IT !!!!
I’m fixing this recipe today for my 82 year old mother in law who says she doesn’t like them. I’ve made them before and they were tasty but never grated the onions or used butter. I’m sure this is gonna take the flavor over the top! Thanks AB for all your pro tips you give us! Your recipes never fail!
Great BLACK EYED PEAS AB! The older people taught me that black eyed peas on New Year’s Day meant GOOD LUCK and a young lady at work today also reminded me that any GREEN VEGETABLES 🥬 means MONEY all year as well! 😊 Personally I just like how they taste all year long! 😋😋
The only thing that I do differently is to add 3 cloves of garlic, also add your favorite - garlic butter, and a medium-sized smoked ham hock. DEE-licious!!
Exactly 👍
AB … Oh my goodness!!! I gained two pounds just watching this video!!! Beyond outstanding!!! Would I have used a different meat? Respectfully, yes. Equal parts smoked ham and peas PLUS the ham hock along with three cloves of minced garlic added to the onions when they were about 3/4 ready for the broth. Serve this with collard greens cooked with lean smoked jowl and a plate of sliced tomatoes and cucumbers plus cornbread and shucks, I just gained another pound!!!! Arrrrgh! Happy New Year!!!! God bless!!! Chuck Knight from Buffalo, Texas. 🤠🐩✝️🙏🎄🎅☃️
I gotta try the garlic, but no swine for me
I add garlic and also a couple jalapeños for a little spicy kick
If a person don't know how to cook they will certainly learn from you ab as I have learned a lot thanks from the soul of my heart keep up the good works. Truely blessed. It's like when your taste testing at the end of each presentation I know it's good by your. You make it simple for everyone that's what I love about it. I tell everyone about you.
He seems like such a Sweetheart
Wealth and prosperity. Greens represent paper money and the beans are the change :)
Mmmmm …. I can smell it through the smell-a-vision! My black eye peas are soaking now! Got to have ‘‘em for good luck on New Years!
This white girl whose not a very good cook yet has learned so much from you this year. I love how you explain why you do all the things you do because it really helps. Happy New Year to you and your family. Please don't stop making these videos.
Who cares about you being a white girl? It doesn't carry any weight.
@@cherylfeaster7784 well the stereotype is we can't season food. But I'm doing my best to fix that.
@@bh6246 😂😂😂 Good job!
@@cherylfeaster7784 well you cared enough to comment though 🙄🙄🙄
Good job Beth
I like my black-eyed peas with sweet, stewed tomatoes...yummy!!!
I’m a Ghanaian of the Erveh/Ewe tribe. My people brought the cultivation and consuming of black eye peas to not only the Ghanaian culinary culture, but it was also popularized all across the West Afrikan Coast by many of our kinsfolk who settled in the Yoruba lands, Benin and Togo.
In fact I smiled all through your video because, you proved my late grandmother ‘👑Akuyo Mansa’ right, about those stories she told us under the Afrikan moonlight, about the Sons and Daughters of Afrika in the the Americas and Islands being of Hebraic descent. 🤔 Seeing how important cooking this dish for the New year is to my people in the American diaspora, made me realize that nobody can obscure who you Truly are.
In Ervehland, this dish is prepared and eaten thick, drizzled with spiced palm oil and pre-toasted or instant cassava grits, aka ‘gari’, with a side of fried ripe plantains…
Our history runs deep as a people, and no amount of oppression and revisionist history can ever change that.
🤗Just watching you cook these beans so thick like an Erveh tribesman and using the recipe we call ‘Veh-yi’ in the Ewelands of West Afrika was astonishing.
The seasoned meat is surely an American adaptation but I know you are aware that Afrikans brought these beans to the Americas.
These wonderful beans sustained us on our Journey from the land now called Israel, where we Trekked after decades of invasions, which led us to flee and settle in Abyssinia (Ethiopia), then in the Nile Valley, Msraem (Egypt) Aka Keme also spelled Kemet, and thence to Mali, Sudan, then finally settling along the Gold Coast of Afrika. I am not preaching the so-called Hebrew Israelite doctrine at all, because my people owned that land long before 1946 when that nation was created.
If you want to hear anything closest to the most ancient form of the Hebrew language in this world, speak to any West Afrikan of Erveh/Ewe origins.
During our Exodus from the land now being fought over (which still sits on Mother Afrika’s tectonic plate), we were the only tribe obsessed with growing and harvesting these same beans my people hold so dear in the USA as a bringer of good fortune and that is because, it sustained our, Afrikan Ancestors centuries ago, after the people now known as the Jews and others like the Assyrians, left us no option but to flee after decades of invasions.
My parents are Ghanaian and believe it or not, the most authentic Hebraic history, language, and culture can be found along the West Afrikan Coast aka ‘ The Gulf of Guinea.’
I hope you are not overwhelmed by my comment; but I had to do this because the evidence was far too glaring to ignore…
We are not Israelites but rather the descendants of the real owners of that land being fought over…
Have a very happy and prosperous New Year.
🙏🏾👌🏾
Loved this information 😊🙏🏾 Blessings ❤️
Thank you!
Niiiiiice
Got up at 3:30 this morning to start my greens (3 kinds) and my beans. Prosperity to all of you in the New Year!
Nothing like some good black eyed peas and some butter beans in the winter 😋
Hush yo mouth. I love butter beans too. Since you mentioned it I'll be making them next weekend :-)
Great camera work ...
Don't allow minor distractions to deter you from achieving MAJOR GOALS Know what to ignore and what to focus on Use your energy WISELY remain calm... 2022
Happy New Year AB! Love following your recipes. Black eyed peas (as my mother told me) are for good luck & collard greens are for prosperity (money)
I love your cooking I will be coming to Cali and will stop in to Rancho Cucamonga to try your bbq can't wait. I have been hooked since seeing your Rueben grilled pastrami love that
I had the same story told to me as Saundra
Good luck
Prosperity
Yes, so true. The meaning of black eye peas and collards. Plus my family use something gold. Corn or cornbread.
Every year!💕
I love to make mine with the ham bone left over from Christmas. The salt from the ham is perfect. I’ve used a honey baked ham bone too and that adds a smoky sweet and salty flavor to it. My great grandmother used to add okra on top but I don’t like mushy okra so I don’t do that. I have never started with butter and onion so I’m going to try that this year. Love your videos!
Gonna try it with okra since I like okra but don't care for black-eyed peas
I’m using my ham bone too
I never used butter either but will try a Lil bit of butter today great tips
@@optbuild4U I used butter today too, it’s sooo good
Oooo weeee!! I love our heritage and culture.
He done taught me how to make the beans and I’m excited to try it. I’m gonna make some oven baked turkey wings with rice, black eyed peas, and collard greens ❤❤
My mom would cook it for good luck and to have a blessed new year
I never thought about grating an onion, thank you for the tip
R.I.P. Vivian!
She's The One who told me about Black Eyed Peas on New Years!
I've never seen black eyed peas that thick but I bet it's bangin'! You're gonna make me hit the supermarket in the morning.
I love the tradition of greens for cash and black-eyed peas for luck. I eat this anyway, so it is a good excuse to start the year off with a great meal. He's right about cornbread and sweet tea goes with this. Happy New Year everyone!
Happy New Years my black people!!! The black eyed peas are for good luck. Wealth and health 2022 and beyond
Years ago, I had an uncle who grew fresh black eyed peas. Let me tell you, I’ve eaten dried black eyed peas my whole life, but there is nothing more delicious than the fresh. Oddly enough, I found fresh frozen black eyed peas for a few tears after that but not in a very long time. I don’t know why but my Mama always said we had to have them on New Year’s Day (she was born and raised in the south). Thanks for everything you do to share your expertise!
Love black eye peas. And this recipe is amazing and easy. Will be making these for the traditional New Year's Day dinner.
Pork chops (symbolizing to look ahead at the future, because a pig can't look back).
Collard greens (symbolizing good fortune and money).
Black eye peas (symbolizing to see a good future).
Never knew this about pork chops . Will be adding this to my dinner this evening.
I was raised that BEPeas stood for pennies and greens stood for dollars. Pork is a must like chits, ham hocks, chops, BBQ ribs, 🐔 wings fried or BBQ'd,and 🐟 🐠 🎏 cooked any way, tuna salad, salmon patties, fried 🐟 🐠 fish . Just seafood.
I will have to say Sunday because after service you are full from the word of God and fellowship with the family is a tradition👏🏽✊🏽
Made this tonight straight from your recipe with smoked turkey wings Southern fried chicken wings rice collard and turnip greens and buttermilk cornbread muffins.
😋 yum yum yum… thank the lord for allowing us to have such great memories 👏🏾🔥
And that’s how we eat ours is with rice 🍚 that’s why I love your channel. You definitely know what you’re doing. Remind me of my great grandmother, and great aunts and I learned from them and I’ve learned some things from you. Thanks for sharing all of your delicious recipes
In my family, who's roots go deep in Alabama and North Carolina, we eat them on New Year's day for good luck and prosperity for the new year.
That looks amazing.... I need to start this tradition for my kids....never too late to do that, especially with great food...
Good luck and the greens are money it Black people tradition🤙🏿
This is how I cook my black eye peas. This year, I will try the butter with the onion. I don't cook mine that low. I have a little more juice. God bless you and your family. Have a great new year. Keep making those recipes. You have a fan for life.
Black eyed peas is luck and greens money. All my life we have had this every New Year ❤️❤️❤️
I make mine almost the same. I always cook my meat overnight and the broth from that meat is so good. I also add onions, and trio Peppers ( green, yellow, red) I like my peas with some juice so not so thick so I can SOP!! it up with that good buttery cornbread. But yes yours look scrumptious also
I cooked the recipe on New Year's Eve, 12/31/2021, and the Black Eyed Peas were delicious. This was my first time soaking beans overnight. I plan to use this method again. Also, no bean splitting LOL! Everybody loved them! Thanks for sharing.
I grew up in the south, East Texas. We ate black eyed peas every New Years for health and prosperity.
Black eyed peas bring good luck going into the new year 🎉
I made this with a smoked chicken, thank you for this recipe!!!! Even my wife went back for seconds and my son and the rest of my family ask for it with some cornbread, thanks AB
You gotta have your greens or cabbage that's for money and prosperity in the new year. The peas is for health and luck.
You took all the guesswork out of it all. Thank you!
Where I’m from we use field peas to make Hoppin John. Serve that along with collard greens for luck!
From Charleston SC and I made my hoppin John this morning. Gotta have dat cow/field peas 😋
I was raised in Georgia, and we ate a lot of beans, especially. Black eye peas, and. Corn 🍞 bread, sweet tea, and rice. Do not forget the greens. Thank you AB.
Gotta have the black eyed peas for the new years!! Always had them with greens for wealth and health
A.B. I’m born and raised in Mobile Alabama… my parents are both from Lowndes County Ala… superstitions and tradition is what country people grow up on… don’t get me wrong, CHRIST gets all the glory!!! But them black eyed peas on new year’s are believed to usher in the season of Prosperity, which includes wealth, favor, and good health!!! It’s been a southern tradition for many decades as you already know. Thanks for the awesome cooking videos 🙏🏾 GOD Bless!!!
Works well with pork shoulder too. Your channel takes me back to cooking with my grandmother. Thank you for that sir. Very Happy New Year to you!
We always used hog jowls with our black-eyed peas, but I bet that turkey is a mouthful of goodness!
I noticed you were using the Swanson's stock-- they also make an unsalted version. If you were using hog jowls, that's the version I would use to balance out that salt. I also put a bay leaf or two in mine, with some savory and thyme-- the two best herbs for beans and peas. MMM-mmm! Here's to a happy and prosperous New Year to you and your family! :-)
It's tradition to start the new year with black eyed peas for good luck. I'm so grateful you're teaching these time-honored recipes. Thank you! Much love.
Blackeye peas for good luck & collards for money. I really love your videos AB. Not from the South but having these for
New Year just for tradition. If good luck comes to me nice. Life is bad times and good times for all of us. Good times for you AB.
YESSS!!! IMMA START MINES TOMORROW NIGHT! HAPPY NEWS TO YOU & YOUR FAMILIES 🎉🥳CELEBRATION 🍾 ❤
I was brought up for New Years to eat black eye peas and fresh greens a new blessing the greens was for money and the black eye peas was for blessing for the new years.
Eat some black eyed peas on New Year’s Day , for good luck in the new year 🙌🏻💯🥳. Thank you for sharing your recipe. I’m excited to try it. I never thought about using smoked turkey.
Black eyed peas for good luck and cabbage for money✨🙏🏾
I like a little black pepper sprinkled in mine. My grandma added black pepper to all her beans and peas: Large lima beans, great Northern beans, pinto beans, baby lima beans, string beans, black-eyed peas, june peas,....lol. My fav is great Northern beans with smoked ham cooked in them. 😋
LOOKING GOOD 👍👌 THANKS 😊 FOR BRINGING US NEW IDEAS AND NEW FLAVORS ON THE RECIPES. THANKS FOR TAKING THE TIME OUT OF YOUR PRECIOUS DAY AND SHOWING US AMAZING RECIPES. HAVE CONTINUED SUCCESS AND A JOYOUS AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR TO YOU AND YOUR FAMILY.
As a child my parents my grand
parents great grandparents always cook black-eye peas for the New Year. It was never stated why, but to me it was a Southern thing. Now I hear that it’s for good luck? I just make them because it’s a tradition along with other dishes for the New Year
Those beans with cornbread and a sliced home grown tomato on a saucer with salt and pepper WOO
I Absolutely Love Black Eye Peas! YUMMY!
Enjoy G-Maw!
This is one of my favorite meals my mom makes. My favorite way to eat it is to mix in the cornbread with some Louisiana hot sauce. Hands down one of the greatest comfort meals of all time, especially during a cold winter.
Best way to do it 👌🏽👌🏽
Amen!!
We eat black eye peas on new years because they are suppose to bring you good luck all year, the rest of the year we eat them because they're delicious.
This has always been a must-have for New Years. I make mine with spicy sausage and add white pepper and crushed red pepper flakes. It’s spicy but that’s how my Grams rolled. Doesn’t anyone call it Hoppin John anymore?
I do. I've done it so long I can't remember where the name Hoppin' John came from.
I don’t think anyone knows…it’s all mythology at this point. The first I heard was a one legged man came hoppin when his wife said peas were on…who knows?🧐🧐
@@sondranelsoncrosier9701 I should have said I don't recall who taught me to call it that. lol The bit about the one legged man has piqued my curiosity though. I guess I know what I'll be doing today.
I love black eyed peas with rice. I add the rice towards the end of the cooking, thus the starch from the rice thickens it. Learned that from my grandmother who was a professional cook. Happy blessed new year to you and your family. Btw, it don't have to be New Year for me to cook this southern staple. 😋
How much rice do you add?
@@TREWHIT1 between 3/4 to one cup per bag.
Omg lord I couldn’t stand eating black eye 👁 peas growing up, but with this video my GOD I want to make some right now! Looks delicious and simple. Thank you!👍🏾
Love when my mom makes black eye peas and rice Yum Yum
Agreed!
Man love all you do and all you teach us!! Love to watch you do your thing!!! Thank you so very much! Jeff Davis, Moss Point, Mississippi. God Bless!!!
Grated onion and the juice is like *chefs kiss* magic!
Thank you so much for inviting us in your kitchen and your an amazing cook..Your kitchen is 💯💯💯💯🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
We make black 👀 peas on New Years to bring in prosperity for the year. I understand it's a hoodoo tradition but yall can let me know if it's just tradition or a cultural thing.
Absolutely
This takes me back to my childhood when my granny and auntie were making black eyed peas. Always was told if u make them for the New Year u will have good luck
I do it because my parents done it. It’s for wealth and blessings. And above all, they are delicious! Happy New Year! 🥳🥳🥳
When they invent "smell-i-vision"! My God. Thank you for another great recipe AB!
I made these yesterday and they are fantastic. This is the first dish that my teenage boy will eat the leftovers. ☺
I have to eat them on New Years day an turnip greens. Happy New Year. Love your channel.
They're the best. I love them too
..bout to make this right now ..thank you AB💥👊🏼💯💥💥
The symbolism behind black-eyed peas tradition for New Years is twofold. First, the peas are said to resemble coins, symbolizing wealth and financial abundance in the year ahead. Second, their hearty nature represents resilience and sustenance during challenging times. Happy New Year everyone & please BE SAFE out here✨️🙏🏼🖤✨️✨️
I've been cooking black eyed peas and greens every new year. They are for wealth, prosperity and good luck peas for the coming year.
I never ate black-eyed peas on New Year's Eve but I'd love to give this dish a try.
Neither have I but im making some tonight
That looks ridiculously good! I had already planned and set out some black eyed peas, and smoked turkey necks for New year's Eve dinner(and for some good luck). Definitely gonna try this method. If I were to add greens, it would be collard greens to go with.
Good luck 👍🏻 in the new year. Enjoyed on New Year’s Day.
I always grate my onions in my beans and greens…..because I love love onions,I eat them raw…..never saw anyone else do that til I ran across your channel…..yummmmmmy🦶🏽
This recipe was so good. I don't know anything about smoked turkey, but I do now. I used two big drum sticks, this is so good. Yah baby
Ain't nothing like a good bowl of black eyed peas and cornbread. while sitting back and watching a western movie.
They are for good luck! I love them.
I eat blacked eyed peas because I love them. There is no particular time to eat what you love. I make them about every 3 months. And if I eat at a soul food restaurant, I always order themm.. yum yum ... great video! I'm watching now because I'm making them now with smoked ham hocks.
I either cook mines on New Years Eve and eat on New Years Day to welcome the New Year and to welcome a good year with good health and wealth
I am loving your new kitchen!!!! So many details flat screen in background your name etched in the cutting board … been a follower for years now. Congratulations
Been watching your channel for two years now! Taught me how to make so many things, including collard greens that everybody loves. 😏 Really enjoy your channel.
Got that ham bone I saved from Xmas put that in my chicken broth with onions and then add them black eye peas, we ready….🦋🦋🦋
Thanks AB! I'm doing mine like this for New Year's Day! I have always been told the Black-eyed peas were for good luck throughout the rest of the year! My daughter posts the meals on Instagram!
I LOVE THIS CHANNEL!!!! THANK YOU FOR ALLL OF THIS GOODNESS!!!! GOD BLESSS YOU ❤️
You’re doing a fabulous job my brother and your method is very simple easy and quick I like quick and you’ve given me a lot of great tips this is your buddy Rob from Ohio I will continue watching you enjoy you very much.
Man this reminded me of how my grandmother used to do it. No mashing just low and slow until they thicken up on their own yea AB I know what I’m making this weekend.
I used the fast method you spoke of! Followed the remainder of your instructions. These peas are delicious!!! Love your kitchen by the way. 🙂
That’s it right there, perfectly good cooking. Lord that cornbread muffin sets it off, we all love rice 🍚 but it’s good 👍🏽 just like that, well done!
When I was a little fellow my Mom used to put a dime in the bottom of our bowl for luck. Maybe it was to get us to eat all our food but maybe I’ve been lucky to make it 44 years on this earth.
I’m making these black eyed peas tomorrow! Your way is the BEST way!