The reason that you use mongoose is for testability.
Instead of having to work with a MongoDb instance, which, in Windows can be a pain with the .lock file and the service, mongoose creates the schema that you can test your code with.
The mongoose way is ideal for TDD/TFD.
Below is the model and the mocha test:
recipemodel.js
var mongoose = require('mongoose'),Schema=mongoose.Schema;
var RecipeSchema = new mongoose.Schema({});
RecipeSchema.statics.create = function (params, callback) {
'\\ params is any schema that you pass from the test below
var recipe = new RecipeSchema(params);
recipe.save(function(err, result) {
callback(err, result);
});
return recipe;
};
var recipemodel=mongoose.model('Model', RecipeSchema);
module.exports = recipemodel;
You don't need to describe the schema, mongoose will create it for you when you pass the values of the collection from a mocha test, for example!
The mocha test is below:
var mongooseMock = require('mongoose-mock'),
proxyquire = require('proxyquire'),
chai = require('chai'),
expect = chai.expect,
sinon = require('sinon'),
sinonChai = require("sinon-chai");
chai.use(sinonChai);
describe('Mocksaving a recipe ingredient', function () {
var Recipe;
beforeEach(function () {
Recipe = proxyquire('./recipemodel', {'mongoose': mongooseMock});
});
it('checks if ingredient '+'ing1' + ' saved to mongoose schema', function
(done) {
var callback = sinon.spy();
var recipe = Recipe.create({ title: "faasos", chef:
'faasos',region:'Chennai',ingredients:'ing1',instructions:'abc' },
callback);
expect(recipe.save).calledOnce;
expect(recipe.ingredients).equals('ing341');
done();
});
});

The call to a sinon spy is simply to ensure that the call to the data in the schema got saved (mock saved!) and that the 'save' method did get called at least once. This logic flow is in sync with your actual logic, as you would use in code, when the save on a mongodb collection would be made.
Simply change the value to 'ing1' to make the test pass when you run the test.
For an array type, pass the values as below:
var recipe = Recipe.create({ title: "faasos", chef:
'faasos',region:'Chennai',ingredients:'ing341,ing1',instructions:'abc' }, callback);
expect(recipe.save).calledOnce;
expect(recipe.ingredients).to.include('ing1');
