An old fashioned baked bean recipe made with dried beans, molasses, brown sugar and patience. Classic baked beans cooked low and slow in a bean pot just like grandma (or everyone's favourite pioneer mother Caroline Ingalls) used to make.
I started bringing a pot of good old fashioned baked beans to Easter dinner a few years ago and I enjoy the holiday much more now.
I have two criteria for judging holidays - how good is the food and how good is the decorating? Easter is filled with ham and pastel colours therefore I judge it harshly.
Sneaking baked beans into the menu makes perfect sense. When paired with ham they create a bundle of sweet, savoury, smoky goodness in your mouth. Plus you get to cleanse your palate during dinner with the ever popular "salad" made out of marshmallows and canned fruit.
My Marshmallow Salad recipe is here if you're interested, because yes, I am a sucker for it.
These baked beans also go perfectly with any meats you pull off of your summertime grill or smoker. And as a quick autumn or cool spring day lunch to fill yourself up, beans on toast is fantastic!
Filling, nutritious and - O.K. I know you're ALL thinking of the tooting. So go ahead and giggle about the toots so we can continue with this serious baked bean discussion.
Alright.
These are traditional baked beans done in the oven in a bean pot with molasses and brown sugar and yes they take two days to make. BUT you can make them in an Instant Pot much faster and in a pinch if you have to. I'm not a fan of the Instant Pot but I know I'm in the minority with that.
I've included instructions for Instant Pot baked beans as well in the recipe card. Even though you're not allowed to call them baked because they're Instant Potted. Not baked.
Table of Contents
Baked Beans From Scratch
Delicious, smoky and filling these can be made ahead warmed up prior to serving. You'll need a 1 lb package of dried beans, molasses, water, brown sugar and a few other pantry staples.
Reducing the gas
If you're worried about the impending flatulence caused by eating beans you can do two things to help reduce gas.
- Throw away the water you soak your beans in.
- Change the soaking water and rinse the beans every 3 hours.
There's evidence that throwing away the bean soaking water will eliminate much of the indigestible carbohydrates that cause gas.
HOWEVER after soaking my beans I use the same bean water later in the recipe because I like the added flavour using the bean water gives. If you want to reduce the potential for toots, do not reuse the bean water.
What kind of beans are baked beans?
White Pea Beans (Navy beans) are traditionally used for making baked beans because they're creamy once cooked. Navy beans have the highest amount of fibre of all the dried beans.
Great Northern Beans can also be used for baked beans. They are less creamy but hold their shape better than navy beans. Because they're bigger they take a bit longer to cook until tender. If you prefer a creamier texture but only have Northern Beans, after cooking remove about ½ cup of the beans, mash them then stir them back into the pot.
The ingredients for this recipe are classic baked bean ingredients. Nothing super fancy and no heat. To me, baked beans shouldn't be spicy. But if you like spicy baked beans you can add a couple of finely diced jalapeño peppers or cayenne pepper.
These beans technically take 2 days to make and that seems like a long time but 95% of that time is dedicated to slow cooking. You aren't actively doing anything other than smelling the scent of baked beans waft throughout the kitchen. You soak the beans, mix the ingredients together and then pop the beans in the oven for 8 hours or so.
If you love old timey things like this, you can buy a brand new old fashioned bean pot here.
When they're cooked, the beans come out and they're ready to serve. Just like that. So it seems like a big ordeal, but it really isn't. It just takes a long time.
As an aside, I am absolutely STUNNED at the amount of Baked Bean recipes on the Internet that are made with ... CANS of baked beans. What the??? As I mentioned, this recipe is made with dried beans. Not a can of them. This is a recipe for actual baked beans from scratch.
For your tooting pleasure.
Old Fashioned Baked Beans
Ingredients
- 454 grams dry beans white pea (navy) beans
- water enough to cover beans
- 1 onion diced
- ½ tablespoon salt
- 2 tsps cider vinegar
- ¼ lb bacon or salt pork
- 1 teaspoon mustard
- 2 tablespoon brown sugar
- ¼ teaspoon smoked paprika
- ¼ cup molasses
- ½ cup ketchup
- pinch black pepper
Instructions
- Soak the beans overnight in water.
- The next morning heat the beans to boiling and simmer for around 30 minutes. If the skin of the bean peels back when you blow on it the beans are done.
- Drain the beans and SAVE the bean water.
- Mix all of the sauce ingredients together and mix in the cooked beans. Put everything in a bean pot.
- Add enough of the reserved bean water to the bean pot to cover the beans by ½".
- Add bacon or salt pork to top of beans, cover and bake at 250 F for 7 hours.
- Remove lid and continue to cook uncovered for 2 hours to help the beans develop a dark brown colour.
- Serve with grilled meats as a side dish or on toast for a lunch.
- Remove from oven and remove bacon or salt pork. If you like your beans with some meat chop it up and mix it into the beans. I prefer to remove the pork entirely and just use it for the flavour and smokiness it infuses in the beans while cooking.
Notes
- To eliminate the overnight soak, you can boil the beans for longer during their initial cook in water. Instead of simmering for 30 minutes, simmer for (apx) 90 minutes.
- If you're vegan or vegetarian and want to eliminate the bacon then double the amount of smoked paprika from ¼ teaspoon to ½ tsp.
- TO COOK BAKED BEANS IN THE INSTANT POT (bleh) 1. Add your dried beans to the Instant Pot with enough water to cover them quite well. Cook on high for 25 minutes. They might be perfectly done or they might be overdone and mushy. It depends on the bean. And that's why I don't like the Instant Pot. 2. Drain the beans and return them to the Instant Pot. Add all of the other ingredients and cook on high for 10 minutes.
Nutrition
If you don't have a bean baking pot, just use any oven safe casserole with a lid like a dutch oven. Keep your eyes open at antique shops and flea markets for vintage crocks. Just check the inside to make sure it's still in good shape inside with the glaze intact and no crazing.
You bet you can. I freeze them in individual portions and they reheat perfectly.
Well, beans are very nutritious and healthy! But baked beans contain a lot of molasses and sugar which isn't ideal. Still, they aren't terrible. A large serving of these baked beans contains 17 grams of sugar. A small piece of yellow cake with chocolate icing has 56 grams of sugar.
As long as you eat a reasonable amount of baked beans and not an entire pot (and you don't have diabetes) then they're a perfectly healthyish side dish.
Yes, there are a few things you can sub in for molasses if you don't have any:
To replace 1 cup of molasses use one of the following:
¾ cup of firmly packed brown sugar
1 cup dark corn syrup
1 cup of honey
1 cup of maple syrup
Brown sugar is the best substitute in terms of flavour because brown sugar is actually a mixture of white sugar and molasses.
Baked beans for Easter dinner. Is that weird? Or just risky? ;)
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Notfurlong
These are delicious. I used blackstrap molasses since I had some on hand. Was impressed with the results. Yum. Thanks for sharing. 😋
Karen
Thanks for taking the time to review and comment! I'm currently cleaning out my apocalyptic basement where my bean pot resides and ALSO found half a bag of dried beans in my kitchen cupboard sooooo. This weekend is bean weekend. I'm excited. :) ~ karen!
Kathy
Thanks so much for posting. They are exactly how my mom made them!!
I am going to try them this weekend with the Canadian additions! 🇨🇦👍🏻
Alene
I grew up in Maine in a mostly Franco American town and every Saturday
the bakeries would make baked beans (a lot saucier than what you are showing) that you would purchase with a quart of coleslaw and a large loaf of fresh baked bread. I can taste it right now in my memory. I will certainly try your recipe.
My other baked bean memory was on my fathers side in Indiana. Southern barbecue beans with smoked mutton for that Smokey flavor.
For those that have a hard time digesting any type of bean I recommend adding a pice of
Pacific Combu premium dried seaweed. It doesn’t add any noticeable flavor and really helps the digestion
Karen
Good tip! To make the beans saucier you can just add a bit more water as you cook them. I made some this weekend that were saucier. However I accidentally added the salt twice.🙄 They're still edible, just ... salty, lol. ~ karen!
TeresaRichardson
Love recipes from scratch like this. You got a good chili recipe?
Karen
I do! Here's my chili recipe. Like all chili recipes feel free to adjust to your tastes and likes. :) ~ karen
Randy P
As valid and tasty today as it was back in 2019. And IMHO as a super-carnivore, serving it with lots of bacon is almost a baked bean recipe mandate - lol Thanks for sharing.
Kay
Do you have any suggestions for making the baked beans without pork? Thank you.
Karen
Hi Kay! You can just leave it out. :) The bacon gives a bit of smoky flavour, but they also acquire a bit of that just by baking for so long. ~ karen!
Laura Bee
Risky as all get out. Internal ham toots AND baked beans...omg.
Going to have to make these in my Nana's Dutch oven.
Karen
Yes, lol! The internal ham toot.🤣 ~ karen!
CH
Would a good old-fashioned (compared to InstaPot), newfangled (compared to bean pot) Crock Pot work as a means of freeing up the oven (and using less electricity at my house)? Obviously no heat comes from the top, as with a bean pot or dutch oven, so it would be an Unfavored method, much as Instapot... but I'm thinking I could do the stovetop bits, then follow the instructions for the oven parts.
Yes? Terrible idea? Anybody's-guess-don't-make-for-company-first? What does your experience suggest?
Heather Grauman
For sure crockpot will work. I use high setting and if you want them browner, just add some browning sauce ( which adds no flavor just color)
Susan MacIsaac
You can use your crocpot liner in your oven. Just cover the top with tin foil. I do it often.
Bethany Hubbard Jones
I was in a commercial last year for Sneak A Squeak, a supplement that makes your toots not stink.
Honestly. It’s a thing.
Karen
I have never thought of having baked beans for Easter dinner but once I read your post I couldn't get it out of my head. I rehydrated the beans in my pressure cooker then baked them in my enameled cast iron Dutch oven. Yum! Served with ham, scalloped potatoes, honey glazed carrots and mile-high coconut cream pie for dessert. Everyone went home stuffed so I'm taking that as a compliment.
Alice
Karen, no need to publish this, but it's "intact" -- one word -- not "in tact".
Joanne Lewis
I grew up in New Brunswick and had relatives on PEI and I don't remember baked beans at holiday dinners! Oh well, never too late to start a new tradition. I'm in Alberta now and plan to take this to an Easter potluck supper. Thanks for the recipe - I don't have a bean pot so my dutch oven with lid will have to do. I do have an Instant Pot but I want to be able to say that it took me two days to make the beans!
I'll try to remember to report back after!
Joanne
Patricia
I'll have to try your bean recipe as I love baked beans!
I love those squares (you can get them at Starbucks) called confetti squares with the peanut butter, butterscotch chips and multicoloured marshmallows; in our house they are called trailer park squares. I could eat the entire pan with a spoon (I'm classy like that) :).
Kathy
Sounds just like how my Mom used to make them! :) :)
Neither of my sisters nor I had her recipe. I was looking for something simple and delicious as we plan to spend most of that weekend playing outside, and I don't have a big event planned.
I have the pot too! I mainly use it for the dogs' cookies, lol.
Thanks for sharing this great Easter idea!
Kathy (also)
Haha! I use mine for dog cookies too! I had no clue it was really for beans! Lol
Ann
Do you use 1 tsp. prepared OR dry mustard? Will definitely make these as soon as I know.
Thank you so much.
Karen
Hi Ann! It's prepared mustard. ~ karen!
Laura-Lee Walter
Laura-Lee
I have two additional ingredients that are added to my baked beans (a recipe very similar to yours that has been handed down to me) - bit of maple syrup and rye whiskey. Makes them Canadian, 😂
Karen
Someone else mentioned adding bourbon and I said the next time I make them I was going to add whiskey! I was going to add Irish whiskey but you're right, rye whiskey would be more appropriate, eh? ~ karen!
Sue Taylor
Can’t wait to try this. This will be our Easter dinner along with a green salad and crusty bread. Thanks for making Easter easier....and much healthier.
A question: on one of your Christmas Wish lists you showed a dehydrator. Wondered if you ever got one and tried it. I just got one and have no idea how to proceed. I thought with your guidance and humour I could give it a go. Thanks Karen
Karen
I did get a dehydrator for Christmas from my mother! I believe it's the one I linked to. A 6 tray Excalibur and it works great. I've used it to dry mangos, make yogourt, dry apples and something else that I can't remember at the moment. ~ karen!