slow cooker baked beans
$5.14 recipe / $0.57 serving

***Many readers have reported that their beans have not softened after over 8 hours of cooking. This seems to only be a problem with this particular slow cooker/bean recipe so I suspect the sugar is the issue. Not everyone is experiencing this problem, so proceed with caution!***

So, you know how I love to cook beans in the slow cooker, right? Right. Well, this week I was craving some good 'ol home cookin' so I decided to whip up a batch of baked beans in my slow cooker. I threw all of the ingredients into the slow cooker at night before I went to bed and in the morning, the sweet and savory scent of baked beans was beckoning me out of dreamland.

FYI, baked beans are REALLY good for breakfast. ;)

Did I mention that you don't have to soak the beans? Yep, you just toss them in there dry.

slow cooker baked beans


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Total Recipe cost: $5.14
Servings Per Recipe: 9 (equivalent to approx. 3 cans)
Cost per serving: $0.57
Prep time: 10 min. Cook time: 8 hrs. Total: 8 hrs. 10 min.

INGREDIENTS COST
1 large yellow onion $0.87
6 oz. smoked bacon $1.49
1 lb. white beans
(navy or great northern)
$1.18
1/2 cup brown sugar $0.16
1/2 cup molasses $1.10
1/4 cup dijon mustard $0.24
generous cracked black pepper $0.05
4 cups water $0.00
to taste salt $0.05
TOTAL $5.14

STEP 1: Dice the onion and slice the bacon into 1 inch pieces. Spread the beans out on a baking sheet to sort through and remove stones or bad pieces. Transfer the beans to a colander and rinse with cool water to remove dust and debris.

STEP 2: Place the diced onion on the bottom of the slow cooker, sprinkle the bacon pieces over top, and then add the rinsed beans.

STEP 3: In a large bowl, stir together the brown sugar, molasses, dijon, and black pepper (do not add salt yet). Once they are combined, stir in four cups of water. Pour this mixture over the beans in the slow cooker. Secure the lid, turn the heat onto high, and cook for six hours or until tender.

STEP 4: Give the beans a good stir, taste one to test the texture. Add salt to your liking. If you're unsure, start with 1/2 tsp of salt and stir it into the bean mixture well. Taste the beans and add more (just a dash at a time) until it tastes right to you.

This recipe makes about as much as 3 (15 oz.) cans and they freeze well, so don't let any go to waste!


Step By Step Photos


ingredients
The baked beans start with these three items. I chose great northern beans because I like a larger bean. If you want smaller beans, you can use navy beans.

dice onion
Dice the onion...

slice bacon
Bacon usually comes in 12 oz. packages but I only used 6 for this recipe. Luckily, bacon freezes really well so I saved the other half. Cut the portion that you're using into small pieces by slicing across the strips.

sort beans
Sort through the beans and remove any stones or bad pieces. Doing this on a baking sheet makes them easy to see while keeping them contained. Transfer them to a colander and give them a good rinse.

add to cooker
Add the onion, bacon and beans to the slow cooker.

molasses mix
In a large bowl, stir together the molasses, brown sugar, dijon mustard, and cracked pepper.

add water
Stir in four cups of water.

pour into slow cooker
Pour that mixture over the beans in the slow cooker. It should be enough liquid to fully cover everything. Secure the lid and turn the heat onto high. Cook for approximately 6 hours (if you need to let it go a little longer, it will be okay).

slow cooked baked beans
After at least 6 hours, open it up, give everything a stir and test a bean for texture. If they are soft and fully cooked, season with salt to taste.

slow cooker baked beans
Bacon-y, brown sugar & molasses goodness!

28 comments:

genevievvve | September 27, 2011 5:24 PM

Oh. My. Goodness.
This is just what I needed. I've been experimenting with beans in my slow cooker, and I've realized I need to study your process more carefully. I had a small disaster with chickpeas - chana masala actually. (I would lovvve to see your tips on that one!)

I can't wait to try this for a football tailgate or something. Thanks!

Michèle | September 27, 2011 5:25 PM

That looks great! I'll try that some time soon :) Thanks for this recipe

Beth M | September 27, 2011 5:27 PM

Genevievvve - what happened to your beans? Now I'm curious! Too mushy? Too hard?

genevievvve | September 27, 2011 6:02 PM

Oh man, I didn't add enough liquid and they totally burned up. Not mushy.... crunchy! I didn't know it was possible to make crunchy food in a slow cooker. I opened the door and was hit with a sort of smoky, carmelized, burned-up smell. Had to soak the crock pot all night.

http://genevievvve.wordpress.com/2011/08/09/how-not-to-make-chana-masala/

greenhorn gourmande | September 27, 2011 6:18 PM

That's so funny! I was thinking just the same thing the other day (my blog bost from yesterday was on baked beans). Mine were quite delicious, however yours look easiner to make. I'll have to give it a try some time.

If your interested here's a link to my post: http://greenhorngourmande.blogspot.com/2011/09/homemade-baked-beans-with-molasses-and.html

Anonymous | September 27, 2011 6:37 PM

I have used a similar recipe in the crockpot for years now. It doesn't use the molasses though and I use dry mustard - quite a lot actually. I don't cook beans except in the pressure cooker or the slow cooker now because it's so much easier. I just soak the beans overnight, drain, put back in the crock, add the other ingredients and let it cook on low all day and they are ready at night.

Lauren {Adventures in Flip Flops} | September 27, 2011 7:19 PM

I love crock-pot baked beans. Yum. And I love beans for breakfast! Hello, beans on toast!

Anonymous | September 27, 2011 10:01 PM

do you have any suggestions for a substitute for bacon? I am a vegetarian but the recipe looks so good!

Beth M | September 27, 2011 10:21 PM

Anon - you can either just skip the bacon or try a vegetarian bacon. Or maybe you could even try adding a few drops of liquid smoke, although I've never used it so I don't know how that would work.

Michelle P | September 28, 2011 12:51 AM

That looks good!

Matt @ FaveDiets | September 28, 2011 9:41 AM

This looks unbelievably good! I just recently got a slow cooker, and am now looking for more slow cooker recipe ideas. I'm definitely bookmarking this one for later.

Thomas Tuegel | October 2, 2011 10:17 AM

Liquid smoke was a great suggestion! I used 2 tsp instead of bacon and I could hardly tell the difference.

alex veilleux | October 3, 2011 6:51 PM

substituted molasses for maple syrup and it was unbelievable. i realize this is budget bytes and maple syrup is a lot more expensive than molasses but i have gallons laying around because my uncle makes it. if you have an easy access to maple syrup, highly suggest the substitution.

Meg B @ Our Misadventures | October 5, 2011 9:51 PM

I used Great Northern beans with this recipe today.... and I'm on hour nine and several additional cups of water. Just can't get those beans to soften up! I think next time I'll definitely soak them overnight, at hour six only about 2/3rds of the beans were mostly done. I have a 7qt slow cooker, normally things cook quicker in it because of it's size!

Morsels of Life | October 11, 2011 6:55 PM

sounds great! and no presoaking works for me!

The Burggrafs | October 18, 2011 9:12 PM

ALL I CAN SAY IS....BAD ASS! THOSE LITTLE BEAN NUGGETS WERE PURE GOODNESS!

boobookitty | October 30, 2011 7:37 PM

Ok, I'm trying the recipe tonight. Unfortunately, I did not have enough DIjon. I had some grainy Dijon, which, which is a totally different texture, I hope it imparts the same sort of flavour. Hm, might still have some of the mustard seeds in the beans. In any case, we shall see how they turn out in the morning! :D

Crystal | November 8, 2011 8:32 PM

I just made these tonight. Boyfriend, son and roommate approved. (I also added a wedge of homemade cornbread on top, just flour, cornmeal, sugar, baking powder, salt, an egg, some milk and some oil.)

Thanks SO MUCH for this. You're awesome.

Chelsea Jamison | November 28, 2011 3:04 PM

Very good, thank you for the recipe!

Elle | November 29, 2011 9:00 PM

Hour 7+ and I still have crunchy beans! Smells delish though. It might actually have to be breakfast at this rate...

FoodEpix | December 1, 2011 7:58 PM

This looks delicious. Would love for you to share this with us over at foodepix.com.

Anonymous | December 10, 2011 7:36 PM

The first time I tried this recipe I had crunchy beans after 8 hours. Now I soak them beforehand and don't have that problem.

Luke | December 14, 2011 11:57 PM

I just turned on the slow cooker for this recipe and I'm hoping to wake up to some delicious beans. After reading the comments, I soaked the beans for a few hours to give it a head start so we'll see how it turns out.

Anonymous | February 18, 2012 12:15 PM

After 12 hours beans were still crunchy:( Will try again but next time I will soak the beans first. It smelled good and tasted good but the beans never cooked completely. Here's to another try.

Michelle | March 5, 2012 1:29 PM

I'm also in hour 12 of these and the beans are just not tender. Next time, pintos for sure! Smells great, but the crunchy beans ruin it. :(

Beth M | March 5, 2012 4:37 PM

Michelle (and others) - I think the issue might be with the sugar and perhaps the minerals in the water in your particular area. I put a warning at the top of the post to let people know ahead of time. I hate that so many people have had ruined beans!

Anonymous | March 5, 2012 8:45 PM

Instead of soaking the beans I put them in a little bit of water and bring to a boil on the stove top for 20 minutes. Then drain the water off and put in the crockpot. That cured the crunchy bean problem. It is a lot less time than soaking them.

Alison | March 22, 2012 7:54 AM

if you have hard water it will take a lot longer to cook the beans... add some baking soda to the water and you won't have any trouble... but I'm pretty sure that beans have to be boiled, to kill that fungus thing?

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