Boston Baked Beans Recipe (2024)

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Homemade Boston Baked Beans are so darn' good!

Homemade Boston Baked Beans are far more yummy than canned beans and worth the small extra effort to prepare them. This Boston Baked Bean recipe is all about easy comfort food. When I was a kid growing up here in New England, every Saturday supper we had "beans and franks" and brown bread. There is a reason that Boston is referred to often as "Beantown" and this traditional recipe is a New England classic.

What are the best beans to use for Boston Baked Beans?

In my opinion, this recipe makes the best Boston Baked Beans. Most likely my opinion is based on the fact that it was my Nana's recipe that we had almost every Saturday night. She always used a small dried bean, usually navy beans but occasionally pinto beans. Although the packaged dried beans are usually clean, it is advisable to pick thru the beans to discard any discolored beans, and occasionally I have found tiny pieces of rock and stems, neither of which you would want to bite down on when eating your beans.

Boston Baked Beans Recipe (2)

How do you prepare the beans?

Making traditional Boston Baked Beans is not a quick process so you need to start preparing the night before. I use a oven-proof Dutch oven. A 5-6 quart Dutch oven works the best. The night before I thoroughly rinse the beans in a colander to remove any dust and dirt. Then I soak the beans in the Dutch oven in salted water (1 tbs. of salt). In the morning I add a pinch of baking soda to the pot and bring the beans to a boil, then simmer them over medium heat for 30 minutes. Keep an eye on them and top with water if necessary. Drain the beans with a colander over a bowl and reserve all the bean liquid. Preheat oven to 250°F. Prepare the sauce portion of the beans by mixing the molasses, brown sugar, mustard, black pepper and a pinch of salt together. I use a Pyrex glass measuring cup that I coat with vegetable oil before adding molasses as it will make it easier to get all the molasses mixture out of the cup.

Boston Baked Beans Recipe (3)

Take a knife and score the salt park on the fatty side cutting down within a ¼ inch of the rind. Lightly brown the salt pork in the Dutch oven over medium high heat until pork lightly browns and pork fat is rendered (takes about 5 minutes). Remove pot from heat and dump the beans in on top of the pork and gently stir in the diced onion. Add the molasses mixture and enough reserved bean water to completely cover the beans. Stir gently to mix. Bring the beans to a simmer. You do not want to see any beans poking through the surface. They should be completely covered with liquid. Add more bean liquid if necessary. Cover the pot and place in the oven for 2 ½ hrs. Remove the cover, stir gently and add hot water to just cover beans if needed, checking every hour to be sure that the beans are just covered with liquid. Add more hot water if needed. Stir gently each time you check. Beans should be getting tender, so stir the beans thoroughly but gently one last time. Do not add any more water unless the level gets very low. Allow the Boston Baked Beans to form a dark brown crust on top.

Boston Baked Beans Recipe (4)

A classic Boston Baked Bean Recipe just like Grandma used to make!

So for my Boston Baked Beans I go traditional - Old school slow oven cooking in the bean pot. We are in the process of remodeling the kitchen so the wood cookstove isn’t hooked up yet. That’s the way I usually cook them. Get all the ingredients in the bean pot and tuck them in the back of the oven. Run the woodstove “low and slow” and let the beans cook all day. I check them periodically to see if I should add water but that’s it. They’re a really easy dish to make and soooo much better than canned baked beans. Sorry, Duke but you can keep guarding the Bush family recipe! Cooking them in the woodstove also saves money. The wood energy gets to perform 2 tasks for the same price. It heats the house and cooks the beans. But this time I put them in the electric built-in oven. Traditional baked beans are a long process. There’s only one thing you can do to speed the process and that’s at the beginning. You either soak the beans overnight (12-14 hours) in cold water or you can wait till the next day and boil them in water for about 1 hour. The test for readiness “to bake” is to put a bean in a spoon and gently blow on it. If the bean is boiled enough, the skin will come off the bean as you blow. I do a combination of both. I do the overnight soak and them boil them for about 20-30 minutes and then do the “bean skin test”.

Boston Baked Beans Recipe (5)

How to store your Boston Baked Beans

I no longer have three hungry boys to feed so an entire pot of beans seems to be with us for weeks But I plan them into a couple of meals through the week. One night we’ll have chili and another we’ll have some chili dogs or baked ham and beans. There are lots of possibilities. Beans go with a lot of things. I freeze the rest for later consumption. To freeze them, you just let them chill in the fridge and then put them in air tight containers. Be sure to mark the date on the container and use them in 3-6 months. They’ll taste as good as the day you made them.

this …

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Nana Smith's Boston Baked Beans

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★★★★★5 from 1 review

An old New England Saturday night favorite was baked beans and franks. Nana always served it with steamed brown bread. Here's her old recipe tried and true 100 years later!

  • Author: SHERYL THOMPSON FROM NANA SMITH'S OLD RECIPES
  • Prep Time: 15 mins
  • Cook Time: 8 hours
  • Total Time: 8 hours 15 mins
  • Category: VEGETABLE
  • Method: Bake
  • Cuisine: AMERICAN; NEW ENGLAND;

Ingredients

Scale

  • 1 lb. dried beans, preferably navy
  • Kosher salt
  • ½ lb. piece of salt pork (you can also use diced bacon or a small ham hock)
  • ⅔ cup molasses
  • ¼ cup loosely packed brown sugar
  • 2 tsp. Dijon or brown mustard
  • 1 tsp. salt
  • ½ tsp. coarse ground black pepper
  • 1 large yellow onion, diced

Instructions

  1. Pick out discolored beans and any field derbris (stone pieces and stems). Soak beans overnight in cold water and 1 tbsp. of kosher salt.
  2. The next morning I simmer the beans in the same water for 30-45 minutes until tender and bean skins can be gently blown off bean. Drain the beans reserving the liquid.
  3. Preheat oven to 250°F.
  4. Take piece of salt pork and with rind side up, use a sharp knife and score the meat with cuts ½ inch deep making a crosshatch pattern. Sear the salt pork in hot Dutch oven over medium high heat till it is golden brown. Place in the bottom of Bean pot or covered Dutch oven.
  5. Arrange the beans on and around the salt pork and layering them with onion.
  6. In a bowl, combine molasses, salt, pepper, mustard, and brown sugar. Pour over beans. Pour in the reserved bean liquid. Cover the Dutch oven with a lid.
  7. Bake for 6-8 hours in the preheated oven, until beans are tender. After 2 ½ hours, remove the cover, stir gently and add hot water to just cover beans if needed. Continue checking every hour to be sure that the beans are just covered with liquid. Add more hot water if needed. Stir gently each time you check. Beans should be getting tender, so stir the beans thoroughly but gently one last time. Do not add any more water unless the level gets very low. Test for tenderness. Allow the beans to form a dark brown crust on top.

Keywords: Boston Baked Beans

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For more Traditional New England recipes try these -

New England Clam Chowder

As Promised….Fiddlehead Recipes!

Moist Juicy Slow Cooker Ham Recipe

KitchenAid Basic White Bread Recipe

Boston Baked Beans Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What makes Boston baked beans different? ›

The main difference between baked beans and Boston baked beans comes down to the use of molasses. Boston baked beans bake in a sauce typically made with molasses while traditional baked beans cook in brown sugar and corn syrup.

Why are my Boston baked beans hard? ›

Boston baked beans are by definition, slowly cooked. According to Shirley Corriher in CookWise (great book, btw), either sugar or calcium will make beans hard, even after long hours of cooking.

Who made the original Boston baked beans? ›

Though the exact origins and inventors of the mimic candies are unknown, they became popular in the 1920s and '30s. The main producer today, the Windy City's Ferrara Candy Company, has been making the crunchy red nuggets since 1924.

What is the coating on Boston baked beans? ›

Sugar, Peanuts, Corn Syrup, Modified Food Starch (Corn), Acacia (Gum Arabic), Confectioner's Glaze (Shellac), Artificial Flavor, Carnauba Wax, White Mineral Oil, Red 40, Yellow 5, Yellow 6, Blue 2.

What are original Boston baked beans? ›

Boston baked beans are a variety of baked beans, sweetened with molasses, and flavored with salt pork or bacon.

Why do you put vinegar in baked beans? ›

Cider vinegar added at the end balances the flavor profile. It's important not to add vinegar until the end so as to maintain the mixture's pH balance throughout the cooking process.

Why are Boston baked beans so good? ›

Unlike other beans, Boston Baked beans contain molasses. They are delicious, and an easy and inexpensive food to add to your menu, especially if you have an Instant Pot.

What is the secret to soft baked beans? ›

As dried beans age the pores in the beans that allow water to enter close up which will prevent the beans from softening no matter how long they are cooked. Be sure to follow the instructions to soak the beans overnight and then boil them for an hour.

How do you thicken Boston baked beans? ›

Use starches to thicken beans

Simply add 2 tablespoons of cornstarch to 1 cup of water or to the liquid from the baked beans (scoop it out into a separate bowl and let it cool first) and mix. Once the starch is thoroughly incorporated, pour the slurry into the baked beans dish and stir.

What kind of beans are Boston Baked Beans made of? ›

The short answer is that they're small white beans (usually navy beans), slow-cooked in an oven, hearth, or ember-filled hole in the ground with molasses, salt pork, black pepper, and maybe a touch of mustard and onion until they form a thick stew, rich with a deep color and caramelized crust.

Are French burnt peanuts the same as Boston Baked Beans? ›

Are French burnt peanuts the same as Boston baked beans? Both are candy coated Spanish peanuts in varying shades of red. But while they may be related, they're not the same thing. French burnt peanuts have spikes and a bumpy, rustic coating, while Boston baked beans have a smooth and shiny outer coating.

What bean is Bush's baked beans? ›

Bush's® Original Baked Beans are a Secret Family Recipe of navy beans slow-cooked with specially cured bacon, fine brown sugar and our signature blend of spices.

Do Boston Baked Beans go bad? ›

Stored in a cool, dry place, an unopened and undamaged can of baked beans in sauce will generally have best quality for about 3 to 5 years but should remain safe to use after that for up to another 4 years.

Is Boston Baked Beans healthy? ›

This legume dish is high in folate and a good source of iron. Folate helps form red blood cells, which contain iron. Both nutrients are important in preventing anemia.

Why is there white stuff in my bush's baked beans? ›

If you're worried about the white stuff on top, it's fat that cooked out of the bacon & rose to the top as it cooled.

What is the flavor of Boston baked beans? ›

What is the flavor of Boston Baked Beans? The dominant flavor profile is sweet from the molasses, along with smokiness from the salt pork. They really are quite delicious if made properly.

What is the difference between Boston baked beans and burnt peanuts? ›

Are French burnt peanuts the same as Boston baked beans? Both are candy coated Spanish peanuts in varying shades of red. But while they may be related, they're not the same thing. French burnt peanuts have spikes and a bumpy, rustic coating, while Boston baked beans have a smooth and shiny outer coating.

What kind of beans are Boston baked beans made of? ›

The short answer is that they're small white beans (usually navy beans), slow-cooked in an oven, hearth, or ember-filled hole in the ground with molasses, salt pork, black pepper, and maybe a touch of mustard and onion until they form a thick stew, rich with a deep color and caramelized crust.

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