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Hey. We never said we were trying to win Beautifullest Side Dish. Lay off. |
Despite the fact that, some nights, it is all I can do to put
Pizza Toast on the table, I love to have lots of people over for dinner. I really do. And as soon as the weather is nice, I like to make burgers and
veggie burgers and huge salads and a ginormous pot of (cheap and cheerful) baked beans. Everybody loves them (by which I mean "most people like them pretty much"), and they're great if you're actually too lazy to make veggie burgers, because then you still have a protein to serve the vegetarians! (Sleazy but real, folks.) Also, if you got a
pressure cooker like I
told you to recommended, this is a very quick and effortless recipe. Otherwise, this is a very time-consuming and effortless recipe, and one that I'm not quite as sure about.
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I am not sure why the beans look so weirdly lacquered here. |
A few notes: despite the unconscionable amount of sweetener, these are just about right. Less sweet than many canned varieties, but still familiar in their smoky sweetness. I'm sorry about the sugar. It's kind of the baked-bean thing, but you can
eat all your beans unsweet the whole entire rest of the year. Also, I'm sorry about the liquid smoke. You'll feel like you might as well be ashing your American Spirit right into the pot, but it really adds the perfect smoky flavor, I've found. You can substitute smoked paprika or chipotles, but be mindful of the heat potential if you're serving heaps of potentially bean-eating
wimps kids. Edited to add: I forgot to mention (thank you, readers, for reminding me!) that the only reason you need to add something smoky here is
the absence of bacon. How the mighty have fallen! A year ago, I would have been like, "Chop a pound of bacon and fry it. Fry the onions in its rendered fat." That's what you really should do, if you can.
Baked Beans
Makes tons (10-20 servings)
1 cup of purchased barbecue sauce is a good substitute for
the ketchup, molasses, vinegar, cloves, and liquid smoke—although I confess to
liking the flavor better in the more-ingredients version. Still don’t hesitate:
the beans are delicious that way.
4 cups pinto beans (about 2 pounds) (Navy beans are traditional, but my devotion to big, succulent pinto beans knows no limit.)
3 tablespoon kosher salt (divided use) (or half as much
table salt)
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 onion, chopped
6 cups water
½ cup ketchup
½ cup molasses
2/3 cup brown sugar
1 tablespoon white vinegar
¼ teaspoon ground cloves
1 teaspoon liquid smoke
1 teaspoon dry mustard (I like Coleman's)
1 teaspoon garlic powder
Put the beans and 2 tablespoon salt in a pot and cover them
with water by a generous 3 or 4 inches. Bring to a boil over high heat, then
turn the heat off, cover the pot, and leave them to soak for approximately an
hour (a little more or less is fine!). Drain the beans.
Heat the oil in the bottom of your
pressure cooker*, and
sauté the onion over medium heat until soft and golden, around 8 or 10 minutes.
Add the drained beans to the pot, along with the remaining 1
tablespoon of salt, the six cups of water, and all the rest of the ingredients.
Stir well. Seal the lid, bring the cooker to pressure, and cook at steady, low
pressure for 35 minutes. Turn the heat off and allow the pressure to release on
its own.
Now take the lid off. The beans will seem too liquidy and
fall-aparty, and you’ll think you’ve overcooked them. Fret not! With the lid
off, simmer the beans over low heat for 30 minutes to an hour, until the beans
firm up (oddly, they will) and the liquid gets nice and thick. Taste and adjust
the seasonings (if they don’t taste robustly delicious, consider adding more
salt, vinegar, or sugar). Serve.
* If you don’t have a pressure cooker (which you really
should have, if you’re at all serious about beans), try this method instead,
based on one in The Joy of Cooking:
Soak the beans, as above, but don’t add salt and don’t drain
them. Instead, after an hour, bring them back to a boil over high heat, then
reduce the heat to medium-low and simmer for 45 to 90 minutes, or until the
beans are creamy but still intact. Drain them gently.
Now sauté the onions, as above, in a Dutch oven (or another
lidded oven-safe pot), then add the beans, 3 cups of water (instead of 6) and
the remaining ingredients (use 1 ½ tablespoons kosher salt). Bake in a 250 oven
until the liquid is thick and the beans are delicious: 4 to 5 hours. Taste for
salt and other seasonings.
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This is a nice, inexpensive way to make a huge side dish. |
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I like that the garlic powder turned away at the last second--so coy and mysterious! |
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Beans soaked and drained. |
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Half these onions were destined for the veggie burgers. It was kind of a twofer situation. |
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This is the watery stage, when you'll be despairing. No worries! They'll boil down nice and thick. |