Slow-Cooked Red Beans

Beans, Red Chile, Vegetable Sides

Slow-Cooked Red Beans are a nice changed from my regular pintos and black beans.

Slow cooked pot of spicy red beans. mjskitchen.com

When it comes to red beans, it seems that the larger kidney bean gets most of the attention. Of course this could possibly be due to the classic red beans and rice, “an emblematic dish of Louisiana Creole cuisine“. To be honest, red beans and rice is normally our go to dish for red beans. However, sometimes I like to cook up the small red bean. It’s more tender than the kidney bean and has a sweeter, more delicate flavor, in my opinion.

This bean recipe yields a flavorful bowl of tender beans that’s savory, spicy and quite versatile. As with most beans, we love to eat these as just a bowl of beans with some cornbread or tortillas and maybe a topping or two. But you could also add them to salads or soups, serve them on top of a bowl of rice, or wrap them in a tortilla and smother with red chile. Lots of possibilities…

Like most dried beans, the small red bean does take a long time to cook if cooked on the stovetop or in the oven. However, you could speed up the process by using a pressure cooker, or use the slow cooker for a long cook, but non-interactive process. I used to always prefer the pressure cooker for dried beans, but now, I just want to enjoy the pleasure of a slow cook that allows me to baby my pot of beans for a few hours – stirring and tasting, adjusting the seasoning for that perfect bowl of beans. This recipe provides just that. If you don’t want to do a slow cook, then check out the Kitchen Notes on cooking them in the pressure cooker.

Slow-Cooked Red Beans

Slow cooked pot of spicy red beans. Small red beans, slow-cooked with a few vegetables and spices. #redbeans #beans @mjskitchen
5 from 2 votes
Slow cooked pot of spicy red beans. mjskitchen.com
Slow-Cooked Red Beans Recipe
Prep
15 mins
Cook
2 hrs 30 mins
Total Time
2 hrs 45 mins
 

A spicy red beans dish that makes a complete meal with just a tortilla or cornbread, or served over rice or wrapped in a burrito and smothered with red chile. 

Since this recipe uses dried beans, there is a 4 hour brine.  After that you have about a 10 minute prep and 2.5 – 3 hour slow-cook.

"*" See Kitchen Notes for more information or links to special ingredients.

Course: Dried Beans, soups & stews
Yields: 6 servings
Recipe Author: MJ of MJ’s Kitchen
Ingredients
Brine
  • 2 cups dried red beans*
  • Water
  • 1 Tbsp. salt
Bean Ingredients
  • 1 Tbsp. bacon drippings or olive oil
  • ½ large onion, diced
  • 1 medium green bell pepper, diced
  • 6 garlic cloves, minced
  • ¼ cup red wine
  • 6 – 8 cups water / vegetable or beef broth* (1:1)
  • ½ tsp. salt
  • ½ tsp. black pepper
  • ½ – 1 tsp. New Mexico red chile powder*
  • ½ tsp. dried thyme
  • ½ tsp. dried Mexican or regular oregano
  • 1 – 14.5 ounce can of fire roasted diced tomatoes with liquid*
Instructions
Brine
  1. Dissolve 1 Tbsp. salt in about 4 cups water.
  2. Add the dried beans. If the water doesn’t cover them, add more water.

  3. Brine for 4 hours.

  4. After 4 hours, drain and rinse.
Cooking the beans
  1. In a large Dutch oven, melt and heat the bacon drippings or oil over medium heat.
  2. When hot, add the onion and bell pepper. Reduce to medium low and cook, stirring frequently, for 5 minutes.

  3. Turn the heat back up to medium and add the garlic. Saute’, stirring constantly, until the edges of the onion start to brown.

  4. Add the wine and deglaze the pan. Continue to cook until the wine has evaporated, stirring constantly.

  5. Add 6 cups of the water/stock, the rinse beans, and seasonings. Bring to a boil, then reduce to a medium low simmer. Cover.
  6. Simmer for 2 hours stirring occasionally.

  7. After 2 hours, stir in the can of tomatoes with its liquid.

  8. Continue to cook, covered, until the beans are tender. Stir and taste occasionally. Adjust seasoning if needed.  If the liquid gets too low, add 1 cup of liquid at a time as needed.

    Slow cooked red beans | mjskitchen.com
  9. Once done, remove from heat.  You could serve immediately, or let rest for an hour or two, or cool, then refrigerate overnight and eat the next day.

When serving, you can use one or two of the toppings listed in the Kitchen Notes or just eat with a side.
    Serve with flour tortillas*, crackers*, or cornbread*.
      Kitchen Notes

      Dried Red Beans* – For this recipe use the small red beans, not the large kidney beans.  You can substitute black beans, navy beans, pintos or bolitas.

       

      Liquid – A 1:1 of water to a tasty broth (vegetarian or beef) adds a lot of flavor.  The broth could be a fat-free beef stock or a beef broth made with hot water and a broth paste. We use  Better than Bouillon beef broth paste. 

       

      Tomatoes – Substitute canned tomatoes with 2 cups frozen tomatoes and the juice.

       

      Stirring occasionally – When cooking beans on the stove top it is important to stir the bean throughout the cooking time. Stirring helps the beans to cook evenly along with keeping the pot covered.

       

      Red Chile Powder – Amount depends on your heat tolerance or how hot you want your beans. I find that 1 tsp. of a medium to medium hot New Mexico red chile powder adds a little heat to the pot, but not too much.   If you don’t have a NM red chile powder, then substitute your favorite red chile, keeping in mind the heat level. 

       

      Vegetarian / Vegan Version – Use oil to saute’ the aromatics, and water and vegetable broth for the liquid.

       

      Suggested Toppings – Red Chile (from pods or powder), chopped green chile, diced onion, or cheese.

       

      Suggested SidesCornbread, Crackers, Corn Tortillas, or Flour Tortillas

       

      Other suggested meals – Serve over rice, wrap in a flour tortilla and smother with red chile, add to a salad or Budda Bowl, and when you just have a few left, add to a pot of soup.

       

      Pressure-cooked red beans – Complete the brine and Steps 1-4 of “Cooking the Beans”.   For step 5, add the rinsed beans, 6 cups liquid, seasoning and tomatoes. Pressurize the cooker and then cook on a medium pressure for 8 – 10 minutes, depending on the age of the beans. (Older beans need to cook longer.)   Release the pressure.  Taste the beans for doneness and seasoning.  Adjust seasoning if needed and, if not quite done, cook for another 30 minutes or until the beans reach the desired tenderness.

       

       

      If you find the cook time to be different than the recipe’s, there are a few factors that cause this:

      • Age of Beans – The older the beans, the longer they take to cook. In the fall, try to buy beans from the current year to get the freshest beans that have a longer shelf life. But be careful, because the opposite is also true – the fresher the beans, the faster they cook.
      • Elevation – Unless you’re using a pressure cooker, you should expect the beans to take longer at higher elevations. Remember that I live above 5000′; therefore, if you live at sea level, the cooking time may decrease.
      • Soaking time – Most of the time, a longer soaking time can shorten the cooking time; however, I find it can also cause the beans to fall apart easier.
      • Temperature at which you cook the beans – Obviously, the higher the temperature, the faster they’ll cook, but you’ll also have to stir more often. A medium low simmer yields a nice slow-cook and one that you can stir occasionally rather than frequently.
      Slow cooked pot of spicy red beans. mjskitchen.com
      Slow-cooked Red Beans

      For more bean recipes, click on this link for a list of bean recipes in MJ’s Kitchen.

      42 Comments

      1. Pingback: Red Beans Vs Kidney Beans - No More Confusion 2022

      2. Made these tonight with Rancho Gordo Santa Maria Pinquito beans because it’s what I had in my cupboard. Turned out amazing! Thanks for the recipe.

        • Erika, Thank you so much for your feedback. I’m thrilled you enjoyed the recipe. You can’t wrong with any of Rancho Gordos beans. 🙂 Cheers, MJ

      3. Can a crock pot be used at low instead of a Dutch oven?

      4. I bought a bag of small red beans and have searched the web for a recipe with no luck. This is the first recipe I’ve actually seen for small red beans and I intend to try it. Do you have any other recipes using the small red bean?

        • Thanks so much Linda for your comment! Glad you were able to find my recipe. I personally like the small red over the kidney beans; therefore I like to substitute the small beans for the traditional southern red beans and rice. My husband likes the kidney so we alternate. 🙂 I have also used them in burritos and in this beans, rice and sausage dish. Many times I make a simple pot of beans using my black beans recipe then use those beans in salads, on pizzas, as a side dish, in soups, in three sisters, and on tostadas, just to name a few. You can slow-cook them on the stove-top or use a pressure cooker or instapot. I have always found the small red beans to be as versatile as the pinto and black bean. I hope this helps and that you enjoy this recipe.

      5. What a beautiful bean dish…. I’m such a fan of kidney beans… I also love the huge white ones (butter beans???). These two are my favourite, but I find kidney beans more versatile: they are equally good in the Western way as in Indian spices!
        Your dish sounds like something I must add to my red bean repertoire! Thank you so much for the soaking tip. I had no idea about the time’s impact on beans falling apart.

        • Thanks so much Sissi! I have found that for the smaller beans, like these small red beans, black-eyed peas and black beans, an overnight soak breaks them apart making them too easy to overcook. I stick pretty much with the 4 hour brine on all beans now and it works MUCH better. By the way, I’ve never tried this recipe with kidney beans so the cooking times might be longer. These smaller reds, cook quicker.

      6. Love kidney beans and I can imagine the deliciousness when slow cooked with wine!!I need to try it 🙂

      7. Made this recipe last night. These were the best beans I’ve ever eaten. Delicious recipe.

      8. Thanks for the quick response MJ. And yes I have the sausage
        I even found the “Slap yo mama” seasoning. I live in Ruidoso and can’t always find the things I need.
        Looks like I’m set right down to the 🌽 bread
        Thanks for your help

      9. Hey Lydia, Thank you so much for your wonderfully nice comments! IN reference to the red beans and rice, many of the recipes you find do call for kidney beans, but not all. My Louisiana cookbooks say you could use either, so personally, I think you’d be just fine with the smaller red beans because yes, there are “red” “beans”. 🙂 What’s more important is the andouille sausage. Were you able to find that? With the smaller beans, I would just slice the sausage a little thinner than I would with kidney beans. Hope this helps!

      10. Hi MJ,
        I have been meaning to ask you the following question for a while now and I have been lazy. D day is almost upon me so I best get on the stick and ask.
        Can I use the small red beans for a supposedly authentic Cajun recipe for red beans and rice.
        I sent my grandson to the store to pick up items for that purpose and this is what he came back with. ( Red is red and beans are beans, right. lol )
        Do I need to go back to the store and get the larger red kidney beans in order to ensure a successful end result?
        Love your recipes and being Hispanic I look forward to them and your informative blog that you send.
        Thank you so much for your labor of love.

      11. These red beans look perfect! Spicy, tender, and all-around yummy!

      12. Absolutely delicious!!

      13. These are simple recipes I adore. I’ll try it, thank you for sharing.

      14. Your beautiful photo has me craving a pot of beans. And I must admit, I’m pretty sure I always grab for those larger red beans. I’ll have to pay more attention and try this smaller variety.

      15. I agree, a bowl of beans works beautifully on its own!. So satisfying and delicious – I love that these are savory too. Non-interactive process, heeheeh – love that, first time I’ve heard it in the kitchen context. Makes sense but I think I like the babying approach too – there’s something soothing and meditative about the tending, tasting process. Is there a particular type of wine you like to use here? Bet it adds some gorgeous flavor – never thought to use it with beans. Great idea!

        • “Non-interactive” – I just couldn’t come up with a better way to put it. 🙂 Over forty years ago (longer than you can relate too) we got a crockpot for a wedding present. I tried it a few times and each time, I kept wanting to pick up the lid and stir, taste and smell. The instructions said “never pick up the lid”. I hated that! Plus, and I don’t know if it’s true with the slowcookers today” – everything I cooked in the crockpot came out tasting the same. Therefore, it became a garage sale item. LOL Cooking is relaxation and yes, meditative. I hand knead bread for the Zen of it. Love hands-on cooking .:)

          For the red wine, I had some leftover red table wine, but any wine would work. I added some of the same wine to a beef and vegetable soup last night and, even though it’s just a little bit, it does add a richness to the dish that’s hidden, but there.

      16. I did not even know red beans come in different sizes lol. A very tasty bean recipe, great for the weather.

      17. I need to try these red beans as I’ve never been a huge fan of kidney beans! This recipe is the perfect way to test them out!!

      18. Another one winner recipe for my slow cooker! Thanks!

        • It you do slow cook these, please let me know how it goes and your method of slow cooking dried beans. I don’t have a slow cooker so it’s hard for me to know for sure how this recipe works in one. Thanks!

      19. This is a splendid winter recipe, hearty and flavorful, just what we need on a cold evening. I’m considering an Instant Pot and this recipe would easily adapt to that type of cooking.

      20. So very yummy and comforting! I love that you have used some red wine there..must be extremely flavourful.

      21. Love beans! And cook them ALL the time. Rarely cook red beans by themselves, though. Wonder why I don’t? They have such good flavor — I need to do that more. Terrific dish — thanks!

      22. These look delicious!!!!!!

      23. Based on the ingredients, it sounds like a tasty dish.

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