Slow-Cooker Baked Beans With Chorizo and Lime
Updated Feb. 8, 2023

- Total Time
- 6 hours and 20 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1pound dried pinto beans, soaked about 8 hours and drained (see Tip)
- 12 to 14ounces cooked, smoked or cured Mexican-style chorizo links, sliced into 1½-inch chunks
- 1yellow or red onion, finely chopped
- 5large garlic cloves, finely chopped
- 2cups chicken broth or stock
- 1cup canned tomato purée
- ¼ to ⅓cup packed light or dark brown sugar
- 2tablespoons unsalted butter
- 1tablespoon tomato paste
- 1teaspoon onion powder
- 1teaspoon garlic powder
- 1teaspoon red-pepper flakes
- 1teaspoon ground cumin
- 1teaspoon paprika
- Kosher salt and black pepper
- 2 to 3tablespoons lime juice (from about 2 limes)
- ½cup roughly chopped cilantro leaves
- Vinegary hot sauce, for serving
Preparation
- Step 1
In a 6- to 8-quart slow cooker, combine the soaked beans, chorizo, onion, garlic, chicken broth, tomato purée, sugar, butter, tomato paste, onion and garlic powders, red-pepper flakes, cumin and paprika. Season with 1½ teaspoons salt (or 2½ teaspoons if using unsalted stock) and a generous amount of black pepper. Using a spatula, stir well to combine, then smooth the top of the mixture to submerge as many beans as possible. (It’s OK if some poke out of the liquid.) Cover and cook on high until the beans are very tender, about 6 hours.
- Step 2
Stir in the lime juice and cilantro. Taste, and add more salt or pepper if desired. Serve with hot sauce.
- Dried, soaked beans work best here, but if you’d prefer to use canned or precooked beans, you will need about 6 to 6½ cups of drained beans. That’s about 4 (15.5-ounce) cans worth, after draining. Reduce the salt to ¾ teaspoon, and reduce the cook time by an hour or so.
- The beans should reach a simmer and cook until tender to be safe to eat. If your slow cooker does not reach a simmer on the low setting, increase the heat level to high, and ensure the beans cook at a simmer for at least 15 minutes at some point in the cooking process.
Private Notes
Comments
what about raw chorizo? Should I cook it first?
I used an Instant Pot. I used the sauté setting for the sausage (I used Beyond Sausage and omitted the butter to make it vegan) and then tried to use the slow cooker function on high. At the 5hr mark, the beans were not cooked (I soaked them for 24hrs) so I pressure cooked on the bean setting and then turned it back onto slow cook until I was ready to serve. Came out DELICIOUS. In future, I would pressure cook first, then slow cook as long as time permits for beans to absorb the flavor.
I've made this multiple times, always according to the recipe, and adjusting the sugar to taste (you can always add more toward the end). "Creamy" beans is not something I understand to be the object here, but 6 hours on high with dried pinto beans that I have soaked overnight in advance results in a tender bean with a flavorful bite that has friends asking for the recipe. I use uncooked choriza (pork or beef) available at my grocery store next to the bacon and sausage, and I lightly brown it.
I've made this multiple times, always according to the recipe, and adjusting the sugar to taste (you can always add more toward the end). "Creamy" beans is not something I understand to be the object here, but 6 hours on high with dried pinto beans that I have soaked overnight in advance results in a tender bean with a flavorful bite that has friends asking for the recipe. I use uncooked choriza (pork or beef) available at my grocery store next to the bacon and sausage, and I lightly brown it.
Way too sweet... use brown sugar sparingly.
Pretty bad miss. Cut in half but otherwise followed exactly. Please stop with the dried bean propaganda. Got beans from the Whole Foods bulk section and soaked overnight (at least 12 hours) and cooked in the crookpot for 8 hours on high. Barely done. Same experience basically every time I've cooked from dry, though many of those recipes will suggest adding salt at the end since it keeps the beans from tenderizing. Anyway, all that work resulted in something that tasted vaguely of canned chili.
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