A Fresh, Fun Baked Bean Recipe (with Dr Pepper)


© Richard Mann

It seems that many of you wandering into the Bean Lovers site from search engines are looking for information on baked beans. Recipes, presumably. Far be it from me to frustrate our visitors, so I've undertaken a massive project to find out All About Baked Beans.

This article is not, unfortunately, All About Baked Beans. I haven't finished that yet. As part of my research process, however, I'm finding and printing as many different baked bean recipes as I can so that I can eventually analyze them and find out many fascinating things. (Certainly such an analysis would produce many fascinating things, wouldn't it?)

As I find and print them, some are just irresistible. So far the most irresistible ones have been the simple ones that use canned beans and don't require overnight soaking or the quick-soak method (which is still a lot more time-consuming than opening a can). So I find myself getting ahead of the research plan (of course I have a plan!) and making baked beans willy-nilly as fun recipes come to hand.

Here's one that my family and I have enjoyed both times that I made it. It caught my eye because it looked easy and because it has an unusual ingredient: Dr Pepper. Yep, the soft drink. (Use the fully sugared version, not the diet.) I have a half-dozen recipes for Root Beer Baked Beans, too, but something about Dr Pepper Baked Beans tickled my fancy.

Here's the recipe:


Dr Pepper Baked Beans

Yield: 6 servings

28 oz can pork and beans (or two regular-sized cans of 14 oz. each)
1 onion, chopped fine
1 green pepper, chopped fine
1 tomato, chopped fine
1/2 cup dark brown sugar
1/3 cup Dr Pepper
1/8 teaspoon ground cloves (I left these out)

Preheat oven to 350 F.

Drain liquid from the pork and beans. Pour beans into a bean pot, if you have one, or a baking dish if you don't. Gently mix in onion, green pepper and tomato into the beans.

Combine sugar, Dr Pepper, and cloves until sugar is dissolved. Pour evenly over the bean mixture. Bake, covered, for an hour. Check on the beans; they might need a little more time than that, but don't overcook them.

You could successfully substitute ginger ale for the Dr Pepper for a different flavor.



The fresh tomatoes, peppers, and onions give these beans a fresh taste and feel that is simply delightful. The Dr Pepper just mixes itself into the overall sauce; you would never know it's there if someone didn't tell you.

       

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Here's the follow-up discussion on this article: View all related messages

1.   May 25, 2000 6:37 PM
Is it REALLY good? Or just palatable? Jerri

-- posted by jerrib





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