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Saved by red beans and rice

To celebrate Mardi Gras, I decided to try and to make gumbo.

I failed.

It wasn’t the fault of the recipe, I just don’t think I’m hard-wired to stand in front of a stove for an hour stirring flour and oil to make a roux—there’s just no pleasure in that for me at all. So since I had the ingredients on hand, I decided instead to make red beans and rice. Now that’s a Louisiana dish I can understand.

red beans and rice | Homesick Texan

At my house when I was a kid, we ate a lot of beans. Weekly, we’d have pinto bean night, bean salad night and red beans and rice night. The latter was my favorite, as mom slow cooked the beans with sausage, lots of spices and love.

Now, our Texas version of red beans and rice used pinto beans and kielbasa whereas the Louisiana version has little red beans or kidney beans alongside ham or andouille sausage. But no matter, after you cook the beans long enough the flavors come together in very similar ways.

Red beans and rice is traditionally served on Mondays in New Orleans. This goes back to when people had a hambone leftover from Sunday dinner, and Monday being washday, cooks needed a slow-simmering dish that didn’t call for a lot of fuss as they were cleaning clothes.

Of course, I’m fairly certain that anytime is a fine time for red beans and rice. And with just enough attention, after a few hours you are left with a flavorful, creamy dish that sticks to your bones and warms you to the core.

red beans and rice | Homesick Texan

But the best thing is that you it practically makes itself, so you can busy yourself with other more important things, such as visiting with friends or reading a book, instead of being a slave to the skillet. And after a few hours, you can return to the pot and dinner will be served.

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5 from 2 votes

Red beans and rice

Servings 8
Author Lisa Fain

Ingredients

  • 1 pound red beans
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons kosher salt
  • 1 tablespoon bacon grease
  • 1 medium yellow onion, chopped
  • 2 celery stalks, diced
  • 1 bell pepper, seeded, stemmed, and chopped
  • 6 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1/2 pound andouille sausage, cubed
  • 1/2 cup chopped parsley
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 1 teaspoon dried thyme
  • 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  • 1 teaspoon sweet paprika
  • 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 teaspoon black pepper
  • Cayenne
  • 2 smoked ham hocks
  • 8 cups chicken broth or water
  • 6 cups cooked rice, for serving
  • 4 green onions, green part only, chopped, for serving
  • Hot sauce, for serving

Instructions

  • Rinse and sort the beans. Place in a large pot or Dutch oven, cover with 2 inches of water, add the salt, bring the pot to a boil then turn off the heat, cover the pot, and allow the beans to soak for an hour. After an hour when the beans have almost doubled in size, drain and rinse the beans and rinse the pot.
  • Place the pot back on the stove, and on medium heat sauté in bacon grease the onion, celery, and bell pepper for 10 minutes. Add the garlic and sausage to the pot and cook for 2 minutes. Add the soaked beans, parsley, bay leaves, thyme, oregano, paprika, Worcestershire sauce, pepper, cayenne, ham hocks, and chicken broth to the pot. 
  • Turn up the heat to high and bring to a boil. Let it boil for 20 minutes and then turn the heat to low, cover the pot, and let it simmer for 40 minutes.
  • After 40 minutes, take off the lid, stir the pot and continue to let it simmer for 2 hours. You might check back on it every once in a while to make sure there’s still enough liquid in the pot.
  • At this time, test your beans—they should be soft, but if not, continue to cook on low until they are. 
  • When the beans are ready, with a wooden spoon smash a few of them against the side of the pot—this will make your beans extra creamy. Taste and adjust seasonings, adding more salt if needed.
  • Serve the beans over rice, and garnish with the green onions. A few shakes of some Louisiana hot sauce such as Tabasco or Crystal is a good addition as well.

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5 from 2 votes (2 ratings without comment)

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73 Comments

  1. Lisa Fain says:

    Cameron–Soak 16 ounces of beans.

  2. Could this be made decently in a crockpot? If so, what are your recommended modifications?

  3. Lisa Fain says:

    Christa–I've never tried it (I don't own one), so I can't give you advice on modifying the recipe. Perhaps you could just throw everything in the pot and cook it on low all day.

  4. Anonymous says:

    Be accursed! only 1/4 lb of Andouille? at least 1lb. The rest looks good, very good. P.S. Make the Roux in the oven and quit killing yourself. Oven Roux dont burn. 350 degrees 1.5 hours. Stir every 30 min.

  5. Anonymous says:

    I lived in Louisiana (Lake Charles, Merryville) in the early 1980's and was taught to make pinto beans with rice and sausage (kielbasa) with only a few other seasonings – salt at the end of cooking, black pepper, a little cayenne, and some jalapeno peppers and some tabasco. The sauteed kielbasa added a lot of flavor, and the taste and consistency of the pinto beans cooked from scratch is incomparable to anything canned, or any other variety of dry beans. Coming from New England, I had never heard of such a thing as "pinto beans" or "cayenne. I lived in LA only about a year, but that recipe is one of my husband's (also a New Englander) favorites and it's one of my all-time go-to comfort foods. It's impossible to find any references online to a recipe using these three staples – there are variations, but mostly it's "red beans and rice" and although I love those, it would be nice to know if anyone else has heard of the combination I described.