Gourmet's Boston Baked Beans
Submitted by babbs
Classic Boston baked beans with navy beans, salt pork, and molasses, slow-baked for six hours until thick and bronzed. The traditional New England Saturday-night supper.
YIELD
6 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
7 hrsREADY
7 hrsReal Boston baked beans take time, but the work itself is mostly waiting. Navy beans soak overnight, simmer for an hour, then settle into a low oven with molasses, salt pork, and a whisper of dry mustard for six unhurried hours. The result is what no canned version ever quite captures: beans tender to the bite, swimming in a dark, faintly bitter glaze that smells like New England in November.
Scoring the salt pork matters more than it sounds. Cutting a crosshatch into the surface lets fat render into the pot all afternoon, basting the beans from within. The buried piece in the center does the same work from below. Skip the scoring and the pork sits there like a brick instead of melting into the dish.
Molasses is a structural ingredient here. Beyond sweetness, it acidifies the cooking liquid just enough to slow bean softening, which is exactly what you want over six hours. Beans cooked in plain water for that long would dissolve.
That final uncovered hour is when the magic happens. The top crisps, the liquid reduces to a glossy syrup, and the pork edges turn mahogany.
Pro Tips
- Check the bean liquid level every hour and add reserved cooking water to keep the beans barely submerged. Dried-out beans become leathery and never recover.
- Use sulphured (not blackstrap) molasses. Blackstrap is too bitter for this dish.
- Let the finished beans rest 20 minutes before serving. They thicken further and the flavors round out.
Variations
- Stir in 2 tablespoons of dark brown sugar with the molasses for a sweeter, more modern profile.
- Swap a third of the salt pork for thick-cut bacon for smoky depth.
- Add a splash of apple cider vinegar in the last hour to brighten the finish.
Ingredients
Directions
In a bowl, combine the beans with 4 cups cold water and let them soak overnight.
Drain, reserving any remaining liquid. Transfer them to a small heavy kettle, and add fresh water to cover.
Simmer, covered, for 60 minutes.
Drain in a colander, reserving the cooking liquid and combining it with the soaking liquid.
To the kettle, add a quarter lb. piece of salt pork and the beans and bury the remaining piece of pork, well scored, in the center of the beans.
In a small bowl, stir together the molasses, ½ cup of bean liquid, mustard, paprika, and onion.
Pour the mixture over the beans and stir in.
Bake the beans, covered, in the middle of a preheated 300℉ (150℃). oven for 5 hours, stirring in some of the bean liquid at hourly intervals as necessary to keep the beans just barely covered.
Remove lid and cook uncovered for 1 more hour.
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