Baked Beans.

Marixita

New member
What are your favorites?

When I lived on Cape Cod I used to get some beans called Buckeye Beans.
They were dried and looked like black eyed peas but a slightly different
color and I think they were bigger. I followed the recipe on the bag and it
called for an onion to be put in and discarded. I love onion though. So
after baking the heck out of them as it said to do, I would chop the onion
and mix it in. I can't remember what all went into them except for a ton of
molasses. Not something I could eat much of now.

I am making baked beans for Easter. I got the idea from a fellow diabetic.
She didn't have an actual recipe but just told me what she puts in hers.
Tons of caramelized onions for sweetness. Some ketchup or tomato sauce, a
little mustard, a little molasses, small amount of Splenda and a ton of
black pepper. I also add plenty of crumbled, crisply cooked bacon. I use
navy or pea beans, either canned or dried and cooked. Am using canned for
Easter.

I do these in the crockpot and you can cook them forever. I usually start
them around dinner time the day before and by lunch or dinner the next day
they are done. I always think they are going to get too dry and want to add
more liquid but this is really not necessary.

I think I like most baked beans except for limas. I do like limas but
prefer them plain or mixed with other veggies. I just do not like them in
sauce for some reason. And I don't like most BBQ beans but there have been
some that I do like. I just never know so tend to avoid them in
restaurants.

I have a cute little bean pot that came with four serving cups that I got
from my parent's next door neighbor. She was having a yard sale but I had
just moved to my first apartment so she offered me anything I wanted for
free. It is now considered vintage but apparently quite common because I
have seen the same set on Ebay countless times for not much money. The pot
is brown with a orange and white accent painting. The little cups have
similar painting. I used to use it quite a lot when I was living alone but
it is not really big enough for a family that includes me because I love
beans so much!

One of my favorite ways to eat baked beans is leftover ones, cold on
buttered white bread and topped with chopped or sliced raw white onions.
Alas nobody else in the family will eat this.
 
On Apr 21, 1:46?am, "Julie Bove" wrote:

I love beans too. Reminds me of when I was a kid, and I'm in my 80's
now,
all the ladies in the neighberhood would bring their bean pots early
every Friday
morning next door to my grandfather's bakery. He had a large brick
oven and baked them in there.
All the pots had a metal ring and metal tag with a number on them to
identify the owner.
Then in the afternoon the ladies came back to pick up their pot of
cooked beans.

Lucille
 
On Wed, 20 Apr 2011 22:46:58 -0700, "Julie Bove"
wrote:


With all their starch I wouldn't think beans are a good choice for
diabetics, and then with all those sweeteners plus tons of caramelized
onions...
 
On Apr 21, 10:31?am, Brooklyn1 wrote:

I'm diabetic, and don't eat them. The prepared ones that you buy in
the can are far too sweet. I've never made them from scratch though.
But still, every recipe I've looked at looks a tad unhealthy.
 
On Thu, 21 Apr 2011 08:38:41 -0700 (PDT), Portland
wrote:


The canned ones I've had are like homemade and they're delicious.
They wouldn't be baked beans if they didn't have molasses in them.

--

Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
 
Portland wrote in news:17a427ef-074c-4f04-999f-
[email protected]:


The Campbell baked neans aren't sweet. Or at least, not as much as the
others. I, personally, don't like sweet baked beans.



--
"Experience is something you don't get until
just after you need it." Steven Wright
 
On Apr 21, 11:24?am, sf wrote:

I like Bush's original best, but I doctor them up. I think S & W
makes really good home-style baked beans which you can buy canned.

N.
 
On 21 Apr 2011 16:52:01 GMT, KenK wrote:


I like them dark and sweet. My new favorite way to make baked beans
is with molasses, some dry mustard, a tiny bit of vinegar and fill
with up the pot with bean water or stock.

--
I love cooking with wine.
Sometimes I even put it in the food.
 
"Brooklyn1" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...

Beans in and of themselves contain protein and fiber so a very good choice
for diabetics provided we watch our portion size.

I do not add any sugar or other sweeteners to the onions. I just cook them
for a long time. Splenda is low in carbs and I only add a touch of
molasses. Yes the ketchup has sweetener. I used to use the low carb kind
but I don't think they make it any more. At any rate there isn't that much
difference in the carb count so I just use the regular.
 
"Portland" wrote in message
news:17a427ef-074c-4f04-999f-a7a240c559f3@i39g2000prd.googlegroups.com...
On Apr 21, 10:31 am, Brooklyn1 wrote:

I'm diabetic, and don't eat them. The prepared ones that you buy in
the can are far too sweet. I've never made them from scratch though.
But still, every recipe I've looked at looks a tad unhealthy.

Mine are much lower in carbs than the canned. I do eat the canned on
occasion. A serving for a diabetic is usually 1/3 cup.
 
On Thu, 21 Apr 2011 04:49:47 -0700 (PDT), Lucille
wrote:


I love to hear about food and cooking in the past. Did your
grandfather bake any other dishes for the neighborhood? Do you mind
sharing where you lived?

Tara
 
On Thu, 21 Apr 2011 14:36:57 -0700, "Julie Bove"
wrote:


Onions themselves are pretty high in sugar, they really don't need any
added sugar to caramelize. Instead of adding any fake sweeteners, or
ketchup and molasses I would flavor beans with a smoked ham hock or a
meaty ham bone, then you can eat a larger portion of beans without
blowing your sugar allotment. If you're going to perpare beans with
all that sugar then you may as well eat canned. You'd be much better
off to totally forget baked beans and make a big pot of bean soup with
smoked ham hocks, seasoned with herbs and add lots of greens... add
just a small amount of sweet veggies like onions, garlic, and carrots
for flavor. Make a big potful so you'll have lots to freeze in
portions for subsequent meals.
This is a soup:
http://i53.tinypic.com/29kzww7.jpg
Doesn't this look lucious, beans don't get any better:
http://i54.tinypic.com/96dk03.jpg
 
On Apr 21, 6:10?pm, Tara wrote:

This was in Fall River, Massachusetts. I know he made lots of bread
and different kinds of pastry.
He would deliver the bread in his horse and wagon. The horse knew
when they got to the last house.
Then he ran all the way home. That was the days of trolleys and
cobble stone streets.
My mother had five brothers and they all became bakers. My mother
made good pies and cakes too.

Lucille
 
Lucille wrote:

They have some of the best bakeries there. Or they did when my husband was
working there some 12+ years ago. Many of them brought trays of goodies to
the ship on a regular basis.
 
On Apr 21, 8:14?pm, "Julie Bove" wrote:

I move away from there around 1960 so I have no idea what the bakeries
are like anymore.
My daughter lives there and when she come over to visit me in Ct I ask
her to bring me a French meat pie.
The best ones at a bakery only make them on Thursdays and Fridays. So
she orders one for me and freezes it.
My mother's meat pies were soooo good. I could never make them like
her.
She used ground pork, finely chopped onions, some spices I can't
remember which and she would use
a rolling pin to make cracker crumbs with saltine crackers.

Lucille
 
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