Bourbon Maple Slow Cooker Baked Beans — The BEST baked beans ever! The flavors of bourbon, maple syrup, brown sugar, molasses, and BBQ sauce intensify and concentrate over time, and the resulting beans have incredible depth of flavor. Sweet with a bit of heat, robust yet smooth, and extremely satisfying!!
Slow Cooker Baked Beans Recipe
I had a craving for baked beans that hit me like a ton of bricks over Memorial Day Weekend. And these are the best beans that have ever passed my lips.
I was walking around my San Diego neighborhood, and the smells from neighborhood cookouts were wafting through the air, music was playing, people were laughing with beer bottles clanking, and the early summer evenings that stay light until 8pm reminded me of my childhood summers.
Because I grew up in Minnesota, summer was painfully short and each day was cherished. It meant as much time outdoors as possible and cookouts and grilling were an integral part. The nice thing about grilling was that it kept the mosquitoes the size of golf balls somewhat at bay.
Baked beans were always served at picnics and barbeques, and since I was never a meat eater, I made meals out of baked beans, corn on the cob, watermelon, and white grocery store-bakery sheet cakes. I’d like to get back to that diet, actually.
It’s funny how certain smells set off my cascade of memories, and I had to make bourbon baked beans. I had never made them before, but necessity was the mother of recipe development.
This is an easy and nearly work-free baked beans from scratch recipe. The only caveat is that it takes forever. Like 16 hours or so, but it’s just waiting around, no active work. They don’t call it a slow cooker for nothing. Set it and forget it.
I kept the recipe vegan, and free from garlic, onions, or added salt. Most baked bean recipes start out with bacon, pork fat, stinky spices, and enough sodium to make me retain water until Christmas. No thanks. You won’t miss one ounce of flavor or pig fat.
If you have another method for making homemade baked beans, use it. Bean recipes are like chocolate chip cookie recipes. Everyone has one, everyone thinks their family recipe is the best, and why another recipe isn’t as good or isn’t the traditional way. I happen to love everything about these slow cooker baked beans and wouldn’t change a thing.
After soaking the beans (overnight or for an hour, details in the recipe), and simmering them for about 45 minutes, the mostly-cooked beans go into a marinade that uses everything but the kitchen sink. Mix and match based on what you have.
The key elements include maple syrup, brown sugar, ketchup, mustard, molasses, vinegar, and bbq sauce. Bourbon is the other key ingredient and you’ll need a cup. As I poured 1 cup of Jim Beam into my Crock-Pot, it felt so wrong. But so right.
The beans simmer in their black hot tub for 12 to 16 hours. I set my slow-cooker to low and let them cook for 12 hours. I didn’t bother stirring them the entire 12 hours. When I checked them, the marinade had reduced and thickened, but was no where thick enough. Still pretty liquidy and soupy.
So I set my Crock-Pot to high, took the lid off, and let them simmer on the hottest setting for 4 hours. Between the increased heat and the evaporation from having the lid off, they thickened up considerably and were ready. If you’re having soupy issues, remove the lid and crank up the heat. Because slow-cookers and their cooking temperatures vary greatly, tinker with the settings as you see fit.
The beans are done when they’re tender, the sauce has thickened and the flavor is rich and robust, the smell in your house is driving you nuts, and you just can’t take it any longer. The beans are slightly sweet, with a touch of heat and tanginess. They’re tender, but not mushy.
The already robust flavors of molasses, maple, and bourbon become concentrated and are intense yet smooth. Although the sauce thickens, it’s still plentiful. I’m a sauce lover and made sure they stayed juicy and saucy.
They’ll make a bean lover out of even those who say they “don’t like beans.” I’ve never been so excited about beans in my life. It’s the little things.
What’s in Slow Cooker Baked Beans?
To make these Crockpot baked beans from scratch, you’ll need:
- Dry Great Northern beans
- Bourbon
- Maple syrup
- Barbecue sauce
- Light brown sugar
- Water
- Ketchup
- Mustard
- Molasses
- Olive oil
- Apple cider vinegar
- Worcestershire sauce
How to Make Baked Beans in a Slow Cooker
The prep work for these slow cooker baked beans begins the night before. You need to soak the dry beans in water overnight, then drain and rinse the beans the next day.
Then, simmer the beans in water for about 45 minutes. You want the beans to be tender, but not cooked through.
Once the beans are partially cooked, it’s just a matter of throwing everything into your slow cooker and letting it do all the work. Cook on low heat for about 12 hours, or until the beans are tender, the sauce has thickened and reduced dramatically, and the flavor is concentrated and robust.
Do I Have to Add Bourbon to the Baked Beans?
The finished bourbon baked beans do not taste like alcohol and all traces of alcohol are removed. There’s no way any traces survive 16 hours of simmering, and no one will get tipsy from beans. The bourbon adds wonderful richness and depth of flavor, and I can’t imagine the beans without it. Although I’m wondering how beans with tequila or scotch would be. I may have to find out.
If you have reasons to skip the bourbon, you may replace it with water; however, your beans won’t taste like mine and I loved everything about them.
Before Simmering for 16 Hours
16 Hours Later
How Long Do Baked Beans Last?
These Crockpot baked beans will keep airtight in the refrigerator for up to 1 week, and they actually taste better on days 2 and 3 as the flavors marry even more.
Can You Freeze Baked Beans?
I would anticipate finished beans could be frozen for up to 6 months, however I have not tested it so I can’t say for certain.
Tips for Making the Best Baked Beans
I used Great Northern beans to make this bourbon maple baked beans recipe, but dry navy beans will also work. Just make sure to use dry (uncooked) beans and not canned beans!
Likewise, you must use pure maple syrup in this recipe and NOT pancake syrup. Pancake syrup is essentially flavored corn syrup — not what you want in your slow cooker baked beans.
If you need to keep these slow cooker baked beans vegan, omit the Worcestershire sauce or substitute with Bragg’s Liquid Aminos or soy sauce.
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Bourbon Maple Slow Cooker Baked Beans
Ingredients
- 1 pound dry Great Northern beans, or navy beans
- 1 cup bourbon
- 1 cup maple syrup
- 1 cup barbeque sauce
- 1 cup light brown sugar, packed
- 1 cup water
- heaping 1/4 cup ketchup
- ¼ cup mustard, I used yellow, if using stoneground or dijon, consider using slightly less
- ¼ cup molasses
- ¼ cup olive oil
- ¼ cup apple cider vinegar
- 2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce, omit if keeping vegan, or substitute with Bragg’s Liquid Aminos or soy sauce
Instructions
- Rinse and sort dry beans in a colander over the sink.
- Add beans to a large pot and cover with 8 cups water and let soak overnight (about 8 hours). OR to save time….
- …Use the 1 hour rapid soak method. Bring beans and 8 cups water to a boil. Allow beans to boil rapidly for 3 minutes, uncovered. Shut the heat off, cover the pot, and let stand for 1 hour.
- In either the overnight soak method or the 1 hour rapid soak method, drain soaking water and rinse beans well under running water in a colander over the sink.
- Return beans to pot, cover with 6 cups water, and allow to simmer on low heat for about 45 minutes, or until quite tender; cooked about 80% of the way. They’ll be transferred to a slow cooker where they’ll cook for 12+ hours so you don’t want them or need them to be totally done, but they shouldn’t be overly hard either (taste a few beans, you’ll know when you bite into them)
- While beans are simmering, combine all remaining ingredients in the slow cooker, and whisk to combine until smooth.
- After beans are done simmering, drain them, add them to the slow cooker, and stir.
- Cover and cook on low heat for about 12 hours (start checking at about 8 hours), or until beans are tender, the sauce has thickened and reduced dramatically, the flavor is concentrated and robust, and the smell in your house is intoxicating. If after 12 hours your sauce is still liquidy or on the soupy side, remove the lid, increase the heat to the highest setting, and cook uncovered until thickened to desired level (this took 4 hours for me; 12 hours covered on low and 4 hours uncovered on high, for 16 hours total). *
- Serve immediately.
Notes
- *Note – Because slow-cookers and temperatures vary greatly, you can tinker with the temperature settings as you see fit. You could possibly cook on medium for 10 to 12 hours, or cook on high for 8 to 10 hours, or do a combination of settings until your sauce has thickened and beans are tender.
- Beans will keep airtight in the refrigerator for up to 1 week, and taste better on days 2 and 3 as the flavor marry even more.
- I would anticipate finished beans could be frozen for up to 6 months, however I have not tested it.
- Take care all ingredients used are suitable for your dietary needs if keeping vegan and gluten-free, reading labels and selecting specific brands that meet your needs.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
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I have been using a similar recipe for years, but never measured the ingredients. Friends kept asking me for the recipe and I finally started documenting the ingredients. In an epiphany, I thought to look online to save time, and found this recipe. The only differences are the addition of barbecue sauce and I used lemon juice instead of vinegar. I made this recipe verbatim and although a bit different, it’s just as delicious! Highly recommended and also you can easily modify the ingredients to suit your tastes. Bob Apetit!
Thanks for the 5 star review, David, and I love stories like yours. This recipe is also from 2013 and so it’s especially nice for me to see an old recipe getting a new comment and some fresh love and praise! I am glad that my recipe helped you document to your friends how to make this style of baked beans. For me, they’re reminiscent of baked beans my grandma used to make (minus the bourbon) and I have always loved them for my personal nostalgia.
Without a doubt the best baked beans ever. I did as suggested and used maple syrup and the brown sugar bourbon instead of regular bourbon. Wow! Can’t wait to have another bbq get together and torture myself with the long hours of thinking I’ll starve if these aren’t ready soon. Thanks so much for all you recipes you share. I’m 85 and love trying new recipes. :-)
Without a doubt the best baked beans ever. I did as suggested and used maple syrup and the brown sugar bourbon instead of regular bourbon. Wow! Can’t wait to have another bbq get together and torture myself with the long hours of thinking I’ll starve if these aren’t ready soon. Thanks so much for all you recipes you share. I’m 85 and love trying new recipes. :-)
Thanks for the 5 star review and I am glad that without a doubt they’re the best baked beans ever! I agree :)
I love that you’re 85, still cooking, and trying new recipes from the internet! And that in your 85 years think my recipe is the best!
great
I made these beans last night, in the crockpot. I cooked them for 18 hours. The mixture is extremely dark. The flavor is really good but the beans never really softened. They are a little too firm for my liking.
What do you think I did wrong?
I soaked them over night, prior to my simmering them on the stove for 45 minutes. I did not taste them at that point.
I’d definitely make them again if could figure out what I did wrong this time.
I made these beans last night, in the crockpot. I cooked them for 18 hours. The mixture is extremely dark. The flavor is really good but the beans never really softened. They are a little too firm for my liking.
What do you think I did wrong?
I soaked them over night, prior to my simmering them on the stove for 45 minutes. I did not taste them at that point.
I’d definitely make them again if could figure out what I did wrong this time.
It is soooo hard to say where things went haywire with the beans. They were not cooked long enough, that is the bottom line, if they weren’t soft enough.
I suggest cooking the beans longer in steps 3 and 5. Since it doesn’t sounds like your slow cooker really cooked them enough to your liking, you need to handle that then on the stovetop before even transferring them into the slow cooker.
Soak overnight (step 2), do step 3 anyway, and do step 5 until they are 90-95% cooked I would say.
Oh boy! I made these Saturday into Sunday and the bourbon taste was so overwhelming! BUT – I’m just now reading your notes (all over the page!) about the 16 hours!! I tried cooking on and off on low adding more bbq sauce, worcestershire, ketchup etc. to rid the bourbon taste!! Wow!! I need to start re-reading if something doesn’t seem right! I wonder if I could throw them back in the crock and put them on high uncovered for a couple of hours??
Oh boy! I made these Saturday into Sunday and the bourbon taste was so overwhelming! BUT – I’m just now reading your notes (all over the page!) about the 16 hours!! I tried cooking on and off on low adding more bbq sauce, worcestershire, ketchup etc. to rid the bourbon taste!! Wow!! I need to start re-reading if something doesn’t seem right! I wonder if I could throw them back in the crock and put them on high uncovered for a couple of hours??
Thanks for trying the recipe, yes this is a longer recipe for sure with the notes/timeframes involved although not complicated. I would say that it will mellow in time as leftovers, although not sure what would happen if you tried cooking them longer – it could “evaporate” and dissipate, or it could become stronger and more concentrated, hard to say.
i haven’t tried your recipe yet, but from the ingredients list it looks good and the directions and tips you provide are excellent. (i am troubled at the thought of giving up a cup of jim bean for a pot of beams, but i will make myself do that.)
i look forward to making my first from scratch batch of baked beans. thank you for such a great instructional post.
I hope you enjoyed them and that the cup was worth it!