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Yeah, I know. I’m not really “with” the seasons right now. Then again, being “with it” isn’t exactly something of which I have ever been accused.
I definitely intended to get my act together and make these baked beans this summer. You know, when it was actually warm and the season for cookouts and whatnot. But somehow I blinked, and summer was suddenly gone.
Thankfully, we aren’t picky about when we eat our baked beans in this house. So as the cooler weather started rolling in, I pulled out the slow cooker and filled it with some dried pinto beans which had been soaking overnight, some spices, plenty of molasses, brown sugar, and maple syrup, and a whole cup of bourbon.
Yes, you read that right. There’s a cup of bourbon in them beans. It feels so wrong but it’s so, so right.
While this is an easy recipe, I won’t pretend like this is quick. It requires you to soak your beans (I highly recommend these from Bob’s Red Mill) for at least 8 hours, and the actual cook time on these suckers is a solid 12 hours – in fact, I would suggest letting these guys cook overnight, and reheating them when you are ready to eat. But trust me when I tell you that homemade beans are so, so worth it. These beans are sweet and rich and full of flavor from the bourbon and several slices of thick-cut bacon. Not to mention, beans freeze notoriously well, which means that a big pot of beans now can mean sides of baked beans a couple of months down the road.
Believe me, you’ll be thankful for that when there is snow up to your…nevermind.

Slow Cooker Maple Bourbon Baked Beans
Ingredients
- 1 pound dried pinto beans
- 7 slices thick-cut bacon diced
- 1 onion diced
- 1 1/2 cups water
- 1 cup bourbon
- 1/2 cup ketchup
- 1/2 cup brown sugar
- 1/2 cup maple syrup
- 6 tablespoons molasses
- 2 tablespoons cider vinegar
- 1 tablespoon spicy brown mustard
- 1 clove garlic minced
- 2 teaspoons kosher salt
- 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
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Instructions
- Place the dried beans in a large bowl. Cover with 2-3 inches of water, and let soak for 8 hours or overnight at room temperature.
- When the beans are finished soaking, drain and place the beans in a slow cooker (minimum 3 1/2-quarts). Place the diced onion and bacon on top.
- In a bowl, whisk together the remaining ingredients and pour over the beans. Cover and cook on high for 12 hours. 1-2 hours before the beans are done, you may want to check the sauce for consistency. If it seems too thin, prop the lid open slightly with a wooden spoon to allow the sauce to reduce and thicken slightly while the beans finish cooking.
- If cooking overnight, allow the beans to cool to room temperature before placing in the fridge. Reheat before serving.

About Stephie
Stephie is the creator of Stephie Cooks, a food blog that focuses on creating memories around the food we share, with family recipes at the site’s heart. Stephie lives in Central Illinois with her husband, daughter, and a menagerie of cats and dogs. When she’s not in the kitchen or at her computer writing, you can usually find her curled up with a book or working on one of her many grandma-esque hobbies. Learn more >




I don’t see anything in your recipe about how many portions it makes, or of which size. From your admonition about using a slow cooker of at least 3.5 quart capacity, I assume the recipe makes about 3 quarts, or 12 one-cup portions.
I will be making these for a Thursday Night Football gathering at a cigar bar (fine cigars, craft beers, bourbon, hot dogs with onions, mustard and kraut — the beans will be a good fit). The number of attendees will be anywhere from 10 to 20, all mostly big guys with hearty appetites, and they will all likely eat multiple portions over 5 hours.
I am not worried about having to take some home afterward, but whatever I do I don’t want to show up with too small an amount!
Hi Bill- Sounds like you will be feeding a room full of guys who eat about like my fiance does! If you have larger slow cooker, I would double the recipe based on what you just told me. It makes around 10 cups as-is.
Is the bacon cooked before going in with the beans? Thanks!
Nope- it’ll cook with them!
These beans were delicious! Brought them to a bbq and everyone gobbled them up! Thanks for the recipe.
I’m so glad you enjoyed them! Thank you for commenting!
I am ALL over making these babies!
I challenge you not to faceplant into them immediately. Mostly because you might burn yourself. Wait at least 10 minutes for that. 😉
Dude, baked beans are totally an any time of year thing in our house! I especially am loving using dried beans these days. Mike will love these! Served along side a nice big cheeseburger! Yes!
Oooooo yes! Alex has been craving a nice big cheeseburger for days now. These would be perfect together!
It’s around this time that food blogging is really challenging for me – the rest of the country is cooling off and embracing Fall foods, while I am in Sacramento where it’s still in the high 80’s. Soup isn’t exactly on my mind yet. But hey, whaddya know, I’m posting a bean recipe tomorrow! *high five*
My friend from college just moved to Sacramento with her hubby. She was telling me about her warm weather and I was feeling soooooooo bad for her (haha, not). 😉 BUT you can still grill out, so get something grillin’ and make some beans! *high five*
It’s completely acceptable to eat nothing but bourbon baked beans for dinner, right? Riiiiight? Can we add these to the list of therapy foods? And now that we’re on the subject, how long am I allowed to stretch this therapy food thing? At least through the holiday season, I imagine….anyway…I want some boozed up beans yesterday, so I had better get to soaking some legumes! 😉
I was working on the same idea–beans for my main dish! I’m there. And yes, definitely therapy food through Halloween treats and then through New Year’s. 🙂
Oh, you can absolutely milk this through the holidays. I mean…single during the holidays? That’s totally excuse for booze, cookies, and beans. Weird combo, but whatever.
And I personally think beans and cornbread would be an ideal meal. 😉
I’ve been looking for a simple baked bean recipe in the crockpot! And since this one has a cup of bourbon, I know it’s a winner! 🙂
Hi, I’m craving baked beans and bourbon at midnight. That’s the kind of magic you are working here!
Forget “eating the seasons” with this recipe! None of the ingredients are seasonal, and this is a very hearty recipe. I can’t wait to try it! Thank you.
Please let me know what you think if you do try it! 🙂
Wow these are awesome! There were no leftovers though so I’m going to make them again for Christmas. The bourbon seems to take the ‘wind’ out of them so that’s a plus! I used cannellini beans instead of pintos because I had them.
Thank you for sharing this recipe. Merry Christmas!
So glad you enjoyed!