Hot Cowboy Beans
Submitted by canuslupas1969
Hot cowboy beans: pinto beans simmered low and slow with salt pork, ham hock, onion, jalapeños, and chili powder. A Texas chuckwagon classic that gets better every day.
YIELD
24 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
30 minREADY
8 hrsThese are the pinto beans cowboys actually ate at chuckwagon camp, slow-simmered for days over a low fire until they reach a kind of perfection no quick-cook bean can touch. The recipe is honest about taking three days, and it’s worth the wait. Each day deepens the flavor as the salt pork renders, the ham hock collapses, and the spices meld into the beans.
The overnight soak is the foundation. Skip it and you’ll get tough beans no matter how long you cook. Use the soaking water for cooking; it’s full of dissolved bean starch that gives the broth body.
Three ounces of chili powder sounds extreme but it’s correct. Cowboy beans need the punch, and the long cook smooths the spice into something warm rather than sharp. The fresh and pickled jalapeños layer different kinds of heat: the fresh chiles are bright, the pickled ones are tangy.
The “turn off the fire at night” instruction is the secret. Letting the pot cool slowly at room temperature, then reheating gently the next morning, allows the flavors to redistribute and concentrate. It’s the same logic as soup tasting better on day two.
Serve in deep bowls with cornbread, pickled onions, and a stack of warm flour tortillas.
Pro Tips
- Slash the salt pork in a fan pattern so the fat renders evenly into the pot.
- Don’t add salt until the end. Salt added early prevents beans from softening.
- Stir occasionally to prevent the beans on the bottom from scorching.
- Skim any foam in the first hour for a cleaner final pot.
Variations
- Add 2 quartered tomatoes for a slightly more Mexican-leaning flavor.
- Stir in a tablespoon of cumin or smoked paprika in the last hour.
- Top with shredded cheddar, sour cream, and chopped scallion at serving.
Ingredients
Directions
Pick over beans for rocks and dirt.
Wash and soak overnight.
Next morning, cook in soaking water.
Add remaining ingredients and enough fresh water to cover the beans by about 2 inhces.
Bring to boil, then reduce heat and simmer.
Can be eaten first day.
For 3 days stir and inhale the marvelous aroma from time to time.
Turn fire off at night.
Keep covered at all times.
Watch water; you may have to add a little as you go along.
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