Helen's Baked Beans in Tomato Sauce
Submitted by sophia
Old-fashioned baked beans with navy beans, smoky bacon, molasses, and brown sugar in a tomato sauce base. The classic New England Sunday-supper bean pot baked low and slow until thick and rich.
YIELD
6 servingsPREP
5 minCOOK
7 hrsREADY
15 hrsThese baked beans are the kind of bean pot New England farmhouse kitchens have been making for generations. Dried navy beans soaked overnight, simmered until tender, then baked low and slow with smoky bacon, aromatic vegetables, molasses, and a tomato base. The whole thing transforms over hours into something thick, deeply savory, and just sweet enough.
Don’t skip the overnight soak. Quick-soaking dried beans is fine in a pinch but the long soak in salted water gives you more evenly cooked, less skin-splitting beans. The salt actually helps the skins stay intact during cooking, contrary to old kitchen lore.
The sweat-don’t-brown step for the bacon, onion, pepper, and celery is intentional. You want the vegetables to soften and release their flavors into the bacon fat without picking up Maillard color, which would make the beans look murky and add a burnt edge.
The long bake (2 to 7 hours) is forgiving but not optional. Two hours gets you tender beans in sauce; 7 hours gets you that classic thick, glazed texture where the sauce reduces to coat every bean. The sweet spot for most cooks is around 4-5 hours.
Pro Tips
- Check liquid level every hour or two during the long bake. Add a splash of water if the sauce reduces too aggressively before the beans are done.
- Use unsulphured molasses, not blackstrap. Blackstrap is too bitter and overpowers the other flavors.
- A traditional bean crock works best for even heat, but any heavy lidded casserole (Dutch oven, ceramic baker) works fine.
Variations
- Add ¼ cup of bourbon or apple cider for deeper flavor complexity.
- Stir in 2 tablespoons of yellow mustard and 1 tablespoon of cider vinegar at the end for a tangier, more Carolina-style profile.
- Top with a layer of smoked sausage slices in the last hour for a one-pot supper.
Ingredients
Directions
Soak beans over night in salted water.
Drain and cook the soaked beans until tender.
Chop the vegetables.
Simmer bacon, onion, pepper, and celery but do not brown.
Place all ingredients in a casserole, bean crock (or use a slow cooker on high) and bake at 300℉ (150℃) for 2 to 7 hours until done.
Comments




Wow - are you kidding me? Check out that sodium level - not even trying this one!
Yowzer, that bacon really adds a lot of salt. Definitely should consider using sodium-reduced bacon and then only add salt to taste.
Checked on the nutrition facts and discovered this recipe was using canned beans instead of dried (which have a ton of salt) for the nutrition calculation. Updated the recipe to specify dried beans, and the sodium level is much more accurate and reasonable now.