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Home-Made Baked Beans with Chorizo

‘Breakfast, lunch, and tea!’

Most of us know baked beans on toast as that Sunday night staple for the sake of getting the kids to bed sooner.

Bean there, done that.

Where there’s smoke, there’s bacon and chorizo – and in this episode, Cam slices, dices, and sautés both to bring out the robust, full-bodied punch that baked beans deserve.

For the flavour cravers who double as time savers, catch Cam’s rustic take on a tinned favourite right here – plus more on our YouTube channel, every Sunday from 6pm.

A plate of home-made baked beans with sourdough bread.

Where there’s smoke, there’s bacon and chorizo! Cam’s Home-Made Baked Beans with Chorizo.

Ingredients:

Baked Beans

4 x 400g cans of cannellini beans 

200g of fresh chorizo  

200g streaky bacon 

1 x brown onion 

4 x cloves of garlic 

400ml of passata (tomato puree) 

1L of chicken stock 

½ bunch of continental parsley 

Salt and pepper  

To Serve

2 x slices of stone-baked sourdough bread

Cam’s Kit:

Companion Double Burner Wok Cooker

Campfire Nonstick Pans

Popup Colander and 2-Bowl Set

A selection of baked bean ingredients, including white beans, bacon, and tomato passata.

Cam’s ingredients

Method:

1. Prepare the Sauce (00:31)

Roughly dice the onion, garlic, chorizo, and bacon.

A hand chopping onion.

Roughly dice the onion.

A hand dicing bacon.

Roughly dice the bacon.

A hand dicing chorizo.

Chop the chorizo.

A hand chopping chorizo.

Chop the chorizo.

2. Crank the Heat (01:36)

Add the olive oil to the pan – not too much, as the bacon will release enough oils from its own fat. We don’t want some kind of fat fight over here.

Toss in the diced garlic, onion, chorizo, and bacon.

Bacon, chorizo, garlic, and onion in a pan.

Toss the diced garlic, onion, chorizo, and bacon in with the olive oil.

3. Sauté (01:52)

Fry off the ingredients for 5 minutes. The aim is not to let them brown (there’s nothing healthy about a tan), but to simply allow the fat to render out.

Bacon, chorizo, garlic, and onion in a pan.

Fry off the ingredients for 5 minutes.

Bacon, chorizo, garlic, and onion in a pan. Oil puddles in the spoon.

Allow the fat to render out.

4. Add Tomato Passata and Stock (02:20)

Once the bacon, chorizo, onion, and garlic are starting to show some colour and reduce, turn the stove to a low heat.

Add the tomato passata and a small volume stock (roughly 1/3 to 1/2 of the carton). To use every last drop of the passata, add a splash of stock to the empty bottles, shake, and empty into the pan.

Tomato passata poured from two jars in to a pot.

Add the tomato passata.

Stock poured into a pot.

Add the stock.

5. Season with Salt and Pepper (03:09)

A hand cracks salt into a pot of tomato sauce.

Season with salt and pepper.

A hand cracks pepper from a red grinder into a pot of tomato sauce.

Season with salt and pepper.

6. Simmer and Stir (03:16)

Allow the sauce to simmer for 5 minutes – stirring every so often, and seasoning to taste.

A large pot of chunky tomato sauce.

Allow the sauce to simmer, stirring every so often.

7. Turn Down the Heat (03:49)

Quick, everyone cool off and get in position – Cannellini’s coming!

8. Prepare the Beans (04:01)

Traditionally, this recipe uses dried beans, soaked overnight. While camping though, tinned beans are less fuss.

Tip the cannellini beans into a colander (Cam uses his hand instead), and strain away as much fluid as you can. Add water to rinse the beans, and strain again.

Cannellini beans poured from a can into a Popup pot.

Strain away as much fluid as you can.

9. Add the Beans (05:17)

Just like someone coming in hot to a party – the cannellini beans are already cooked, so they won’t need a lot of heat.

Tip the beans into the sauce and ensure it’s on a low heat. Stir through until they’re simply heated through. Just like an extrovert chiming in at the tail-end of a conversation at a party – this should only take a couple of minutes.

A pot of baked beans in tomato sauce.

Stir the beans through until they’re hot.

10. Add Parsley (05:44)

Roughly chop the continental parsley, and add to the beans for added colour, texture, and flavour.

A hand roughly chops parsley.

Roughly chop the continental parsley.

11. Turn Off the Heat (06:03)

Give the beans a final stir, like a DJ turning one last song.

A pot of baked beans in tomato sauce, with flecks of parsley throughout.

Stir the parsley through the beans.

12. Slice the Stone-Baked Sourdough (06:21)

A hand slices bread on a board.

Slice the sourdough.

13. Serve Up (06:44)

Time to call an Uber and bring these beans home.

Spoon the beans onto the plate, and position the bread on the side.

A hand places slices of bread on the side of a plate of baked beans.

Position the bread on the side of the plate.

14. The Finished Product (07:09)

In a world of frozen peas, be a smoky baked bean.

Cam’s homemade baked beans generate genuine grub gusto – kicking serious butt with black pepper, backhanding it back with bacon, and packing a smoky chorizo punch.

A plate of baked beans with two slices of bread on the side.

In a world of frozen peas, be a smoky baked bean!