Pinto beans and cornbread – I love them!! We used to eat them every week when I was growing up. There’s just something grounding about a pot of beans quietly simmering all day. No rushing. No shortcuts. Just time doing what time does best—turning simple ingredients into something deeply satisfying.
This is the kind of food that generations before us relied on: affordable, filling, and nourishing. Pinto beans cooked low and slow with onions, mushrooms, garlic, and bay leaves create a rich, savory broth without a drop of oil or animal fat. It’s not flashy—but it’s soulful, dependable, and exactly what your body wants on a cold night or a busy week.
If you grew up in the South, you already know: a pot of beans on the stove means you’re fed, heart and soul.
Why This Recipe Works
- Slow cooking builds flavor without added fat
- Mushrooms add umami and a meaty depth
- Bay leaves quietly elevate the whole pot
- Dried beans = better texture & nutrition than canned
This is pantry cooking at its finest.
Pro Tip 🌱
If you want a thicker, stew-like texture, mash about ½ cup of beans against the side of the pot and stir back in during the last hour of cooking.
Nutrition & Cost Comparison
- Pintos are a powerhouse of nutrition. They have about 260 calories, 15 grams of protein and 15 grams of fiber with no fat and no cholesterol in a cup and a half of beans.
- Pinto beans are rich in potassium, magnesium, iron, and folate—nutrients that support heart health, digestion, and steady energy.
- Per serving, dried pintos are significantly cheaper than other styles of beans. The are one of the most budget -friendly whole foods you can make.
- Dried beans: $0.60 per serving
- Canned beans: $1.50 per serving
- Restaurant bean dishes: $6+ per serving
Final Thoughts 🌻
Beans are one of my favorite things to eat and Dr Michael Greger would like the whole world to eat at least a cup a day. This is the kind of recipe you come back to again and again. A pot of beans that asks very little and gives so much in return—comfort, nourishment, and the quiet reminder that simple food can still feel deeply satisfying. Make it once, and it’ll earn a permanent place in your rotation.

Smoky Pinto Beans
Ingredients
Method
- Soak the beans overnight in plenty of water. Drain and rinse.
- Add everything to the pot: beans, onion, mushrooms, garlic, bay leaves, and fresh water.
- Slow cook on low for 8–10 hours, or until beans are tender and creamy.
- (Stovetop option: simmer gently for 2½–3 hours, stirring occasionally.)
- Season with salt during the final 30 minutes so the beans stay tender.
- Remove bay leaves and adjust seasoning to taste.
