10 Budget-Friendly Recipes Starring Canned Beans (2024)

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Su-Jit Lin

10 Budget-Friendly Recipes Starring Canned Beans (1)

Su-Jit Lin

Su-Jit Lin is a food-focused journalist whose work spans cooking hacks and how-tos, food and ingredient history, and product research and reviews.

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Updated on 12/13/22

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10 Budget-Friendly Recipes Starring Canned Beans (2)

Gas prices aren’t the only rates on the rise these days. As we face rapid inflation across all living costs, groceries are taking a particularly hard hit. And you know what that means: It’s time to break out the beans.

Across civilizations around the world, beans, pulses, and legumes have been staple ingredients that combat financial cramps. They’re protein- and carbohydrate-dense, making them filling, nutrient-rich ways to anchor a meal. They store well over time, whether they’re dried or canned. And when they are canned, they’re quick, easy, and instant stars for Meatless Mondays as well as gateway ingredients for vegetarian and vegan cooking. And they are one of the best deals—day in and day out—at any grocery store.

These 10 simple recipes featuring canned beans can help you get a flavor-packed, low-cost lunch or dinner on the table (and leftovers, too—bean dishes reheat easily!), as the use of beans stretch out your meat purchase or omit it entirely. Here’s how to make budget magic with canned beans.

  • 01 of 10

    Caribbean Yellow Rice and Pink Beans

    10 Budget-Friendly Recipes Starring Canned Beans (3)

    Pairing beans and rice is the most classic of classic combinations, and this thrifty recipe lets you do it with cheery, vibrant optics and Latin Caribbean flair. Rather than black beans or pigeon peas, this recipe uses pink beans with sofrito and sazon with annatto seasoning for satisfying flavor. You can make your own basic sofrito using garlic, onions, peppers, tomatoes, and herbs, or buy it ready-made to keep on hand. Either way, the bulk of the cost of this dish is in that seasoning blend, making this recipe one that makes cents.

  • 02 of 10

    Cowboy Beans with Ground Beef

    10 Budget-Friendly Recipes Starring Canned Beans (4)

    Half a package of bacon and one pound of ground beef brings your meat cost to as little as $7 total to $12 on the high end, while four cans of beans at around a dollar each and $3 for a bag of shredded cheese bring the shopping list up to $19 if we estimate up. You can even substitute one of these ingredients for molasses if that’s not an ingredient you keep in your pantry. With an 8-serving yield from one batch of this barbecue-and ketchup-flavored comfort dish, we’d call that a pretty good bargain.

  • 03 of 10

    Vegetarian Chana Masala with Spinach

    10 Budget-Friendly Recipes Starring Canned Beans (5)

    Technically, chickpeas are a legume and not a bean, but they’re on the same shelf and included in the same sales, so let’s go for it. This recipe simplifies a common, popular, and delicious Indian dish and gives you a reason to pick up a nice naan. Garam masala and curry powder make up the flavor backbone of this easy recipe, but the chickpeas carry the dish. Steamed seasoned rice is another cost-effective accompaniment, and you can substitute cheaper jasmine for basmati.

  • 04 of 10

    Easy Black Bean Salad

    10 Budget-Friendly Recipes Starring Canned Beans (6)

    Save both time and money with this make-ahead dish that can just as easily be an easy, light lunch for a few days, too, eaten by itself on a bed of lettuce to make it a meal, or as a topping on something as simple as grilled chicken leg quarters. This cut of poultry, with skin and on the bone, is a sleeper cost saver—they’re often sold in bulk for cents on the dollar per pound.

    Continue to 5 of 10 below.

  • 05 of 10

    Sausage and Cabbage Stew with Beans and Tomatoes

    10 Budget-Friendly Recipes Starring Canned Beans (7)

    Sausage and beans as a pair don’t always have to bring the heat, as this comforting, filling stew goes to show. This very veggie recipe pushes every dollar to its furthest, as economical cabbage, carrots, and celery make up the bulk of the dish. The use of apple-derived liquids helps to give it a sweet-tart flavor, but feel free to tweak it to be meat-free to save on spending and go heavier on the beans.

  • 06 of 10

    Slow Cooker Pot Roast with Pinto Beans

    10 Budget-Friendly Recipes Starring Canned Beans (8)

    Even simpler and just as economical, opt for a pot roast with barbecued pinto beans. Four cans, some barbecue sauce, an onion, a hunk of beef, and 10 minutes to prep are roughly all you need to pull this together. After 9 hours, the beans will be richly seasoned, the meat will be tender and flavored through, and 8 bellies will be happily full. Serve it with salad and steamed veggies for healthy staying power.

  • 07 of 10

    Vegetarian Southwest Macaroni and Cheese

    10 Budget-Friendly Recipes Starring Canned Beans (9)

    Here’s a kid-friendly way to introduce beans into a healthy diet: Add it to a box of mac and cheese! This vegetarian dish makes the most of this budget buy meal starter and makes it more nutritionally sound with protein-packed tofu and black beans. Store-bought salsa adds more interest to the flavors, and canned corn lends sweetness. But if that’s too ambitious, you can always just stop with the first two and add a little extra cheese to coat it.

  • 08 of 10

    Creole-Style Crock Pot Black Beans and Sausage

    10 Budget-Friendly Recipes Starring Canned Beans (10)

    A little bit of sausage can go a long way; its fatty nature means it packs a lot of flavor in every bite, seasoning beans to great depth when simmered together. The amount of sausage required is roughly a loop and a half, and you can save by swapping in more accessible, typically less costly smoked sausage or kielbasa. This slow-cooker recipe is a variation on the classic Creole red beans and rice, and you can choose to serve it with white rice or a crusty French bread or baguette, which is often available fresh at supermarket bakeries for less than $2.

    Continue to 9 of 10 below.

  • 09 of 10

    Gallo Pinto

    10 Budget-Friendly Recipes Starring Canned Beans (11)

    The key to being thrifty without getting bored is finding exciting ways to repurpose ingredients you already have, which is why this classic Latin American rice and beans dish often has life after dinner with the addition of a fried egg or two. But then again, what’s stopping you from having eggs at night? They’re quality protein sources with all the essential amino acids your body needs, and relatively inexpensive when you buy generic. Plus, who doesn’t like breakfast for dinner?

  • 10 of 10

    Chili Nacho Casserole with Ground Beef and Beans

    10 Budget-Friendly Recipes Starring Canned Beans (12)

    Casseroles can regularly come to the rescue of both busted wallets and busy schedules, and this flavorful Tex-Mex bean-based one is no exception. Generic tortilla chips do just fine in this recipe; they’ll take on the flavor of the chili-style tomatoes anyway. And two cans of beans take a pound of ground beef far enough that one bake will serve up to eight. Just as appetizing is its estimated cost of only $2 a serving.

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10 Budget-Friendly Recipes Starring Canned Beans (2024)

FAQs

What can I do with extra canned beans? ›

Here are a few delicious recipes you can try using leftover canned beans:
  1. Bean Salad: Simply mix drained and rinsed beans with diced vegetables such as tomatoes, cucumbers, bell peppers, and red onions. ...
  2. Bean Tacos: Mash the beans with spices and sautéed onions and garlic, then use as a filling for tacos.
Feb 4, 2023

What is the cheapest way to eat beans? ›

While canned beans are convenient, a pound of dried beans makes 8 cups of cooked beans—a little over 5 cans worth. And if I compare the price of canned beans to dried bulk beans, they're quite a bargain.

How can I improve cheap beans? ›

A few ideas:
  1. Rinse the beans.
  2. Spice (cumin, paprika, chili powder, garlic powder, onion powder) and warm them up.
  3. Mix with other ingredients (add vegetables, cooked rice, pasta, or use them as a filling for wraps or tacos)
  4. Mix with your own sauce (onion+bell pepper+carrot+canned tomatoes)
Aug 3, 2023

Can you eat 2 cans of beans a day? ›

Yes! "Eating beans, including canned beans, every day is one of the best things you can do to help increase nutrients [that you may fall short on] and substantially improve the quality of your diet," says Papanikolaou.

Should you drain canned beans? ›

"Draining and rinsing canned beans can reduce their sodium content by more than 40 percent. But taking just a few extra minutes is key to getting the most benefit," The Bean Institute website states.

How to jazz up canned beans? ›

You can add crushed whole seeds (coriander, cumin, fennel, mustard, etc.), woodsy herbs (thyme, oregano, rosemary, sage), red pepper flakes, crushed garlic cloves, and of course salt and pepper.

How do you make beans more interesting? ›

Raid your cupboard and experiment with flavoured pastes: sundried tomato, chipotle chilli, even curry pastes can bring beans to life, give it a go and find your own favourite combination.

What can I add to beans for flavor? ›

Those aromatics in the pot will revolutionize the beans' final flavor. The aromatics I tend to use are onions, carrots, garlic, and celery, and then heartier, woodsy herbs, like rosemary, sage, and thyme, which marry beautifully with the earthy-sweet flavor of beans.

How do you make beans taste good without meat? ›

Dried Mushrooms & Mushroom Broth

The trick to wonderfully flavored vegetarian beans is this: steep the dried mushrooms in boiling water to make a broth, and then simmer beans in the mushroom broth (as all or part of the recipe's cooking liquid). After soaking them, chop the mushrooms and add to the beans, as well.

How do you eat beans as a meal? ›

So, how do we get these magical beans into those who don't like them?
  1. Hummus. A lot of kids seem to like blended beans more than whole beans. ...
  2. Bean Quesadilla. ...
  3. Make nachos with refried beans. ...
  4. Rice and Bean Taquitos. ...
  5. Salsa Verde Soup. ...
  6. Black Bean Burgers. ...
  7. Legume Pasta is an easy way to eat beans. ...
  8. Bean Energy Balls.
Feb 22, 2024

Is it cheaper to buy or make beans? ›

Cost: If you want to save money, cook with dry beans.

This means that a serving of pinto beans made from dry beans costs just $0.15 while a serving of store brand canned pinto beans costs $0.34 and the national brand costs $0.48.

What can I add to beans to reduce gas? ›

The baking soda helps break down some of the beans' natural gas-making sugars. I tested this while fixing one of my favorite slow cooker recipes: red beans and sausage. To degas with baking soda, add a teaspoon of baking soda to 4 quarts of water. Stir in the dried beans and bring to a boil.

How do you get picky eaters to eat beans? ›

An obvious way of adding beans to breakfast is with good old Baked Beans. You can serve them as part of a big breakfast, in a toastie, or just on their own with toast. Baked beans are also a good kid friendly option, because they are often quite sweet.

What can I add to canned baked beans? ›

Extra protein: Add diced ham, cooked ground beef, or shredded chicken to the baked beans for an extra boost of protein. Additional vegetables: Include diced green bell pepper, onions, or mushrooms to the recipe for added texture and flavor. Tangy: Replace yellow mustard with Dijon, whole-grain mustard, or dry mustard.

Can you freeze unused canned beans? ›

Freezing your extra canned beans should be fine. In fact, I often make a big batch of chili (using canned beans), and then freeze some of it with no change in quality. Simply store your extra beans in a heavy plastic container or plastic freezer bag and use within 6 months.

How long can you store canned beans after opening? ›

Low-acid canned goods, such as meat, poultry, fish, gravy, stew, soups, beans, carrots, corn, pasta, peas, potatoes and spinach) can be stored three to four days. Although it's safe to store the food in the can, it will retain better flavor if transferred to a glass or plastic storage container.

How do I use more beans? ›

Side Dishes & Snacks

Bean-based salsa with black beans, mango, lime, and cilantro. Hummus or bean dip is a great snack that you can buy pre-made or make from scratch. Roast seasoned beans like chickpeas or edamame. Or keep shelled, frozen edamame in the freezer for an easy-to-grab snack.

How do you store half a can of baked beans? ›

When you open a can of food and you're not going to use all the food straight away, empty the food into a bowl, or other container, and put it in the fridge. Don't store food in an opened tin can, or re-use empty cans to cook or store food.

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