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    Home » Recipes » Instant Pot Bean Recipes

    Instant Pot Cajun Pinto Beans

    Published: Dec 8, 2020 · Modified: Feb 15, 2025 by Mike Vrobel · This post may contain affiliate links · 16 Comments

    Jump to Recipe
    A bowl of Cajun pinto beans and rice, with a smaller bowl of spices behind them

    Instant Pot Cajun Pinto Beans. Pinto beans, cooked New Orleans style, with smoked sausage and Cajun spices.

    I’m from Ohio. When I think of Cajun beans, I think of Red Beans and Rice. But Google said that people were finding my Instant Pot pinto beans recipe by searching for Cajun pinto beans.

    Cajun pinto beans? What a great idea. Let’s try it!

    A bowl of Cajun pinto beans and rice, with a smaller bowl of spices behind them
    Instant Pot Cajun Pinto Beans

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    We'll email this post to you, so you can come back to it later!

    My version is similar to my Red Beans and Rice recipe - smoked sausage, the Cajun trinity of onion, celery, and bell pepper, and a lot of garlic. (BAM!) The only difference is I don’t soak the pinto beans. Kidney beans work better for me when they are soaked, but pinto beans are fine going dry into the cooker - they just take a little longer to cook under pressure. (That said, if you really want to soak your beans, check out the Notes section of the recipe for cooking times.)

    And, I was impressed with the results. Creamy pinto beans make a great Cajun bean alternative. Give them a try, you won’t be disappointed.

    [UPDATE: Turns out, Cajun Pinto Beans are a popular side dish at Bojangles restaurant, a fried chicken chain founded in Charlotte, NC, that has spread throughout the southeastern US. I’ll have to stop in and try some the next time I make it to Charlotte.]

    Jump to:
    • 🥫Ingredients
    • 🥘 Substitutions
    • 🛠 Equipment
    • 📏Scaling
    • 🤨 Soaking pinto beans?
    • 💡Tips and Tricks
    • Instant Pot Cajun Pinto Beans
    • 💬 Comments

    🥫Ingredients

    This is a simple dried bean recipe, so the ingredients list is pretty basic

    • Pinto beans
    • Smoked sausage
    • Onion
    • Celery
    • Green Bell Pepper
    • Garlic
    • Cajun seasoning
    • Bay leaf

    See recipe card for quantities.

    🥘 Substitutions

    Don’t have rosemary or garlic? You can substitute a bay leaf for the rosemary (or skip it), or a peeled onion for the garlic (or skip it). And, as I said above, Rancho Gordo’s Marcella beans are my favorite variety of cannellini beans, but they’re not the only cannellini bean out there - dried beans from any source with good turnover will work.

    🛠 Equipment

    A 6-quart pressure cooker. Pressure cooker dried beans are one of the reasons I became a pressure cooker convert, and love my Instant Pot. Try them - you’ll never go back to canned beans. (OK, maybe you will, for convenience - but see the Storage section for tips on make ahead freezer beans.)

    📏Scaling

    This recipe scales down easily - cut everything in half if you don’t need as many beans, or have a 3-quart pressure cooker. Scaling up runs into space issues; if you have an 8-quart pressure cooker, you can double this recipe, but it’s too much to fit in a 6-quart pressure cooker.

    🤨 Soaking pinto beans?

    I get the “to soak, or not to soak?” question all the the time. I don’t soak my pinto beans in this basic recipe. They don’t need an overnight soak, and cook to tenderness with 40 minutes at high pressure.

    That doesn’t mean you can’t soak the beans. They turn out fine, though the bean broth isn’t quite as full bodied. Soaked beans cook much quicker, 15 minutes at high pressure. I use that when I’m cooking the beans with other ingredients, where the shorter cooking time keeps me from overcooking the whole dish just to get the beans tender.

    💡Tips and Tricks

    • Salt your bean water! “Salt toughens beans” is a myth. Salting before cooking helps season the beans all the way through as they cook.
    • If your beans are still tough when the cooking time is over, especially any “floaters” at the top of the pot, give the beans a stir, lock the lid, and pressure cook for another five minutes. Older beans take longer to cook, and if the beans have been sitting in the shelf at your store for a while, they may need extra time.
    • Simmer to thicken: If you have the time, and want thicker bean liquid, simmer the beans for 20 minutes after pressure cooking. I set my Instant Pot to Sauté mode adjusted to low, set the timer to 20 minutes, and leave the lid off to let the broth evaporate.
    • Or, puree to thicken: The quick way to thicken the bean broth is to puree a cup of the cooked beans and liquid, then stir them back into the pot. Instant thickener!
    Print
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    A bowl of Cajun pinto beans and rice, with a smaller bowl of spices behind them

    Instant Pot Cajun Pinto Beans


    5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star

    5 from 5 reviews

    • Author: Mike Vrobel
    • Total Time: 1 hour 30 minutes
    • Yield: 6 cups of pinto beans 1x
    Print Recipe
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    Description

    Pinto beans, cooked New Orleans style, with smoked sausage and Cajun spices.


    Ingredients

    Scale
    • 1 pound dried pinto beans, sorted and rinsed
    • 1 teaspoon vegetable oil
    • ½ pound smoked sausage (preferably andouille), quartered lengthwise and cut crosswise into ¼ inch wedges
    • 1 large onion, minced
    • 1 stalk celery, minced
    • 1 green bell pepper, seeded and minced
    • 4 cloves garlic, sliced thin
    • ½ teaspoon fine sea salt
    • 1 tablespoon cajun seasoning (store bought or homemade)
    • 2 bay leaves
    • 1 teaspoon fine sea salt
    • 6 cups water (or homemade chicken broth)
    • ½ teaspoon fresh ground black pepper

    For serving

    • Cooked long grain white rice
    • Minced parsley
    • Minced green onions
    • Hot sauce (Tabasco is traditional)

    Instructions

    1. Sort and rinse the beans: Sort the pinto beans, removing broken beans, stones, and dirt clods. Rinse the beans in a fine mesh strainer.
    2. Sauté the aromatics, sausage, and spices: Heat the oil in an Instant Pot set to Sauté mode adjusted to high (or a stovetop pressure cooker pot over medium-high heat) until the oil starts shimmering. Add the smoked sausage, onion, celery, bell pepper, and garlic, and sprinkle with the ½ teaspoon salt. Sauté, stirring often, until the onions and sausage start to brown around the edges, about 8 minutes. Sprinkle the onions and sausage with the Cajun seasoning. Cook, stirring often, for 1 minute to bloom the spices in the seasoning.
    3. Pressure cook the beans for 40 minutes with a Natural Release: Pour the sorted and rinsed pinto beans into the pressure cooker, add the bay leaves and 1 teaspoon of salt, and then stir in the water. Lock the lid on the pressure cooker and cook at high pressure for 40 minutes in an electric PC or 35 minutes in a stovetop PC. Let the pressure release naturally, about 20 minutes. (If you’re in a hurry, you can quick release the pressure after 15 minutes of natural release). Remove the lid carefully, opening away from you – even when it’s not under pressure, the steam in the cooker is very hot. Discard the bay leaves.
    4. Thickening option 1: Ladle out 2 cups of the beans and bean liquid, purée, and pour back into the pot. (I do this in a quart measuring cup with my stick blender.)
    5. Thickening option 2: Set the Instant Pot to sauté mode adjusted to low (or low heat for a stovetop PC), and simmer, uncovered, for 20 minutes.
    6. Serve: Serve and enjoy!

    Equipment

    Fine Mesh Strainer

    Buy Now →

    Flat edged wooden spoon

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    6-Quart Pressure Cooker

    Buy Now →

    Notes

    Have to soak your beans? Sort and rinse them the night before, soak them overnight, and cook at high pressure for 15 minutes (with a Natural Release)

    • Prep Time: 15 minutes
    • Cook Time: 75 minutes
    • Category: Side Dish
    • Method: Pressure Cooker
    • Cuisine: Cajun

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    My other Instant Pot and Pressure Cooker Recipes

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    Comments

    1. Shawna McVay says

      June 19, 2024 at 10:18 pm

      I live in Louisiana and these are AMAZING!!! Perfectly cooked! Printed this recipe out, it's a keeper for sure! Only thing I changed was used 1/2 of the cajun seasoning as we don't like too spicy

      Reply
      • Mike Vrobel says

        June 20, 2024 at 10:30 am

        Thanks, I’m glad you enjoyed it!

        Reply
    2. barbara russell says

      December 27, 2023 at 12:47 pm

      I am excited to try this but need a clarification on the recipe. After sautéing the aromatics and sausage do you leave them in the pot and add the beans to cook in the same pot? I am afraid the 40 minutes of pressure will basically dissolve the veggies and sausage. Or- do I remove veggies and sausage when cooking the beans and add later?

      Reply
      • Mike Vrobel says

        December 27, 2023 at 1:28 pm

        Leave them in the pot.

        Reply
    3. Lee Rutter says

      September 12, 2023 at 8:31 pm

      Appreciate the recipe. I have been craving pinto beans and rice and came across your recipe.

      The pressure-cooking time was spot on. The beans came out seasoned just right, and I had used Stale Cracker's Cajun seasoning. Dat's money, dude!

      Another thing that I did, was to use ground turkey chorizo that I fried before adding to the pressure cooker during the last ten minutes. It ended up being a Mexican/Cajun style beans that worked out really well when served over basmati rice!

      I had andouille sausage sliced up and ready to go just in case the chorizo didn't work out but was pleasantly surprised! Sometimes I use ground turkey with sage, and other times I use sausage.

      Again, thanks for the receipe!

      Reply
      • Mike Vrobel says

        September 12, 2023 at 9:37 pm

        You’re welcome, I’m glad you enjoyed it!

        Reply
    4. Dean says

      February 03, 2023 at 9:49 pm

      if you double the recipe is it still the same 40 minutes?

      Reply
      • Mike Vrobel says

        February 04, 2023 at 7:06 am

        Yes

        Reply
    5. Jen says

      April 04, 2022 at 8:54 am

      Great! My teenagers called them jambalaya beans. I used the whole (14 oz) package of andouille and added an extra pepper. They do taste similar to the Bojangles beans.

      Reply
      • Mike Vrobel says

        April 04, 2022 at 5:27 pm

        Great! I'm glad they liked them.

        Reply
    6. sharon says

      January 20, 2022 at 7:12 am

      Hi Mike,

      With the smoked sausage/andouille I was wondering if just regular old pork sausage wurst (raw) is ok to use as a replacement... I can find a dried/cured type of smoked wurst type of sausage but it is $$$$$ here in Switzerland... so I just went with a big ole package of regular old pork wurst/sausage. it is also sometimes hard to find the green bell peppers here, so I got a red bell pepper... only had the choice of yellow or red this time during pandemic... darn it to heck... LÖL... ok, look forward to your advice, suggestions... maybe I could just "smoke" the sausage somehow on me own... hehehehe...

      Reply
      • Mike Vrobel says

        January 20, 2022 at 10:14 am

        Sharon, use what you have - those are all acceptable substitutes. They may not be authentic, but the recipe will still be good

        Reply
    7. Tom says

      February 14, 2021 at 9:42 pm

      Spot on recipe, will be how I make beans from now on. Your spice blend is terrific too

      Reply
      • Mike Vrobel says

        February 15, 2021 at 10:36 am

        Thanks!

        Reply
    8. Pearl says

      December 08, 2020 at 5:21 pm

      I’m from Louisiana and I approve this message. I used to make red beans and rice all the time (cheap meal). Some times I used pintos or black beans. Camilla beans really are the best. If Tabasco is too hot, try Crystal hot sauce.

      Reply
      • Mike Vrobel says

        December 15, 2020 at 12:35 pm

        Thanks for the tips, Pearl!

        Reply

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    Welcome to Dad Cooks Dinner!

    I'm Mike Vrobel, a dad who cooks dinner every night. I'm an enthusiastic home cook, and I write about pressure cooking, rotisserie grilling, and other food topics that grab my attention.

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