How to cook dried red beans faster?












8















I bought some dried red beans from the supermarket. I learned that in order to cook them well, I need more time. I have to soak them in cold water for one night, then cook for another two or three hours.



Are there any tips or tricks to cook them faster?










share|improve this question




















  • 12





    NB: For those that may not know, eating badly prepared red/kidney beans will make you quite ill Red kedney bean toxins

    – Binary Worrier
    Jan 2 at 16:05








  • 2





    @BinaryWorrier sounds like OP is making adzuki beans, not kidney beans. they are notorious for needing a lot of work, but incredibly tasty dessert/snack treat.

    – Rapitor
    Jan 2 at 20:57













  • @BinaryWorrier Thanks for important information.

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 3 at 3:50






  • 1





    Pressure cooker

    – Chloe
    Jan 3 at 5:07






  • 1





    @rumtscho deleted my answer about toxicity commenting "Hi, this is a good point to make, but somewhere else made it in a comment already, and that's where it belongs". I don't know how to respond except by commenting on the question. I posted an answer because it is safety critical information which should be permanently associated with the question and I thought (perhaps wrongly) that comments were transitory. Happy to be corrected.

    – user20637
    Jan 3 at 13:22
















8















I bought some dried red beans from the supermarket. I learned that in order to cook them well, I need more time. I have to soak them in cold water for one night, then cook for another two or three hours.



Are there any tips or tricks to cook them faster?










share|improve this question




















  • 12





    NB: For those that may not know, eating badly prepared red/kidney beans will make you quite ill Red kedney bean toxins

    – Binary Worrier
    Jan 2 at 16:05








  • 2





    @BinaryWorrier sounds like OP is making adzuki beans, not kidney beans. they are notorious for needing a lot of work, but incredibly tasty dessert/snack treat.

    – Rapitor
    Jan 2 at 20:57













  • @BinaryWorrier Thanks for important information.

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 3 at 3:50






  • 1





    Pressure cooker

    – Chloe
    Jan 3 at 5:07






  • 1





    @rumtscho deleted my answer about toxicity commenting "Hi, this is a good point to make, but somewhere else made it in a comment already, and that's where it belongs". I don't know how to respond except by commenting on the question. I posted an answer because it is safety critical information which should be permanently associated with the question and I thought (perhaps wrongly) that comments were transitory. Happy to be corrected.

    – user20637
    Jan 3 at 13:22














8












8








8


1






I bought some dried red beans from the supermarket. I learned that in order to cook them well, I need more time. I have to soak them in cold water for one night, then cook for another two or three hours.



Are there any tips or tricks to cook them faster?










share|improve this question
















I bought some dried red beans from the supermarket. I learned that in order to cook them well, I need more time. I have to soak them in cold water for one night, then cook for another two or three hours.



Are there any tips or tricks to cook them faster?







cooking-time beans






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 2 at 22:06









Kat

1411110




1411110










asked Jan 2 at 6:22









K. SopheakK. Sopheak

1437




1437








  • 12





    NB: For those that may not know, eating badly prepared red/kidney beans will make you quite ill Red kedney bean toxins

    – Binary Worrier
    Jan 2 at 16:05








  • 2





    @BinaryWorrier sounds like OP is making adzuki beans, not kidney beans. they are notorious for needing a lot of work, but incredibly tasty dessert/snack treat.

    – Rapitor
    Jan 2 at 20:57













  • @BinaryWorrier Thanks for important information.

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 3 at 3:50






  • 1





    Pressure cooker

    – Chloe
    Jan 3 at 5:07






  • 1





    @rumtscho deleted my answer about toxicity commenting "Hi, this is a good point to make, but somewhere else made it in a comment already, and that's where it belongs". I don't know how to respond except by commenting on the question. I posted an answer because it is safety critical information which should be permanently associated with the question and I thought (perhaps wrongly) that comments were transitory. Happy to be corrected.

    – user20637
    Jan 3 at 13:22














  • 12





    NB: For those that may not know, eating badly prepared red/kidney beans will make you quite ill Red kedney bean toxins

    – Binary Worrier
    Jan 2 at 16:05








  • 2





    @BinaryWorrier sounds like OP is making adzuki beans, not kidney beans. they are notorious for needing a lot of work, but incredibly tasty dessert/snack treat.

    – Rapitor
    Jan 2 at 20:57













  • @BinaryWorrier Thanks for important information.

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 3 at 3:50






  • 1





    Pressure cooker

    – Chloe
    Jan 3 at 5:07






  • 1





    @rumtscho deleted my answer about toxicity commenting "Hi, this is a good point to make, but somewhere else made it in a comment already, and that's where it belongs". I don't know how to respond except by commenting on the question. I posted an answer because it is safety critical information which should be permanently associated with the question and I thought (perhaps wrongly) that comments were transitory. Happy to be corrected.

    – user20637
    Jan 3 at 13:22








12




12





NB: For those that may not know, eating badly prepared red/kidney beans will make you quite ill Red kedney bean toxins

– Binary Worrier
Jan 2 at 16:05







NB: For those that may not know, eating badly prepared red/kidney beans will make you quite ill Red kedney bean toxins

– Binary Worrier
Jan 2 at 16:05






2




2





@BinaryWorrier sounds like OP is making adzuki beans, not kidney beans. they are notorious for needing a lot of work, but incredibly tasty dessert/snack treat.

– Rapitor
Jan 2 at 20:57







@BinaryWorrier sounds like OP is making adzuki beans, not kidney beans. they are notorious for needing a lot of work, but incredibly tasty dessert/snack treat.

– Rapitor
Jan 2 at 20:57















@BinaryWorrier Thanks for important information.

– K. Sopheak
Jan 3 at 3:50





@BinaryWorrier Thanks for important information.

– K. Sopheak
Jan 3 at 3:50




1




1





Pressure cooker

– Chloe
Jan 3 at 5:07





Pressure cooker

– Chloe
Jan 3 at 5:07




1




1





@rumtscho deleted my answer about toxicity commenting "Hi, this is a good point to make, but somewhere else made it in a comment already, and that's where it belongs". I don't know how to respond except by commenting on the question. I posted an answer because it is safety critical information which should be permanently associated with the question and I thought (perhaps wrongly) that comments were transitory. Happy to be corrected.

– user20637
Jan 3 at 13:22





@rumtscho deleted my answer about toxicity commenting "Hi, this is a good point to make, but somewhere else made it in a comment already, and that's where it belongs". I don't know how to respond except by commenting on the question. I posted an answer because it is safety critical information which should be permanently associated with the question and I thought (perhaps wrongly) that comments were transitory. Happy to be corrected.

– user20637
Jan 3 at 13:22










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















18














If you want to reduce total preparation time, you can skip the soak. Then you can just boil for about 4-6 hours, instead of soaking overnight. This is not a tradeoff most cooks are willing to make, since it wastes quite a bit of energy, and reduces the taste qualities of the prepared beans somewhat.



If you want it even faster, as weets mentioned, pressure cooking is the way to go. Then you can get away with about 45-50 minutes for unsoaked and 25 minutes for soaked beans - that's the time spent at pressure, the total time will depend on the warming up time, which differs with pressure cooker type and total amount of beans you are cooking at once. The same preference for soaked beans applies with pressure cooking.



If these times don't work for you, you cannot reduce them, but you can switch to buying canned beans. The disadvantages there are the higher cost, higher storage volume, and the fact that some brands have off tastes.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thank you for reply. You are right. It is a tradeoff. Canned bean maybe the easiest. Wait if there is another answer idea.

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 2 at 13:59



















8














What is the dish you are trying to make?



If you are looking to soften the beans quickly you can use a pressure cooker.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thank for your reply. Actually, I want to make dessert. It is red bean soup dessert, which I will add some water, sugar and a little bit of salt.

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 2 at 13:54






  • 3





    @K.Sopheak : pressure cooking will work with that. It's especially useful when you cook the beans separately, then add in other stuff. (it can dull some other flavors while cooking under pressure)

    – Joe
    Jan 2 at 14:08






  • 1





    Pressure cooker is the way to go for beans. You can get them reasonably soft in under an hour without pre-soaking.

    – Paul Draper
    Jan 3 at 0:36











  • ah! if it's red bean soup then after pressure cooking you'll want to open it to continue boiling, and stir continuously for a bit to get that slightly thickened red bean soup 沙 texture

    – weets
    Jan 4 at 3:39



















4














You can soak it for 45 minutes in warm or simmering water. When that happens you'll end up with a lot of indigestible sugars in the water so you'll want to pour that off and then boil them in water. I think you'll end up with more indigestible sugars in the water after that so you'll want to pour those off too and then you can get into a 2-3 hour cook time. When you finish that they should be edible, but they won't be soft. They'll come out with a bit of bite.



There are a couple of things you can do to drastically reduce even this cooking time. The first is that you can cook what gets sold at walmart and other places as lentils. This don't require pre-soaking and can be cooked in like 45 minutes. You can also use a pressure cooker or an instant pot. This will allow you to cook at higher temperatures, but it won't do anything about the pre-soak time. The most effective thing you can do to reduce cook time would be to buy canned beans. Canned beans are a lot less cost effective when it comes to calories per pound/gram, but you save an absolute ton of time since the beans are already cooked.



I typically just put the beans in some water in the fridge to soak them on the week I know I want to cook them. That generally gives them enough time to pre-soak properly and it prevents them from growing if I don't cook them the next day. Generally speaking if you want to cook dried beans, you're going to have to do something like this.



You can also just cook the beans till they're soft. I know that works with chickpeas. I feel like I get better results when I pre-soak though.






share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    You can use hotter than just 'warm' water. What you basically describe is often called the 'hot soak' method. It reduces the time needed to soak the beans. (some say it's not as good for texture, but like you said, gets rid of the indigestable sugars, and it's better than just cooking without any soak (in terms of texture, not time))

    – Joe
    Jan 2 at 15:31








  • 1





    @joe edited my question to include that. Thanks for correcting me. It's been a while since I've done that.

    – Steve
    Jan 2 at 15:38






  • 1





    There are ways to get around the pre-soak with a pressure cooker.

    – user3067860
    Jan 2 at 16:00






  • 1





    @user3067860 That would make a good answer for this question. I myself am curious as to how you do that.

    – Steve
    Jan 2 at 16:53






  • 1





    @Steve rumtscho's answer lists cooking times for unsoaked beans... but basically you just cook for about twice as long.

    – user3067860
    Jan 2 at 18:16



















2














I generally just do a 10 minute boil, 1 hour rest, then simmer for 15-2 hours. But this blogpage suggests that you don't even need the resting period. Essentially her trick is to avoid packaged dried beans and use the bulk beans available in some stores. No idea where that would be in my area, but... How to Cook Dried Beans - The Quick and Easy Method






share|improve this answer
























  • That is good tip. Thank you for sharing

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 3 at 3:52












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4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes








4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









18














If you want to reduce total preparation time, you can skip the soak. Then you can just boil for about 4-6 hours, instead of soaking overnight. This is not a tradeoff most cooks are willing to make, since it wastes quite a bit of energy, and reduces the taste qualities of the prepared beans somewhat.



If you want it even faster, as weets mentioned, pressure cooking is the way to go. Then you can get away with about 45-50 minutes for unsoaked and 25 minutes for soaked beans - that's the time spent at pressure, the total time will depend on the warming up time, which differs with pressure cooker type and total amount of beans you are cooking at once. The same preference for soaked beans applies with pressure cooking.



If these times don't work for you, you cannot reduce them, but you can switch to buying canned beans. The disadvantages there are the higher cost, higher storage volume, and the fact that some brands have off tastes.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thank you for reply. You are right. It is a tradeoff. Canned bean maybe the easiest. Wait if there is another answer idea.

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 2 at 13:59
















18














If you want to reduce total preparation time, you can skip the soak. Then you can just boil for about 4-6 hours, instead of soaking overnight. This is not a tradeoff most cooks are willing to make, since it wastes quite a bit of energy, and reduces the taste qualities of the prepared beans somewhat.



If you want it even faster, as weets mentioned, pressure cooking is the way to go. Then you can get away with about 45-50 minutes for unsoaked and 25 minutes for soaked beans - that's the time spent at pressure, the total time will depend on the warming up time, which differs with pressure cooker type and total amount of beans you are cooking at once. The same preference for soaked beans applies with pressure cooking.



If these times don't work for you, you cannot reduce them, but you can switch to buying canned beans. The disadvantages there are the higher cost, higher storage volume, and the fact that some brands have off tastes.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thank you for reply. You are right. It is a tradeoff. Canned bean maybe the easiest. Wait if there is another answer idea.

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 2 at 13:59














18












18








18







If you want to reduce total preparation time, you can skip the soak. Then you can just boil for about 4-6 hours, instead of soaking overnight. This is not a tradeoff most cooks are willing to make, since it wastes quite a bit of energy, and reduces the taste qualities of the prepared beans somewhat.



If you want it even faster, as weets mentioned, pressure cooking is the way to go. Then you can get away with about 45-50 minutes for unsoaked and 25 minutes for soaked beans - that's the time spent at pressure, the total time will depend on the warming up time, which differs with pressure cooker type and total amount of beans you are cooking at once. The same preference for soaked beans applies with pressure cooking.



If these times don't work for you, you cannot reduce them, but you can switch to buying canned beans. The disadvantages there are the higher cost, higher storage volume, and the fact that some brands have off tastes.






share|improve this answer













If you want to reduce total preparation time, you can skip the soak. Then you can just boil for about 4-6 hours, instead of soaking overnight. This is not a tradeoff most cooks are willing to make, since it wastes quite a bit of energy, and reduces the taste qualities of the prepared beans somewhat.



If you want it even faster, as weets mentioned, pressure cooking is the way to go. Then you can get away with about 45-50 minutes for unsoaked and 25 minutes for soaked beans - that's the time spent at pressure, the total time will depend on the warming up time, which differs with pressure cooker type and total amount of beans you are cooking at once. The same preference for soaked beans applies with pressure cooking.



If these times don't work for you, you cannot reduce them, but you can switch to buying canned beans. The disadvantages there are the higher cost, higher storage volume, and the fact that some brands have off tastes.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 2 at 11:44









rumtschorumtscho

82.7k28191357




82.7k28191357













  • Thank you for reply. You are right. It is a tradeoff. Canned bean maybe the easiest. Wait if there is another answer idea.

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 2 at 13:59



















  • Thank you for reply. You are right. It is a tradeoff. Canned bean maybe the easiest. Wait if there is another answer idea.

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 2 at 13:59

















Thank you for reply. You are right. It is a tradeoff. Canned bean maybe the easiest. Wait if there is another answer idea.

– K. Sopheak
Jan 2 at 13:59





Thank you for reply. You are right. It is a tradeoff. Canned bean maybe the easiest. Wait if there is another answer idea.

– K. Sopheak
Jan 2 at 13:59













8














What is the dish you are trying to make?



If you are looking to soften the beans quickly you can use a pressure cooker.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thank for your reply. Actually, I want to make dessert. It is red bean soup dessert, which I will add some water, sugar and a little bit of salt.

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 2 at 13:54






  • 3





    @K.Sopheak : pressure cooking will work with that. It's especially useful when you cook the beans separately, then add in other stuff. (it can dull some other flavors while cooking under pressure)

    – Joe
    Jan 2 at 14:08






  • 1





    Pressure cooker is the way to go for beans. You can get them reasonably soft in under an hour without pre-soaking.

    – Paul Draper
    Jan 3 at 0:36











  • ah! if it's red bean soup then after pressure cooking you'll want to open it to continue boiling, and stir continuously for a bit to get that slightly thickened red bean soup 沙 texture

    – weets
    Jan 4 at 3:39
















8














What is the dish you are trying to make?



If you are looking to soften the beans quickly you can use a pressure cooker.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thank for your reply. Actually, I want to make dessert. It is red bean soup dessert, which I will add some water, sugar and a little bit of salt.

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 2 at 13:54






  • 3





    @K.Sopheak : pressure cooking will work with that. It's especially useful when you cook the beans separately, then add in other stuff. (it can dull some other flavors while cooking under pressure)

    – Joe
    Jan 2 at 14:08






  • 1





    Pressure cooker is the way to go for beans. You can get them reasonably soft in under an hour without pre-soaking.

    – Paul Draper
    Jan 3 at 0:36











  • ah! if it's red bean soup then after pressure cooking you'll want to open it to continue boiling, and stir continuously for a bit to get that slightly thickened red bean soup 沙 texture

    – weets
    Jan 4 at 3:39














8












8








8







What is the dish you are trying to make?



If you are looking to soften the beans quickly you can use a pressure cooker.






share|improve this answer













What is the dish you are trying to make?



If you are looking to soften the beans quickly you can use a pressure cooker.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 2 at 8:05









weetsweets

862




862













  • Thank for your reply. Actually, I want to make dessert. It is red bean soup dessert, which I will add some water, sugar and a little bit of salt.

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 2 at 13:54






  • 3





    @K.Sopheak : pressure cooking will work with that. It's especially useful when you cook the beans separately, then add in other stuff. (it can dull some other flavors while cooking under pressure)

    – Joe
    Jan 2 at 14:08






  • 1





    Pressure cooker is the way to go for beans. You can get them reasonably soft in under an hour without pre-soaking.

    – Paul Draper
    Jan 3 at 0:36











  • ah! if it's red bean soup then after pressure cooking you'll want to open it to continue boiling, and stir continuously for a bit to get that slightly thickened red bean soup 沙 texture

    – weets
    Jan 4 at 3:39



















  • Thank for your reply. Actually, I want to make dessert. It is red bean soup dessert, which I will add some water, sugar and a little bit of salt.

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 2 at 13:54






  • 3





    @K.Sopheak : pressure cooking will work with that. It's especially useful when you cook the beans separately, then add in other stuff. (it can dull some other flavors while cooking under pressure)

    – Joe
    Jan 2 at 14:08






  • 1





    Pressure cooker is the way to go for beans. You can get them reasonably soft in under an hour without pre-soaking.

    – Paul Draper
    Jan 3 at 0:36











  • ah! if it's red bean soup then after pressure cooking you'll want to open it to continue boiling, and stir continuously for a bit to get that slightly thickened red bean soup 沙 texture

    – weets
    Jan 4 at 3:39

















Thank for your reply. Actually, I want to make dessert. It is red bean soup dessert, which I will add some water, sugar and a little bit of salt.

– K. Sopheak
Jan 2 at 13:54





Thank for your reply. Actually, I want to make dessert. It is red bean soup dessert, which I will add some water, sugar and a little bit of salt.

– K. Sopheak
Jan 2 at 13:54




3




3





@K.Sopheak : pressure cooking will work with that. It's especially useful when you cook the beans separately, then add in other stuff. (it can dull some other flavors while cooking under pressure)

– Joe
Jan 2 at 14:08





@K.Sopheak : pressure cooking will work with that. It's especially useful when you cook the beans separately, then add in other stuff. (it can dull some other flavors while cooking under pressure)

– Joe
Jan 2 at 14:08




1




1





Pressure cooker is the way to go for beans. You can get them reasonably soft in under an hour without pre-soaking.

– Paul Draper
Jan 3 at 0:36





Pressure cooker is the way to go for beans. You can get them reasonably soft in under an hour without pre-soaking.

– Paul Draper
Jan 3 at 0:36













ah! if it's red bean soup then after pressure cooking you'll want to open it to continue boiling, and stir continuously for a bit to get that slightly thickened red bean soup 沙 texture

– weets
Jan 4 at 3:39





ah! if it's red bean soup then after pressure cooking you'll want to open it to continue boiling, and stir continuously for a bit to get that slightly thickened red bean soup 沙 texture

– weets
Jan 4 at 3:39











4














You can soak it for 45 minutes in warm or simmering water. When that happens you'll end up with a lot of indigestible sugars in the water so you'll want to pour that off and then boil them in water. I think you'll end up with more indigestible sugars in the water after that so you'll want to pour those off too and then you can get into a 2-3 hour cook time. When you finish that they should be edible, but they won't be soft. They'll come out with a bit of bite.



There are a couple of things you can do to drastically reduce even this cooking time. The first is that you can cook what gets sold at walmart and other places as lentils. This don't require pre-soaking and can be cooked in like 45 minutes. You can also use a pressure cooker or an instant pot. This will allow you to cook at higher temperatures, but it won't do anything about the pre-soak time. The most effective thing you can do to reduce cook time would be to buy canned beans. Canned beans are a lot less cost effective when it comes to calories per pound/gram, but you save an absolute ton of time since the beans are already cooked.



I typically just put the beans in some water in the fridge to soak them on the week I know I want to cook them. That generally gives them enough time to pre-soak properly and it prevents them from growing if I don't cook them the next day. Generally speaking if you want to cook dried beans, you're going to have to do something like this.



You can also just cook the beans till they're soft. I know that works with chickpeas. I feel like I get better results when I pre-soak though.






share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    You can use hotter than just 'warm' water. What you basically describe is often called the 'hot soak' method. It reduces the time needed to soak the beans. (some say it's not as good for texture, but like you said, gets rid of the indigestable sugars, and it's better than just cooking without any soak (in terms of texture, not time))

    – Joe
    Jan 2 at 15:31








  • 1





    @joe edited my question to include that. Thanks for correcting me. It's been a while since I've done that.

    – Steve
    Jan 2 at 15:38






  • 1





    There are ways to get around the pre-soak with a pressure cooker.

    – user3067860
    Jan 2 at 16:00






  • 1





    @user3067860 That would make a good answer for this question. I myself am curious as to how you do that.

    – Steve
    Jan 2 at 16:53






  • 1





    @Steve rumtscho's answer lists cooking times for unsoaked beans... but basically you just cook for about twice as long.

    – user3067860
    Jan 2 at 18:16
















4














You can soak it for 45 minutes in warm or simmering water. When that happens you'll end up with a lot of indigestible sugars in the water so you'll want to pour that off and then boil them in water. I think you'll end up with more indigestible sugars in the water after that so you'll want to pour those off too and then you can get into a 2-3 hour cook time. When you finish that they should be edible, but they won't be soft. They'll come out with a bit of bite.



There are a couple of things you can do to drastically reduce even this cooking time. The first is that you can cook what gets sold at walmart and other places as lentils. This don't require pre-soaking and can be cooked in like 45 minutes. You can also use a pressure cooker or an instant pot. This will allow you to cook at higher temperatures, but it won't do anything about the pre-soak time. The most effective thing you can do to reduce cook time would be to buy canned beans. Canned beans are a lot less cost effective when it comes to calories per pound/gram, but you save an absolute ton of time since the beans are already cooked.



I typically just put the beans in some water in the fridge to soak them on the week I know I want to cook them. That generally gives them enough time to pre-soak properly and it prevents them from growing if I don't cook them the next day. Generally speaking if you want to cook dried beans, you're going to have to do something like this.



You can also just cook the beans till they're soft. I know that works with chickpeas. I feel like I get better results when I pre-soak though.






share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    You can use hotter than just 'warm' water. What you basically describe is often called the 'hot soak' method. It reduces the time needed to soak the beans. (some say it's not as good for texture, but like you said, gets rid of the indigestable sugars, and it's better than just cooking without any soak (in terms of texture, not time))

    – Joe
    Jan 2 at 15:31








  • 1





    @joe edited my question to include that. Thanks for correcting me. It's been a while since I've done that.

    – Steve
    Jan 2 at 15:38






  • 1





    There are ways to get around the pre-soak with a pressure cooker.

    – user3067860
    Jan 2 at 16:00






  • 1





    @user3067860 That would make a good answer for this question. I myself am curious as to how you do that.

    – Steve
    Jan 2 at 16:53






  • 1





    @Steve rumtscho's answer lists cooking times for unsoaked beans... but basically you just cook for about twice as long.

    – user3067860
    Jan 2 at 18:16














4












4








4







You can soak it for 45 minutes in warm or simmering water. When that happens you'll end up with a lot of indigestible sugars in the water so you'll want to pour that off and then boil them in water. I think you'll end up with more indigestible sugars in the water after that so you'll want to pour those off too and then you can get into a 2-3 hour cook time. When you finish that they should be edible, but they won't be soft. They'll come out with a bit of bite.



There are a couple of things you can do to drastically reduce even this cooking time. The first is that you can cook what gets sold at walmart and other places as lentils. This don't require pre-soaking and can be cooked in like 45 minutes. You can also use a pressure cooker or an instant pot. This will allow you to cook at higher temperatures, but it won't do anything about the pre-soak time. The most effective thing you can do to reduce cook time would be to buy canned beans. Canned beans are a lot less cost effective when it comes to calories per pound/gram, but you save an absolute ton of time since the beans are already cooked.



I typically just put the beans in some water in the fridge to soak them on the week I know I want to cook them. That generally gives them enough time to pre-soak properly and it prevents them from growing if I don't cook them the next day. Generally speaking if you want to cook dried beans, you're going to have to do something like this.



You can also just cook the beans till they're soft. I know that works with chickpeas. I feel like I get better results when I pre-soak though.






share|improve this answer















You can soak it for 45 minutes in warm or simmering water. When that happens you'll end up with a lot of indigestible sugars in the water so you'll want to pour that off and then boil them in water. I think you'll end up with more indigestible sugars in the water after that so you'll want to pour those off too and then you can get into a 2-3 hour cook time. When you finish that they should be edible, but they won't be soft. They'll come out with a bit of bite.



There are a couple of things you can do to drastically reduce even this cooking time. The first is that you can cook what gets sold at walmart and other places as lentils. This don't require pre-soaking and can be cooked in like 45 minutes. You can also use a pressure cooker or an instant pot. This will allow you to cook at higher temperatures, but it won't do anything about the pre-soak time. The most effective thing you can do to reduce cook time would be to buy canned beans. Canned beans are a lot less cost effective when it comes to calories per pound/gram, but you save an absolute ton of time since the beans are already cooked.



I typically just put the beans in some water in the fridge to soak them on the week I know I want to cook them. That generally gives them enough time to pre-soak properly and it prevents them from growing if I don't cook them the next day. Generally speaking if you want to cook dried beans, you're going to have to do something like this.



You can also just cook the beans till they're soft. I know that works with chickpeas. I feel like I get better results when I pre-soak though.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 2 at 15:38

























answered Jan 2 at 15:15









SteveSteve

50026




50026








  • 2





    You can use hotter than just 'warm' water. What you basically describe is often called the 'hot soak' method. It reduces the time needed to soak the beans. (some say it's not as good for texture, but like you said, gets rid of the indigestable sugars, and it's better than just cooking without any soak (in terms of texture, not time))

    – Joe
    Jan 2 at 15:31








  • 1





    @joe edited my question to include that. Thanks for correcting me. It's been a while since I've done that.

    – Steve
    Jan 2 at 15:38






  • 1





    There are ways to get around the pre-soak with a pressure cooker.

    – user3067860
    Jan 2 at 16:00






  • 1





    @user3067860 That would make a good answer for this question. I myself am curious as to how you do that.

    – Steve
    Jan 2 at 16:53






  • 1





    @Steve rumtscho's answer lists cooking times for unsoaked beans... but basically you just cook for about twice as long.

    – user3067860
    Jan 2 at 18:16














  • 2





    You can use hotter than just 'warm' water. What you basically describe is often called the 'hot soak' method. It reduces the time needed to soak the beans. (some say it's not as good for texture, but like you said, gets rid of the indigestable sugars, and it's better than just cooking without any soak (in terms of texture, not time))

    – Joe
    Jan 2 at 15:31








  • 1





    @joe edited my question to include that. Thanks for correcting me. It's been a while since I've done that.

    – Steve
    Jan 2 at 15:38






  • 1





    There are ways to get around the pre-soak with a pressure cooker.

    – user3067860
    Jan 2 at 16:00






  • 1





    @user3067860 That would make a good answer for this question. I myself am curious as to how you do that.

    – Steve
    Jan 2 at 16:53






  • 1





    @Steve rumtscho's answer lists cooking times for unsoaked beans... but basically you just cook for about twice as long.

    – user3067860
    Jan 2 at 18:16








2




2





You can use hotter than just 'warm' water. What you basically describe is often called the 'hot soak' method. It reduces the time needed to soak the beans. (some say it's not as good for texture, but like you said, gets rid of the indigestable sugars, and it's better than just cooking without any soak (in terms of texture, not time))

– Joe
Jan 2 at 15:31







You can use hotter than just 'warm' water. What you basically describe is often called the 'hot soak' method. It reduces the time needed to soak the beans. (some say it's not as good for texture, but like you said, gets rid of the indigestable sugars, and it's better than just cooking without any soak (in terms of texture, not time))

– Joe
Jan 2 at 15:31






1




1





@joe edited my question to include that. Thanks for correcting me. It's been a while since I've done that.

– Steve
Jan 2 at 15:38





@joe edited my question to include that. Thanks for correcting me. It's been a while since I've done that.

– Steve
Jan 2 at 15:38




1




1





There are ways to get around the pre-soak with a pressure cooker.

– user3067860
Jan 2 at 16:00





There are ways to get around the pre-soak with a pressure cooker.

– user3067860
Jan 2 at 16:00




1




1





@user3067860 That would make a good answer for this question. I myself am curious as to how you do that.

– Steve
Jan 2 at 16:53





@user3067860 That would make a good answer for this question. I myself am curious as to how you do that.

– Steve
Jan 2 at 16:53




1




1





@Steve rumtscho's answer lists cooking times for unsoaked beans... but basically you just cook for about twice as long.

– user3067860
Jan 2 at 18:16





@Steve rumtscho's answer lists cooking times for unsoaked beans... but basically you just cook for about twice as long.

– user3067860
Jan 2 at 18:16











2














I generally just do a 10 minute boil, 1 hour rest, then simmer for 15-2 hours. But this blogpage suggests that you don't even need the resting period. Essentially her trick is to avoid packaged dried beans and use the bulk beans available in some stores. No idea where that would be in my area, but... How to Cook Dried Beans - The Quick and Easy Method






share|improve this answer
























  • That is good tip. Thank you for sharing

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 3 at 3:52
















2














I generally just do a 10 minute boil, 1 hour rest, then simmer for 15-2 hours. But this blogpage suggests that you don't even need the resting period. Essentially her trick is to avoid packaged dried beans and use the bulk beans available in some stores. No idea where that would be in my area, but... How to Cook Dried Beans - The Quick and Easy Method






share|improve this answer
























  • That is good tip. Thank you for sharing

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 3 at 3:52














2












2








2







I generally just do a 10 minute boil, 1 hour rest, then simmer for 15-2 hours. But this blogpage suggests that you don't even need the resting period. Essentially her trick is to avoid packaged dried beans and use the bulk beans available in some stores. No idea where that would be in my area, but... How to Cook Dried Beans - The Quick and Easy Method






share|improve this answer













I generally just do a 10 minute boil, 1 hour rest, then simmer for 15-2 hours. But this blogpage suggests that you don't even need the resting period. Essentially her trick is to avoid packaged dried beans and use the bulk beans available in some stores. No idea where that would be in my area, but... How to Cook Dried Beans - The Quick and Easy Method







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 2 at 20:00









elbrantelbrant

1,0871115




1,0871115













  • That is good tip. Thank you for sharing

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 3 at 3:52



















  • That is good tip. Thank you for sharing

    – K. Sopheak
    Jan 3 at 3:52

















That is good tip. Thank you for sharing

– K. Sopheak
Jan 3 at 3:52





That is good tip. Thank you for sharing

– K. Sopheak
Jan 3 at 3:52


















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