It may be tradition to eat black-eyed peas on New Year’s Day, but I’m here to say that you need to be making these delicious and budget-friendly beans year-round! This big ol’ pot of peas is hearty, delicious, freezer-friendly, and about as budget-friendly as it gets. So try them out this New Year’s Day and then add them to your regular rotation for the coming year. Your wallet and taste buds will thank you. ;)
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What Are Black-Eyed Peas?
Black-eyed peas are a small white legume with a black dot, or “eye”, in the center. They’re traditionally served on New Year’s Day in the United States alongside collard greens (or mustard or turnip greens) and cornbread to bring wealth in the new year. The black-eyed peas represent coins, while the greens signify paper dollars. Some even believe you must consume 365 black-eyed peas to bring the wealth, so make sure to dish yourself up an extra large bowl!
Ingredients for Black-Eyed Peas
Here’s what you’ll need to make this incredibly delicious pot of black-eyed peas:
- Black-Eyed Peas: You’ll need one pound of dry black-eyed peas. You can find these near the other dry beans in the grocery store, or on a special display if you’re buying near the New Year!
- Bacon: Bacon gives the black-eyed peas a deliciously smoky flavor and the fat gives the peas body and a wonderful mouthfeel. You can substitute by adding a ham hock or smoked turkey wing to the peas before simmering and using a bit of oil to sauté the vegetables in the beginning.
- Vegetables: The black-eyed peas are flavored with a medley of vegetables like onion, garlic, bell pepper, and celery. The vegetables add flavor, color, and texture to the dish.
- Spices: The pot of peas is seasoned with a savory mix of smoked paprika, oregano, thyme, cayenne pepper, and black pepper.
- Chicken Broth: The black-eyed peas cook in chicken broth for maximum flavor. Make sure to use a good broth to ensure the peas are very flavorful. We like to use Better Than Bouillon because it’s cost-effective and has great flavor
- Salt: As with any bean, it’s very important to add salt to taste at the end of cooking. Salt doesn’t just make food “salty” but it amplifies all of the flavors so you can taste each and every ingredient.
Recipe Variations
Vegetarian or Vegan: To make these black-eyed peas vegetarian, simply skip the bacon and use a few tablespoons of coconut oil to sauté the vegetables. The coconut oil has a similar mouthfeel to pork fat, making the peas extra hearty. You’ll also want to increase the smoked paprika slightly to make up for the smokiness of the bacon and swap vegetable broth for chicken broth.
Slow Cooker: To make black-eyed peas in the slow cooker, simply add all of the ingredients (including the pre-soaked peas) to a slow cooker and cook on high for about four hours, or until the peas are tender.
Canned Black-Eyed Peas: If you’re in a rush or forgot to soak your peas, canned black-eyed peas are a great shortcut. Simply follow our recipe for Quickie Black-Eyed Peas with Greens.
The Quick Soak Method
If you don’t have time to soak your beans overnight (or you just forgot), you can use the quick soak method to get the beans ready for cooking in about an hour. Here’s how to quick soak beans:
- Rinse the beans with cold water, then add them to a large pot. Add enough fresh water to cover the beans by 2-3 inches.
- Place a lid on the pot, turn the heat on to high, and bring the beans up to a boil. Allow the beans to boil for two minutes.
- Remove the beans from the heat and let them sit in the hot water, with the lid in place, for one hour.
- Rinse the soaked beans and continue to use them in place of the beans soaked overnight.
How to Store Leftover Black-Eyed Peas
This recipe is great for meal prep because the leftovers are amazing. Store the cooked black-eyed peas in the refrigerator for up to five days, or, once they’re chilled, transfer single portions to the freezer for longer storage. They can be kept in the freezer for about three months and easily reheated in the microwave or on the stovetop over medium-low heat, stirring often.
Black-Eyed Peas
Ingredients
- 1 lb. dry black-eyed peas ($1.99)
- 4 oz. bacon ($1.33)
- 1 yellow onion ($0.32)
- 4 cloves garlic ($0.32)
- 1 bell pepper ($0.99)
- 2 stalks celery ($0.45)
- 1 tsp smoked paprika ($0.10)
- 1 tsp dried oregano ($0.10)
- 1 tsp dried thyme ($0.10)
- 1/4 tsp cayenne pepper ($0.02)
- 1/4 tsp black pepper ($0.02)
- 1 bay leaf ($0.15)
- 4 cups chicken broth ($0.42)
- 1 tsp salt (or to taste) ($0.05)
Instructions
- The day before, rinse the peas with cool water then place them in a large bowl and cover with 2-3 inches of cold water. Soak the peas in the refrigerator for eight hours or overnight.
- When you're ready to cook the peas, add the bacon to a large pot and cook over medium heat until the bacon is brown and crispy. Remove the bacon, saving it for later, and leave all of the bacon grease in the pot.
- Dice the onion, bell pepper, and celery, and mince the garlic. Add the onion to the pot with the bacon grease and cook over medium until the onion is tender.
- Add the bell pepper, celery, and garlic to the pot and continue to cook for about five minutes more.
- Drain the peas and give them a brief rinse. Add the peas to the pot along with the smoked paprika, oregano, thyme, cayenne pepper, black pepper, bay leaf, and chicken broth. Stir everything to combine, then place a lid on the pot.
- Turn the heat up to medium-high and allow the pot to come to a boil. Once it reaches a full boil, turn the heat down to medium-low and let the peas simmer for one hour, stirring occasionally, or until the peas are tender.
- Once the peas have softened, crumble the bacon and stir it back into the pot. Season the peas with salt to taste, starting with ½ tsp and adding more until the flavors of the pot pop.
- Remove the bay leaf from the pot and serve the peas with a side of collard greens and cornbread, or over a bowl of rice.
See how we calculate recipe costs here.
Equipment
- Dutch Oven
Nutrition
How to Make Black-Eyed Peas – Step By Step Photos
The night before, begin soaking the black-eyed peas. Rinse the peas well with cool water, then place them in a large bowl and cover with at least three inches of water. Soak the peas for at least eight hours in the refrigerator.
When you’re ready to cook the peas, add 4oz. bacon to a large pot and cook over medium heat until the bacon is brown and crispy. Remove the bacon and set it aside for later, leaving all of the bacon grease in the pot.
Dice one yellow onion, one green bell pepper, and two stalks of celery. Mince four cloves of garlic. Add the diced onion to the pot with the bacon grease and sauté over medium heat until the onions are soft, then add the bell pepper, celery, and garlic. Continue to sauté for about five minutes more.
Add the drained black-eyed peas to the pot along with 1 teaspoon smoked paprika, 1 teaspoon dried oregano, 1 teaspoon dried thyme, ¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper, ¼ tsp black pepper, one bay leaf, and four cups of chicken broth.
Stir all of the ingredients together, place a lid on the pot, and turn the heat up to medium-high. Allow the pot to come to a boil. Once it reaches a full boil, turn the heat down to medium-low and let the peas simmer, stirring occasionally, for one hour or until the peas are tender.
Once the peas are soft, crumble the bacon and stir it into the pot. Season the pot of peas with salt, starting with ½ teaspoon, and then add more to taste. The total amount needed will vary depending on how much salt is in the chicken broth used, but we used one teaspoon total.
Remove the bay leaf then serve with a side of collard greens and cornbread, or over a bed of rice. Enjoy!
So flavorful and easy! I did mine in the crockpot (added some extra liquid as I didn’t soak the beans either) with a touch of liquid smoke. High for 5 hours. Over some rice with collard greens, this was a classic Southern dinner.
I came here looking for a slow cooker black-eyed pea recipe that you had had here forever…but now I can’t find it at all? Is it still available? I think it used thyme, if I remember correctly. Thanks!
Hi Danie! You’re correct, this is actually an updated recipe to replace that old one. I just emailed you the old recipe PDF though so watch out for that!
Wow — this was so good I had to come back to comment. I used a mix of red, yellow and orange bell peppers and they were truly beautiful. Is there anything cozier than a pot of beans simmering on the stove? Thanks, Beth :)
Pouring off the soaking water removes a lot of flavor. Blackeyed peas don’t need to be soaked, they cook quickly compared to other dried legumes.
Also, adding salt at the start of cooking adds a lot more flavor as the peas take in the salt. America’s Test Kitchen did some work on this and found that adding salt at the start does not harden the peas. Adding salt at the end is worthless.
Made this using the leftover hambone from Christmas. It was soo good and a nice alternative to the usual ham and beans. The seasoning on this was really good.
(I added the hambone just before I brought it to a boil.)
Beth’s recipes are always 10/10.
Thanks!
LOVE black eyed peas. I usually cook dried ones, but have often subbed fresh or canned this time of year. It mostly means altering cooking time, and maybe less liquid, but dried are definitely the most economical. I tend to soften my veggies in bacon fat (always save bacon fat in a jar in my fridge), but sometimes use leftover ham instead of cooked bacon for the finish. I also like to sub a can of RoTel for a cup of the broth. A Southern classic, a pot of black eyed peas has been part of our New Year’s Day tradition ever since I was married in 1964–cheap and full of flavor!
I was so excited to see this recipe but I so wish it was made with canned black eyed peas instead. It’s really hard to source dried beans where I live and I don’t want to order them online.
You could try our quick black eyed peas instead! https://www.budgetbytes.com/quickie-black-eyed-peas-and-greens/
SO GOOD
Followed this recipe (used chicken broth instead of bouillon) and my super picky husband is still raving about how delicious these were.
Recipe couldn’t have been any easier.
Thanks so much for this great one!
These turned out really well. We made them for our “lucky” New Year’s meal and my husband has already requested we have them again in the future. Thanks for sharing!
First, I have been cooking this recipe since 2014. My whole family request these black eye peas. Love this recipe!!!
Have you tried this in an instant pot? If so, do you know the cook time?
If not this is going in the crockpot tomorrow night!
I haven’t tried this in an IP, but slow cooker recipes usually convert to IP very well! I would probably just use the bean function. :)
For anyone wondering in the future, I made this in the IP tonight! I used sauté function with coconut oil/no bacon and when it was time to put in beans, I added 6 C of liquid and used manual setting for a total of about 10 min with a quick release (I tried 8 min but that wasn’t quite enough and ended up doing 2 more min). Turned out super yummy!!
Hi! New here and loving these recipes. Thank you! Wondering if and how to substitute the bullion? Should I use chicken stock in place of water? Sorry for a silly question. I’m not an intuitive cook. Thank you!
Hi Kate and welcome! Yes per the instructions you can just use 6 cups of chicken broth.
So delicious! The red pepper flakes give it just a little spice. I added a cubed ham steak to make it a more substantial meal. The whole meal cost about $6
Did you add the ham at the begining or in the middle?
My 1 year old absolutely loved this soup! It was a hit! So great on a winter day. Making it again today.
I just cook dried blackeyed peas with water, cooking oil, and salt. Simple, yet delicious.
Wondering if there is a sub for bacon to make it vegetarian?
Hi Aly! These subs are actually in the post if you need to reference them again or want more details, but to make these black-eyed peas vegetarian, omit the bacon and use a few tablespoons of coconut oil to sauté the vegetables. You’ll also want to increase the smoked paprika slightly to make up for the smokiness of the bacon and swap vegetable broth for chicken broth. :)
Was this recipe updated? I feel like I’ve used it in the past but it was vegetarian and didn’t involve soaking the beans…
Yes it was! It used to be slow cooker with no soaking, but it did used chicken bouillon so not vegetarian. If you’d like a pdf of the old recipe, shoot me an email at support@budgetbytes.com and I’ll send it to you!
Yummy! I didn’t have chicken broth, so I added 1 beef bouillon cube and a tablespoon of New Orleans seasoning to 6 cups of water. These were the best black-eyed peas I’ve ever made.
I used vegetable broth order to make it vegan. I had fresh thyme on hand so used that. Otherwise followed your recipe exactly and it was delicious! Was trying to find a way to cook them that was still tasty other than the way I used to do it with a ham hock. They were great thank you!
I have a ham hock I would like to throw in this recipe, do need to increase the cooking time?
Four hours on high should be enough for a ham hock.
I made this for New Years, subbing Better than Bullion No Chicken flavor for chicken broth and it was divine.
Made this for the first time tonight without any changes to the recipe. However I cooked the beans in a stove-top pressure cooker. 15 minutes at 15 pounds (quick pressure release) – served on some Brown Jasmine rice.
I added some Sriracha at the table, spouse added some shredded cheddar. It was wonderfully delicious.
I’m new to slow cooking. Anyone cook these on low for 8 hours?
Eight hours on low should work well. :)
Thanks! I tried it and they turned out great.
I made these beans today, and it was a great and easy way to bring in my New Year. These beans are flavorful, filling, and frankly delicious!!
I made these last night they were great even better as left overs for today. I’ve never made black eyed Peas before super easy to follow direction. Great recipe thanks.
I’ll be cooking these this week, using my own homemade chicken stock instead of bouillon cubes (my hubby is on a low-sodium diet.)
Curious, though, why you don’t suggest pre-soaking the peas. I know soaking beans is a must for many varieties in order to make them easier to digest and more nutritious. Is this also true of black-eyed peas, or are they different?
Thanks for the awesome website, I truly appreciate it!
I don’t know anything about making them more nutritious, but the slow cooker eliminates the need to presoak them for softening purposes. Because they boil happily away in the slow cooker, they soften up all the way without presoaking. :)
If I wanted to use a hammock in this recipe, when would I add it?
You can add the ham hock with the beans and broth, so that it simmers with all the other delicious ingredients. :)
Thanks Beth. We had tonight with cornbread and okra…the beans were really great :-)
Literally just took turned the beans off and they are absolutely delicious!!
delete took….
Making this now and it smells amazing!!! Living in NC now, but born and raised in BR, LA (you actually worked with my hubs at WF in BR…he was in the bakery…Bryan) :)
Love your cookbook, love your blog, love your easy recipes! You rock!
Just stumbled on this site and I have to say I LOVE IT!!!!
I’m now in San Diego but originally from New Orleans. We actually order these beans (Camellia) because you can’t find them out here.
I love this recipe because its WITHOUT the ham hock. We have been cutting back on pork and I’m grateful for the great EASY idea. THANKS!!
Awesome recipe! One thing I add to my own is a hamhock, that bone at the center of the ham with all of the meat on it that is super tasty but too small to really get at. Usually we can just use the one that is left over from the Christmas ham, but this year I didn’t have one, but I found out that hamhocks are super cheap. I was able to get a smoked one from my grocery for about a dollar. Just put it in to boil with the soaked beans. And then take it out, shread off the meat and add the shreaded meat into the beans.
I’d like to make mine a little more similar to Hoppin’ John. When would I add in celery and diced bell pepper? Would they go in along with the onion and garlic?
Also, which rice would be best to mix it in- jasmine, regular long-grain white, or brown?
Thanks!
Yes, I think it would. :)
These beans ARE, as you say, FREAKING DELICIOUS!
Followed recipe exactly, except I used six cups organic vegetable broth for the liquid. Crockpot on high for about 4 hours… then turned the crockpot off and let the beans sit in crockpot overnight. OMG, so incredible. OUTSTANDING OUTSTANDING OUTSTANDING
Awesome Awesome Awesome recipe!!! I’ll definitely spread the word. If you want more vegan recipe for yourself, or your audience stop by http://www.crockpotking.com. And feel free to roam around!!!
And whatever you do please keep it comin!
Smithmommy8 – Yep, just a lil’ parsley :) I always have some in my fridge and it always makes the pictures 10x better!
Sounds tasty, thanks! What is the herb you garnished with? Italian Parsley?
FANTASTIC recipe! I made this for the 3rd time today. Used 4 cups water and 6 boullion cubes. Added an extra dash of red pepper flakes. Doesn’t get any better. Or easier. Thanks so much for sharing!!!
Ashlee – You can try sauteeing a little minced garlic in a pot with oil, then add the beans, a little chicken broth, thyme, red pepper, and a bay leaf. Simmer the pot for 30 minutes or so and hopefully that will make the canned beans taste better :)
OMG, this was the BEST black eyed peas we have ever had! Usually eat them on New Years Day, but have never tasted so good! Thanks Beth, It’s sure to be a great year!
How can I season canned black eyed peas similarly? I assume using the crockpot would make them too mushy, but I have 3 cans to use up today!
Can you believe I’ve never had black eyed peas?? I’ve been wanting to try, though. I even have a bag of them in my pantry. I will definately give this recipe a try!
I made this today! and can I just say, it was so delicious! Thank you so much for this easy, but so yummy recipe! By the way, I absolutely love this blog! :)
Jessica,
Greetings from Australia!!
Made this for New Years in the crock pot (alongside Budget Bytes marinated mushrooms, Roasted Cabbage with Lemon from Kalyn’s Kitchen, and Jiffy corn bread). Threw in some cubed ham with an hour or so left to go. This was a huge hit, we ate until we were stuffed, and I still am drooling over the leftovers! :)
Ack! Thanks Amberpepe! I always forget to change that number from the template that I use :P I’ll be fixing it right away :) Happy New Year!
Oh man, we made these yesterday and they were SOOOO GOOOOOD! W also cooked up a super yummy pot of kale (can you believe my store was sold out of collards?) and some cornbread. A very delicious first dinner of the year.
Also, not to be nitpicky, but I believe your total recipe cost is incorrect in your ingredient breakdown. Just thought you might like to know. :)
I made this for dinner today. Delicious. Thanks so much for posting the recipe.
Black-eyed Peas are such a New Year’s staple! I love it Beth! Check out my post on other New Year’s traditions! Have a Happy New Year!
Mmm, this sounds delish, Beth! Though we may not have them on New Year’s Day, I think Garren and I will have to do it soon.