Portuguese Beans with Linguica are a spicy kin to American Pork and Beans and delicious as a main dish in chilly weather or a side dish for your summer cookouts.
This recipe came courtesy of my cousin who is half Portuguese on the other side. We share our French ancestry, though our descendants came from the Basque region so still pretty close to Spain and Portugal.
Regardless of where you are from if you like a little kick to your pork and beans, you are going to love these.
What is linguica? What is the best substitute?
Linguica is a spicy Portuguese sausage. As you can imagine in a foodie family, especially Portuguese foodies, there is a debate as to which brand is best.
Get what you can find. It should be with the other sausages and bratwursts in your grocers meat section, if they carry it.
You can ask at the butcher's counter if they can order it if they don't have it. Or you can substitute chorizo or hot Italian sausage. If you don't eat pork, longaniza is a beef sausage that would make a good substitute.
If you use Italian sausage, add some paprika (sweet and smoked varieties, if you have both) for a more authentic flavor since both linguica and chorizo both use plenty of it.
Best Beans Recipes from #OurFamilyTable
Beans are amazingly versatile. We have recipes here for beans dips, bean soups, cassoulet and more.
Best Bean Recipes
- 15 Bean Soup from Devour Dinner
- Bavarian Cassoulet from Palatable Pastime
- Bean and Bacon Soup from Hezzi-D's Books and Cooks
- Cast Iron Root Beer Baked Beans from The Spiffy Cookie
- Cheesy Tomato and White Bean Dip from Magical Ingredients
- Portuguese Beans from That Recipe
- Quick Samp and Beans from A Kitchen Hoor's Adventures
- Three Sisters Stew from Art of Natural Living
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Recipe
Ingredients
- 1 pound pink beans
- 1 pound linguisa
- 1 small onion (chopped)
- 1 clove garlic
- 2 cans 16 ounce tomato sauce
- ⅔ cups brown sugar
- ¼ teaspoon cumin
- ¼ teaspoon allspice
Instructions
- STANDARD SOAK: Cover beans with water and soak overnight.QUICK SOAK: Cover beans with water, bring to a boil for 2 minutes, turn off heat, cover and let sit for approximately one hour until beans are no longer hard.
- Drain off water and refill until beans are covered again.
Stove Top Method
- Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and cook several hours or until the beans are tender.
- While beans are cooking, cook the linguica in a skillet and break up into small pieces (about ½ to 1”). When cooked remove the linguica from pan, pour off all but a little grease and sauté the onion and garlic gently until softened. Add the tomato sauce, brown sugar and spice.
- When the beans are well done, drain and save the extra bean water. Stir about one cup of the bean juice into the sauce and add to the cooked beans with the linguica.
- Let simmer for an hour or so before serving. The extra bean juice may be added if the beans seem dry or saved to enrich soup stock for another meal.
Pressure Cooker Method
- Turn electric pressure cooker to SAUTE, for stove top turn to medium high heat.Cook the linguica while breaking it up into small pieces (about ½ to 1”).
- When cooked remove the linguica from pan, pour off all but a little grease then sauté the onion and garlic until softened.
- Add everything into the pot (linguica, beans, tomato, spices, sugar) along with a cup of water.
- Seal the lid and bring to pressure and cook for 25 minutes on high. Remove from heat and use a natural press release for 10 minutes.
- If the sauce seems dry add an extra ½- 1 cup of water.If beans are not tender enough, bring back to pressure and cook for an additional 5 minutes with a natural pressure release.
Tami
I love beans, they make such a great and delicious side dish. This looks and sounds so good. I will definitely try it out. Thanks for the recipe. 🙂
Elise @frugalfarmwife.com
Can't wait to try these! Hubby and I really enjoy beans and like to try new recipes all the time. Thanks for sharing!
Kristina and Millie
Oooh yum. linguisa looks tasty. I've never had that before. I will have to look for some and try this out. Thanks for linking it up to Snickerdoodle Sunday!
bel
Looks interesting. Looks tasty 🙂
Thanks for linking up for Sunday Brunch x
I'll share this recipe again this week
Cynthia
This looks really tasty. I'd never heard of linguisa before. I'll have to try it. Thank you for linking at the In and Out of the Kitchen Link Party. Hope to see you again next week.
Melinda @Home.Made.Interest
Stopping by from SitsGirl- Link to get Featured party. Had to stop and comment since I noticed the title said Portuguese and with me being Portuguese it caught my eye. Brings back childhood memories of helping my mom soak the beans. Thanks for sharing!
Jamie
Those look yummy!! Pinned that recipe! 🙂 #HomeMattersParty
Becky
I am pinning this recipe for sure! Thanks for sharing at the From The Archives Link Party!
Audrey
They are so easy and so good!
sarah k @ the pajama chef
These beans sound so good!! Do you think this would be good with rice? We love rice & beans at our house!
Audrey
These beans are good with anything. Okay, maybe not EVERYTHING everything, but I bet they would be good with rice.