Autumn is most definitely upon us, the nights and mornings are chillier, the gloves have been dug out from the back of the drawer and the lawn is more leaves than grass. It’s time for dinner to be warm and comforting once more. One of the comfort foods we always turn to in this house is baked beans so I was thrilled when Branston asked me to develop a recipe around their beans.
Branston launched their baked beans 10 years ago this month and they have been rated by the Good Housekeeping Institute as the best tasting beans of all the leading brands and in taste tests 4 out of 5 people prefer the taste of Branston’s beans. This might be something to do with Branston putting more tomatoes into their sauce.
This pie makes a substantial family meal, with the beans as the star. The beans’ tomato sauce means that there is no need to make a gravy. I served it with a swede and sweet potato mash that was perfect to soak up the juices, but really all you need is the pie.
If you would like the pie to be even more substantial you can crack a couple of eggs onto the filling before you put the pastry on top. I made it with the eggs when Granny came round for tea, but didn’t for last night’s tea as my eldest is away with school for the week and my youngest turns her nose up at eggs. The pie was well received both times with second helpings being devoured eagerly. Even Granny, who said she wasn’t keen on beans before she dug in, ate every last mouthful! A ringing endorsement, I’d say.
For the pastry
250g plain flour
125g cold butter, cut into cubes
7-8 tbsp cold water
For the filling
1 carrot, finely diced
1 stick of celery, finely diced
1 onion finely diced
350g cooked ham, diced (or you can use bacon rashers, cut into small pieces, or bacon lardons, just fry them with the vegetables)
1 x 410g tin Branston baked beans
½ tsp oregano
pepper to taste
1 egg and a splash of milk for egg wash
Method
Preheat the oven to 200°c, gas mark 6, or use the floor of the roasting oven of the Aga.
Make the pastry by placing the flour into a large bowl and adding the cubes of butter. Rub in using your fingertips until the butter is evenly distributed. Pour most of the water in (you might not need all of it) and draw a knife through the pastry until it starts to come together. If you need more water add it gradually. Bring the dough together into a ball using your hands and wrap in clingfilm and place in the fridge for twenty minutes to chill. You can also make the pastry in a food processor by whizzing the flour and butter together briefly and then add most of the water and whizz until it all just starts to come together.
For the filling, sauté the carrot, celery and onion (and bacon if you are using that instead of ham) in a large frying pan with a tablespoon of oil until the vegetables are soft. This will take about ten minutes over a gentle heat. Take off the heat and leave to cool. Once cool, add the ham, the oregano, a touch of pepper and the baked beans and mix well.
Cut one-third of the pastry off the ball and put to one side. Roll the larger piece on a lightly floured work surface to the size of your pie dish. My pie dish in the photo above measures 20cm. Then line the pie dish with the pastry. Pour in the filling. If you want to add a few eggs then crack them on top of the filling at this point.
Lightly beat the egg for the egg wash in a small bowl or cup and add a splash of milk. Using a pastry brush, brush a little egg wash around the edge of the pastry where the lid will sit to help with the seal. Roll out the smaller piece of pastry on a lightly floured work surface to fit. Place on top of the dish and, using your thumbs, press all along the edge to make a good seal. Using a sharp knife poke two holes in the top of the pie to let the steam escape and trim the excess pastry from the edge of the pie. If there is enough trimmings, re-roll and cut out a few leaves to decorate the top. Place these on top of the pie and brush the entire surface of the pie with the egg wash. Place in the centre of the oven or on the floor of the roasting oven of the Aga and cook for 25-30 minutes until the pastry is golden and the filling is piping hot. Leave to stand for a few minutes before serving.
#LoveBranstonBeans
Disclosure: I was commissioned to develop this recipe for Branston Baked Beans. All the opinions are my own and are honest.
Absolutely delicious!
I am loving seeing what everyone came up with for this challenge. I cheated and used ready made puff pastry. Branston beans are my favourite. I bet your pie is delicious.
Ready made puff pastry isn’t cheating, it’s making life a lot easier for yourself, or Fuss Free ;). I am popping over to see what you have been up to.
Oh well, if Granny-who-hates beans likes it, perhaps I’ll give it a whirl when the grandchildren come to stay this week, even though I’m a bean-hating Granny too.
Yes, give it a whirl, your grandchildren will love it and you never know you might be converted too.
I finally made this last night, with good sausages instead of bacon, and without the grandchildren. It IS nice. It’ll never be Top Meal for me, since I don’t like baked beans, but it was a good use of them if you have to eat them!
Well I am chuffed to bits that you made it. The sausages sounds like a good change. Thanks for the feedback Margaret. You are a star. x