Recipes

Creole White Bean Cassoulet with Braised Pork Belly

Creole White Bean Cassoulet with Braised Pork Belly
Image courtesy of Saint John

Celebrate a milestone year for Camellia beans with a cozy white bean cassoulet

New Orleans’ iconic legume brand Camellia beans turns 100 this year, and its legacy has shaped the cooking practices of both home and professional cooks. “Camellia beans is my go-to,” says Daren Porretto, chef de cuisine at Saint John, a newish old-school creole restaurant in the French Quarter.

Porretto grew up in the Irish Channel and recalls Camellia beans simmering in his mother’s and grandmother’s kitchens. “It was the only kind of beans in our kitchen at home,” he says. Camellia white beans are at the heart of one of his favorite menu items, creole white bean cassoulet with toasted cornbread. “Something about those beans, they hold up to soaking and cook to a perfect, creamy consistency.”

From Key Ingredient: Camellia Beans

recipe heading-plus-icon

yields

Makes 5 to 6 servings

    ingredients
  • ¾ cup medium-diced bacon
  • ½ cup sliced andouille sausage
  • ½ cup medium-diced cured Cajun tasso ham
  • 1 jumbo yellow onion, diced
  • 1 green bell pepper, diced
  • 3 celery ribs, diced
  • 6 garlic cloves, minced
  • 2 dried bay leaves
  • 1 pound Camellia white beans, soaked overnight
  • 6 cups chicken stock or water
  • 1 pound pork belly, cut into 3-ounce pieces
  • 4 cups root beer
  • ¼ cup chopped fresh parsley
  • Creole seasoning to taste
  • Crystal hot sauce to taste
  • Sliced green onions for garnish
steps
  1. In a large pot over medium heat, add bacon, andouille, and tasso and cook until sausage pieces are browned. Remove cooked meats with a slotted spoon to a clean bowl. 
  2. To the same pot, add onion, bell pepper, celery, and garlic. Sauté over medium heat, allowing the moisture from the vegetables to help dissolve any browned bits off bottom of pot as you stir. Add bay leaves and stir for 1 minute. 
  3. Drain and rinse soaked beans. Add beans and cooked meats to pot along with chicken stock or water, and give everything a brief stir to combine ingredients. Cover, increase heat to medium-high, and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to medium-low and simmer, covered, for 1 hour, stirring occasionally. 
  4. Meanwhile, score top of each piece of pork belly in a crosshatch pattern. Place pork belly in a large pot and cover with root beer. Bring to a boil then reduce heat. Simmer uncovered for 45 minutes to 1 hour or until pork belly becomes tender. 
  5. Once beans are tender, use the back of a spoon to mash some of the beans against side of pot, then simmer, uncovered, for about 30 minutes.
  6. Once white beans have thickened, add parsley and stir. Add creole seasoning, salt, pepper, and hot sauce; taste and add more seasoning as needed. Serve beans in a bowl topped with pork belly and sliced green onions.

shop ingredients

Hot Sauce

Catbird Sriracha Hot Sauce

Catbird's Sriracha Hot Sauce is crafted with habaneros and jalapenos then put into mash with pure vinegar and a small amount of organic sugar, garlic and sea salt before fermenting and aging to sriracha perfection. It is also low in calories, gluten free, preservative free, and vegan/vegetarian.

$10.00
Sausages

Andouille Sausage

The perfect match to gumbo or red beans and rice, Pine Street Market's Andouille Sausage is handmade creole style sausage seasoned with chilies, garlic, and allspice.

$14.00
Bacon

Bourbon Smoked Pepper Bacon

Bourbon Smoked Pepper Bacon from Bourbon Barrel Foods is rich, thick-cut, and coated with Bourbon Smoked Pepper. The combination of the hefty helping of pork and dynamic flavors from smoked bourbon barrels makes for slices that can grace anything that comes out of your kitchen. It all starts with hickory-smoked bacon that is then cured with salt, sugar, and Bourbon Barrel Foods’ own signature Bourbon Smoked Pepper.Transform your classic bacon or BLT sandwich into something gourmet, or up your bloody mary garnish game with a slice of bacon. Breakfast won’t taste, or smell, the same after you fry up a pan of this bacon to eat or blend into a bacon jam. Gift the popular Kentucky commodity or have it as a mainstay in your larder. Order extra Bourbon Smoked Pepper for your other meats, too, or to rim a bloody mary. Bourbon Barrel Foods has an expansive collection of gourmet foods that showcase the history of Kentucky’s world-renowned Bourbon Country. All of their items are handcrafted in small batches in Louisville, Kentucky. They utilize reclaimed barrels straight from Kentucky’s finest distilleries as an aging and smoking agent. Their popular “EAT YOUR BOURBON” slogan embodies this idea and has catapulted many of their products to the forefront of the culinary scene. Bourbon Barrel Foods’ Bourbon Smoked Pepper Bacon arrives unrefrigerated, so don’t be alarmed if it arrives at room temperature.

$16.00
  • Recipe By
    Daren Porretto, Saint John, New Orleans
  • Contributing City
    New Orleans
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