Slow Cooker Black-Eyed Pea and Pork Chili

“Lose inches off your waistline in three days!”

“Drop two dress sizes overnight!”

“Make dinner while you’re at the beach!.”

False advertising, especially when it has to do with food and health makes me a little nutty. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. But, in this case, that third statement, about dinner, is for real.

It’s thanks to the slow cooker, a kitchen tool I used to relegate exclusively to cold weather cooking. All that warm, meaty, stewy business seemed more suitable to winter flavors than summer. But it actually makes enormous sense in the heat of the season when your time is better spent playing outdoors than cooking in.

The trick to using the slow cooker this time of year is hitting on ingredients that say, “summer.”

Irish stew? No.

Southern chili with fresh corn, black eyed peas, and pork tenderloin accented with a generous spoonful of cooling sour cream? Yes, please.

Prior to making this Slow Cooker Black-Eyed Pea and Pork Chili, I’d never cooked a black-eyed pea in my life. I can’t even recall ever having eaten a black-eyed-pea. I’m as unsouthern as they come (though I’ve been known to do the two-step now and again, and not badly, I might add).

But you don’t have to be from the south to know a good thing. And black-eyed-peas are indeed good. They work beautifully in chili, are an excellent source of fiber and folic acid, have a decent dose of iron, plus, they’re kinda cute.

The pork tenderloin, a notably lean cut of meat, nestled into the beans, cooks up tender enough to pull into succulent chunks by the time the beans are done. For spice, I use chipotle chilis, which lend a soft heat to the mix that won’t overpower little mouths.

Now, go gather up your ingredients, put them into the pot, and grab a towel. We’re going to the beach, people!

5 from 2 votes
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Slow Cooker Black-Eyed Pea and Pork Chili

This is excellent with fresh corn sheared off the cob, but if you are cooking it out of season, feel free to substitute frozen corn. Figure about two and a quarter cups of corn kernels. You can also add two cups of chopped collard greens to the pot at the same time you add the corn to turn up the southern charm even further. The recipe calls for chipotle chiles en adobo, which are sold in cans in the Mexican food section of most supermarkets. You can adjust the amount of chipotle you use idepending on your family's enthusiasm for spice.

Ingredients

  • 1 pound dried black-eyed peas
  • 1 large yellow onion, chopped
  • One 26-ounce box chopped tomatoes or one 28-ounce can
  • 2-3 chipotle chiles en adobo, finely chopped *
  • 1 tablespoon ground chili powder
  • 1 teaspoon ground cumin
  • 2 1/2 cups water
  • One small pork tenderloin (about 2/3 pound), cut in half crosswise
  • 3 ears of corn, husks removed and kernels cut off the cobs (about 2 cups if using frozen corn)
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons salt
  • Garnish: Light sour cream, sliced green onions

Instructions

  1. Rinse the black-eyed peas and look them over, removing any tiny stones. Put into the slow cooker and fill with water to cover by several inches. Do not turn on the slow cooker. Leave overnight to soak.
  2. Drain the peas, rinse, and put them back into the slow cooker. Add the onion, tomatoes, chipotle chiles, chili powder, cumin, and water. Stir well. Nestle the 2 pork tenderloin chunks into the peas.
  3. Turn the slow cooker to high and cook until the peas are just tender, about 3 hours and 20 minutes. Add the corn and continue to cook until the corn is tender and the beans are soft but not mushy, another 25 minutes. Add the salt, stir well, and turn off the heat.
  4. Pull the pork tenderloin out of the slow cooker and let it rest on the counter until cool enough to handle. Use your fingers to shred the pork into bite-size pieces. Add back into the slow cooker and stir.
  5. Serve in bowls with a generous dollop of light sour cream and a shower of thinly sliced green onions.

 

Comments

07.23.2012 at7:51 AM #

Layne

Didn’t you buy a really cool pair of boots in Texas once? Those look good in a two-step.

Thank you for this recipe! I bought this beautifui, shiny, and huge (was talked into the size), slow cooker at Williams Sonoma thinking it would be the answer to all my big-family cooking needs. But all it does is sit there looking good.

I don’t really know where to start…so I’ll try this recipe. Thanks for a great blog Katie. I love reading your posts.

Any good slow cooker cook book I can start with? Simple ingredients, good family meals?
Thank you Katie!

07.23.2012 at7:51 AM #

Katie Morford

Hi Layne

Once you try it, you’ll be hooked. It makes great “man food” for your kind of crew. I have heard good things about The Art of Slow Cooking by Andrew Schloss. You can also find loads of recipes on the internet…look for Stephanie O’Dea’s blog: Crockpot 365. I also have a slow cooker section on MKH with just a handful of recipes so far. Click on “Recipes” on the home page and scroll down. (and yes, I do have a pair of vintage cowboy boots picked up in Austin Texas…good memory).

07.23.2012 at7:51 AM #

Pam

Layne & Katie,
I can definitely vouch for the Andrew Schloss cookbook for slow cookers. (Personally, I still use the “crock pot” monicker, which definitely dates me.)

Every crockpot cookbook seemed full of recipes with the same ingredients … And potatoes were always among them! The Art of Slow Cooking has a huge variety of recipes. I’ve yet to try one I didn’t like.
Pam H

05.18.2013 at9:54 AM #

Christina

Going to try this recipe this week – excited to use dry beans. 🙂

05.31.2013 at2:44 PM #

Christina

I made this earlier in the week and it was great! Super hearty and filling – tasted healthy – and my kids ate it up. And it made a lot! So I brought some over to my neighbor and she loved it too. Thanks for the recipe!

05.31.2013 at2:44 PM #

Katie Morford

oh great. I really appreciate when you report back!

09.12.2018 at2:16 PM #

Carolyn

I’d like to try the Slow Cooker Black Eyed Pea and Pork Chili but do not have a slow cooker. How can I adjust this recipe for either top of the stove or oven. Thanks.

09.12.2018 at2:16 PM #

Katie Morford

Hi Carolyn, See my response below your question.

09.12.2018 at3:41 PM #

Katie Morford

Hi Carolyn, Good question. I think you could simmer this over very low heat on the stove covered with a lid. It would probably take a couple of hours, peeking at it from time to time to see if more liquid is needed. Let me know how that goes if you do try it.

01.06.2019 at9:06 AM #

Sophie Ziegler

This looks so great. Do you think I could cook it in the instant pot? If so, how long would you recommend?

01.06.2019 at9:06 AM #

Katie Morford

That is a great question and one I don’t have the answer to. I’d have to try it to know for sure. The method would be essentially the same. You could try googling around for cooking times in the IP for black-eyed peas. That’s probably where I’d start. I wouldn’t mind trying this myself, and if I do, I’ll let you know how it goes. Sorry I don’t have a better answer for you.

01.16.2019 at12:10 PM #

Val Barnhart

This was delicious!!! Thanks for the recipe!

01.16.2019 at12:10 PM #

Katie Morford

Oh good. I haven’t made it in ages, but really need to!

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