Simplest Slow Cooker Chickpeas
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Like many, I am feeling drawn to cooking beans right now. They’re cheap. They’re in the pantry. They’re good. Also, it’s still chilly up here, so beans would likely be on the cooking agenda anyway.
As you might know, I’m a fan of brining beans overnight and cooking them stovetop, a method I love for two reasons:
- The beans, thanks to the brine, cook up beautifully: creamy, intact, and cooked through with tender skins. (Scientific explanation here.)
- The overnight soak (in salted water or not) allows for a relatively quick (less than 1 hour) cooking process.
But my recent slow-cooker black bean experiment reminded me of the virtues of the slow-cooker: how nice it is …
- … “to set it and forget it”.
- … to not have to fiddle with the temperature dial to ensure the water simmers just right.
- … to not have to worry about foamy overflows and the messy aftermath.
- … to fill the house with cooking-all-day smells.
These slow-cooker chickpeas follow the same process as the black beans, and you can employ the technique with any bean or legume, keeping in mind the timing will vary from bean to bean. My dried chickpeas (various brands) have consistently been cooking in 8 to 10 hours on high, but it’s important to start checking at the 3 to 4 hour mark to ensure your beans don’t turn to mush. (Moreover, slow cookers vary in their strength/power.)
I could eat these chickpeas straight from the pot. The broth tastes slightly vegetal thanks to the onion and bay leaf, and it’s a little spicy, too, thanks to crushed red pepper flakes. But there’s a richness to it, too, lent by the chickpeas themselves, their “aquafaba”. (More about aquafaba here.) All beans create aquafaba upon being cooked, but chickpeas’, I think, is the most flavorful and the most robust.
Recently, I dumped the entire pot of slow cooker chickpeas into a pot of sautéed onions and escarole and let it simmer away with a rind of parmesan. But I’ve got another batch simmering away, with a few of my favorite chickpea recipes in mind: 10 Recipes to Make with Chickpeas Right Now.
Thinking of you, Friends. Hope you are well 💕💕💕
PS: If you’re having trouble finding dried chickpeas, Nuts.com is a great source.
PPS: Slow Cooker Gigante (or other white) Beans
Here’s the play-by-play: Gather your ingredients:
Add everything into the slow cooker:
Cover with 8 cups of water and set the crock pot on high. Cook until the chickpeas are cooked through — times will vary depending on the age of your beans.
Store in quart containers. These deli quart containers (BPA-free) are great for this purpose. Freeze for up to 3 months. Store in fridge for up to a week.
PrintSimplest Slow Cooker Chickpeas
- Total Time: 10 hours, 5 minutes
- Yield: 6 cups cooked chickpeas
Description
Notes:
- Plan ahead: If you start these early in the morning (7 or 8 am), they likely will be ready by dinner time, but all beans cook at different rates, and if your beans are old, they may take as long as 10 hours to cook. If you want to speed the process up, soak the beans in cold water over night.
- Pepper flakes: if you like a little bit of spice, add the the chili flakes; if you don’t, omit or use less. 1 teaspoon will not make for especially spicy beans, but there will be a nice kick.
Ingredients
- 1 lb. dried chickpeas no need to soak
- 1 half of a small onion, halved through the core to keep it intact, no need to peel
- 1 bay leaf
- 2 teaspoons kosher salt, plus more to taste
- 1 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes, optional
- 1/4 cup olive oil
Instructions
- Place all of the ingredients into a slow cooker. Cover with 8 cups of water. Cover pot. Cook on high heat for 8 to 10 hours or until the beans are done. Note: All beans cook at a different rates. Start checking at the 4-hour mark. They likely won’t be done, but if your beans are especially fresh, they might be done.
- Once the beans are cooked, taste for salt. Add more salt to taste (or, better, wait to add salt to taste till later, when you use the chickpeas in whatever dish you are using.) Note: The beans develop more flavor as they cool in their cooking liquid, which will continue to season them.
- Store the beans in their cooking liquid. I love these deli quart containers for this purpose. I freeze the beans in their cooking liquid in these quart containers as well. Freeze for up to 3 months. Store in the fridge for up to a week.
- Prep Time: 5 minutes
- Cook Time: 8-10 hours
- Category: Beans, Legumes
- Method: Slow Cooker
- Cuisine: American
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
72 Comments on “Simplest Slow Cooker Chickpeas”
What size slow cooker would you recommend using for this recipe?
I would use something like a 6- to 7-qt CrockPot. You probably can get away with something smaller, too.
Thank you so much!
Super easy and super delicious. I use chicken stock instead of water, it adds tons of flavor. I use a small 2 quart crock pot for half the recipe. It is perfect size.
Great to hear, Rebecca!
Curious—have you ever made your own aquafaba? If so, how did you cook your beans (presumably without salt, but what ratio of water to dried beans did you use?)
I have! I wrote about it here: Aquafaba Chocolate Mousse
But in short: I soaked my chickpeas overnight, then transferred them to a pot the following morning, soaking liquid and all, and cooked them without any seasonings—not even salt—until they were done. Then I stored them in their cooking liquid in the fridge for several days, before whipping them. Not sure it was necessary to store them for a few days before whipping them, but my reasoning was that the aquafaba might strengthen with time. They whipped up beautifully!
This technique is super easy. Luckily, my brother-in-law grows garbs on his farm. I was able to grab some after harvest. Also, I love your videos!! Thank you!
Wonderful to hear this, Kim!
The best recipe for cooking chickpea ok slow cooker.. delicious
Wonderful to hear this, Cecil!
This is easy and delicious! I originally made these so I could get to the final product of the Chickpea and Escarole Soup that Alexandra posted. Sometimes, if I don’t want to make the whole soup, I’ll make these beans and just eat a bowl with some parm and crackers over top.
I’m with you! I can eat these straight from the pot. So nice to hear this, Abdelis!
Hi. Maybe you want to add, that cooking kidney beans in the slow cooker is very dangerous.
Please don’t put kidney beans in the slow cooker. https://www.allrecipes.com/article/kidney-beans-slow-cooker/
This isn’t even about kidney beans? Did you read it??
There is a way to mitigate this issue with red kidneys beans which was covered in the Allrecipes article.
They can indeed be cooked in a slow cooker safely.
And this really is a wonderful way to cook any beans then freeze what you don’t use. Something about the long, slow cook with salt and seasoning. Much as I like my instant pot, I think this method turns out a better, creamier bean. Thanks Ali for doing all the work!
Great to hear this, Gale 🙂 🙂 🙂 And I agree re Instant Pot. I’ll use it in a pinch, but when I plan ahead, I love the results from the slow cooker. Thanks so much for writing!
Ali, you speak about brining the chickpeas and how great it is, then you don’t mention brining at all in the slow-cooker method. Have I missed something? Thanks.
DIna
Hi Dina! That’s my bad. When I first discovered the brining method, I was in love — it cooked up the beans so beautifully. For whatever reason — maybe because it’s soooo slow — you don’t need to brine or soak the chickpeas before cooking them in the slowcooker. They cook up perfectly!
I cook beans almost weekly, but chickpeas are my nemesis. I cannot get them to cook completely. I am going to try your idea of leaving them overnight. It’s so frustrating. Thanks for the tip.
Hope you love them! I find this method to be foolproof. Good luck!
I just made a batch and they’re delicious! Would these be good to use for making hummus?
Great to hear! And yes: cook them for the full 10 hours or longer — you want them to be super soft for hummus.
Yummmmm, what’s better than a pot full of brothy beans, nothing! So easy and so delish! I sprinkled a little parm on my sample dish when they were done and it was top notch!!!
So good with Parm! Great to hear this, Sarah. Thanks for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂
Una excelente receta, gracias por compartirla.
This is so easy and you’ll never buy another can of tasteless garbanzos again. I love them by the bowlful, drizzled with good olive oil and lemon juice, a sprinkling of red peppers over a bed of shredded spinach and parsley. DELISH and versatile! Thanks for the great recipe!
So great to hear this, Marilyn! I love this over shredded greens as well. Thanks for writing!
What is the best way to freeze these? In the liquid or do I drain the liquid?
Freeze the chickpeas in their cooking liquid!
These are so so delicious. Served them with the oven baked polenta and my house smelled so good.
Wonder if my crockpot runs hot—my chickpeas were tender around 6-7 hours.
So great to hear this, Molly! And nice work checking them at 6-7 hours… it’s either your slow cooker or your beans — maybe they’re on the fresh side? I find the range of times to be so vast with the slow cooker depending on the model of the slow cooker and the beans.
Hope you are well! 💕💕💕💕💕
Oh, are these good. I trust you when you say, “these are so good,” cause my god, they are.
Great to hear, Kay 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks so much for writing. So good … straight from the pot 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
This is the only way I’m making chickpeas from now on! Thank you!
So great to hear this, Nicole! I feel the same way 🙂 🙂 🙂
Delicious, and so simple. And, for those of us needing to cut back on processed fats, they are fine without the oil – I omitted it, and no problem! Thanks, Ali!
So great to hear this, Cynthia! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes… so helpful for others 💕
If you soak the chickpeas overnight (I had accidentally done so for this recipe!) would it reduce the cook time?
Yes, it should!
If you double the recipe, do you double the water also?
Yes!
6/4/2022
I was not happy with the rising prices of chickpeas, so I brought home a bag of dried chickpeas, and went in search of “how to prepare”. Your Tutorial is very helpful and encouraging..so much so that my peas are in the crockpot now with bay leaf, red peppers, pink salt, and olive oil.
Thank you for getting me started.
Yay! So great to hear this. I make a batch of these every other week … so good!
These are delicious! I am now addicted to them! I make them weekly – and then cook them with onions and greens – and serve them with a tiny bit of pasta! Yummy!
Heaven! I love these so much 🙂
Hi,, I’ve just got myself a huge second hand slow cooker and have many stew recipes which are bettered by the pulses being cooked fr dry or soaked *in the stew*. I also live in a fairly hard water area, which may also be a factor in how hard/soft the chickpeas are. Some guides advise not cooking the chickpeas in a stew broth (eg with vegetables and tomato), but the particular one I love most *demands* a long cook with everything altogether!
I’m asking your opinion as a seasoned slow cooker, basically! Presumably time would overcome any acidity issues?
Hi Cait! I’m not actually sure what you’re asking… can you clarify?
Hi! So just double checking here: you recommend an overnight brine for chickpeas if they’re going to be cooked on the stove, but not if using a slow cooker? Thanks!
Right! I don’t find the need to soak the chickpeas when using the slow cooker.
What happens with the onion and the onion peel?
I pull it out at the end and discard.
I LOVE this recipe! I make it all the time in my instant pot! How would this be with white beans – and how would adapt it for the white beans?
I love all of your recipes!!!
Should be roughly the same amount of time for white beans. What kind of beans are you using?
I use chickpeas. But I was thinking of trying it with white beans.
Ok, great! I think the white beans will probably take less time, so maybe start checking on them at the 6-hour mark?
I make these slow cooker chick peas all the time.. once a week or so.. I love these right out of the slow cooker but I use them for home made hummus..the only change I make is I throw in a frozen habanero pepper instead of the pepper flakes
So nice to hear this, Susan! I love them straight from the slow cooker, too 🙂
hi 🙂 long time fan, first time caller. I made this recipe today and I’m planning on serving it tomorrow. the chickpeas are cooked, just not creamy..at all. I got them at wf but maybe they were old. any advice on what I can do tomorrow to soften them? I was going to simmer them at a low heat and maybe at some baking soda. thanks!
Hi! And apologies for the delay here. Bummer to hear this! It sounds as though the chickpeas just need more time. Simmering them again is a good idea. You may need to add more water. What did you end up doing?
Thank you so much!!
I can’t wait to try these recipes!
I hope all is well and I miss Stufio 4!
In good health,
Andrea
They’re one of my favorites, Andrea! Hope you love them. Miss you!!
Question. I have never had luck cooking dried beans as they never seem to soften. How important a role does freshness play in all this? Or, how long do beans keep? Thank you.
Hi Patty, There definitely is a correlation between freshness and cooking time: the fresher the bean, the faster it will cook. That said, dried beans keep for a very long time, so it’s possible you just need to cook them longer.
Do you have a crock pot?
I do.
Great! Try this recipe. It’s so simple and foolproof.
Hi Ali,
Would this method work for any dried bean? So yummy and easy!
Thanks,
Timmie
Pretty much! I use it for all sorts of white beans and black beans, too.