Brooklyn-Style Hoppin’ John Recipe (2024)

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Cooking Notes

Dr. J

Put the ham hocks in a big soup kettle and cover with water. Add onions, garlic, and pepper. Don't add salt at this point, cause the hocks are salty already. Simmer until hocks fall off the bone, 2-4 hours, depending on the hocks. Remove hocks, discard skin and bones, shred meat and return to pan with 1-2 pounds of blackeyed peas. Now taste for salt and add as appropriate. Cook till peas are cooked, half hour or so. Taste for seasoning, and serve over hot white rice.

Patience Mason

In north Florida, you have to use a hog jowl in the black eyed peas if you want good luck. Ham hocks mean you don't know what you are doing...

lucysky

Content to be ignorant in this instance! ;)

Kenyanmom

I did not use the seasoning meat. I did use the ham hock. The ham hock was so delicious that you have to keep yourself from eating it all. I prepared it slightly differently in that I seared the ham hock, and then cooked everything down together at low heat. The beans were delectable and not overcooked. My southern man was very impressed. Paid with Mark Bittman's cornbread for a show stopper.

M. Callahan

Greens portend wealth.And if you had to toss because it smelled like a dead pig?, and not like beautiful cooked pork? ya done sumpin wrong...jus saying

Nan

Cooked leftover holiday chopped ham from freezer, browned it to caramelization with vegetables and seasonings, added one bag of cooked peas with liquid, Maybe a little less fat and salt this way, still pretty flavorful!!!

HSK

This smelled like dead pig. We tossed it.

PutneyS

I didn't sear the ham hocks and used 12 ounces of 'biscuit ham.' I only added 2 cups of the water; it didn't need more. I also had fresh thyme, tied what I had with a string to make it easier to retrieve and it was all delicious. I think a teaspoon of dried thyme would work just as well.

Gustus

I wish I had seen Dr. J's tips below before cooking, and will follow them in the future. The recipe as written is opaque about some key steps, like how much water to use to boil the hocks, and when (or even if!) to remove them and shred the meat. I ended up not adding more water in step 4 because what I started with seemed like plenty after adding the other ingredients; the pot was almost full to the top. The result was delicious but way soupier than I'm used to for Hoppin John.

Jane H.

We serve this every New Year's Day at an annual drop-in. We follow the recipe as instructed but it's important to note that ham hock saltiness can vary depending on where you source your hocks. We serve this with rice, cornbread, and spicy greens/tomatoes. It freezes pretty well.

Chris

Really tasty. Used some thick hickory smoked bacon bits, and added some random aromatic herbs, made a paste to slathered a bone-in rump roast (slow cooked separately) then added that, and it was heavenly. Feeling lucky already!

SumiDreamer

I love to add crispy bacon bits at the end to kick it up a bit. I cook the veg in the bacon fat.
One of my most favorite dishes, new year's or no.

Aimee

Recipe above did not fully describe how to handle the ham hocks. After cooking the hocks in water for 45 mins I added the veggies and simmered for a bit longer before removing the meat, deboning and removing the skin, and then shredded the pork and adding back into the pot. Then add the beans and cook for 30 more minutes or so. Recipe took me about 3 hours total.

C. Faubion

I've been cooking black eyed peas on New Year's Day for most of my life (and at this point in time, we're not going to be discussing how long that has been). In all that time I've never made what is, essence, a stock out of the smoked ham hocks, but I did this year, following Dr. J's instructions. These were the best black eyed peas I've ever cooked. Thank you, Dr. J!

TP

I made this adding at least double the vegetables. Amended leftovers, taking down to the border, by adding sautéed peppers, green onions, and grilled corn kernels. Seasoned with cumin, oregano, and smoked paprika. Served with avocado and a dollop of sour cream. My family definitely prefers the Hoppin’ Juan version.

SteveD

I’ve been making Hoppin’ John on New Year’s for years and this is the recipe from which I riff. Quick soaking the beans (covering them by a few inches of water, bringing to a boil for a minute, then covering off heat for an hour) works just as well as overnight soaking. I also prefer to sauté the vegetables with chopped meat from the hock briefly before adding the peas and the broth from the hocks. Some years I’ll add in some good chopped smoked kielbasa or andouille. Serve with collards!

Annie

For Italians, it's lentils that are required to bring good luck during a new year. So many traditions from so many different people and places, but legumes, no matter which, are hearty, rib sticking, and cheap ... who would argue with that? This is a good recipe but not a fan of black eyes, I would opt for another bean, perhaps shell or pinto?

overdoit

hog jowl not ham hocks...be true!

Elizabeth

I just made this as a side dish without the ham hocks and it was great. The dried black-eyed peas I bought at my local supermarket cooked in little over half an hour. There was absolutely no need to soak them, much less using baking soda!

Janice

Have been making hopping john for decades. I like to add chopped andouille sausage and a can of creole tomatoes. Serve with sautéed collard greens and cornbread.

Chris

Really tasty. Used some thick hickory smoked bacon bits, and added some random aromatic herbs, made a paste to slathered a bone-in rump roast (slow cooked separately) then added that, and it was heavenly. Feeling lucky already!

M. Callahan

Greens portend wealth.And if you had to toss because it smelled like a dead pig?, and not like beautiful cooked pork? ya done sumpin wrong...jus saying

Hoppin John

This serves twice as many people as the recipe says.

Manya

Use the biggest, hugest, giantest Dutch oven you have!!!

Joy

Any good subs for the pork?

Jane H.

We made a vegetarian Hoppin' John using the Thug Kitchen recipe which was popular with veggie guests. (We have an annual Hoppin' John drop-in on New Year's Day and typically make the NYT recipe with all the ham. But we do know some veggie buddies.)

Marqua1

Adding a quart of home-canned tomatoes lifts this to a new level of goodness!

Hambone Willie

Cornbread is on the side along with the greens. Ham hock is the standard addition, but if you are poor in the old South, you put in whatever you had.

Jane H.

We serve this every New Year's Day at an annual drop-in. We follow the recipe as instructed but it's important to note that ham hock saltiness can vary depending on where you source your hocks. We serve this with rice, cornbread, and spicy greens/tomatoes. It freezes pretty well.

pat royalty

as a cooker of New Year's black eyed peas, living in the South, i will revert to my normal recipe, which i see as superior to this, or maybe i'm just used to it (from Nathalie Dupree's cookbooks). I like bay leaves, even have a bay shrub to pick them from, but not in this recipe. Thus, for me, it's tradition that calls. Nothing wrong with this recipe, but not to my taste as it turns out. And i love the cold tomato vinergarie topping which Nathalie provides, from Virginia.

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Brooklyn-Style Hoppin’ John Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is traditional Hoppin John? ›

Hoppin' John, also known as Carolina peas and rice, is a peas and rice dish served in the Southern United States. It is made with cowpeas, mainly, black-eyed peas and Sea Island red peas in the Sea Islands and iron and clay peas in the Southeast US, and rice, chopped onion, and sliced bacon, seasoned with salt.

What's the difference between Hoppin John and black-eyed peas? ›

What's the difference between Hoppin' John and black-eyed peas? Hoppin' John has black-eyed peas in it, but it also has other ingredients. In this recipe, the black-eyed peas are stewed with onion, garlic, celery, and a ham hock, similar to how some Southern-style black-eyed peas would be cooked.

Why do Southerners eat Hoppin on New Year's? ›

And our tastiest superstitious tradition is eating Hoppin' John on New Year's Day. This classic Southern dish, a one-pot meal of black-eyed peas, ham hock, and rice, is believed by many (not just the Sterlings) to ensure wealth and bring good luck in the upcoming year.

Do you need to soak black-eyed beans before cooking? ›

While not entirely necessary, soaking your beans will cut down on cooking time, making the whole process quicker and easier.

What is so special about the Hoppin John dish? ›

At its core, however, Hoppin' John is rice, black-eyed peas (or field peas), smoked pork, and onions. Black-eyed peas are supposed to bring you luck if you eat them on New Year's Day, and it is traditionally eaten with collard greens.

Why do they call it Hoppin John? ›

There are varying stories about how the name 'Hoppin' John' originated for the meal. For example, some stories tell about a man name John who sold field peas in the streets of Charleston. Others mention enslaved children hopping around a table, enjoying their meal of cooked rice.

What is a substitute for black-eyed peas in Hoppin John? ›

The Best Beans for Classic Hoppin' John

While black-eyed peas are now commonly used in most Hoppin' John recipes, that has not always been the case. Earlier recipes dating back to the 1800s called for cowpeas, red peas, or field peas.

Why do African American eat black-eyed peas? ›

The crop was brought by enslaved Africans in the 1600s as they were transported to the Americas. West Africans have long considered black-eyed peas a good luck charm that warded off evil spirits, and they are often served on holidays and birthdays.

Which tastes better black-eyed peas or purple hull peas? ›

The bigger difference is in how they taste. The purple hulls are far more delicate than the black-eyes; they're creamier, sweeter, and lack the sometimes chalky texture you get with the other. They are the du Puy to the plain old green French lentil. They're more refined — and they're slightly more expensive.

What is the penny in Hoppin John? ›

hoppin' John was, and still is, often eaten with collard greens, which can resemble paper money, and “golden” cornbread. The peas themselves represent coins. Some families boost the potential of their hoppin' John by placing a penny underneath the dishes—or adding extra pork, which is thought to bring more luck.

What do you serve with Hoppin John? ›

Hoppin' John is traditionally served with collard greens, whose green color symbolizes wealth. The black-eyed peas are symbolic of coins (more good fortune), and an actual coin is sometimes added to the pot. This is where eating black-eyed peas on New Year's came from.

Who invented Hoppin John? ›

The first written “receipt” for Hoppin' John appeared in “The Carolina Housewife” (1847), and was written by Charlestonian Sarah Rutledge. The simple recipe called for one pound of bacon, one pint of peas and one pint of rice cooked in a single pot.

Why do you discard bean soaking water? ›

Fun Fact: Discarding the soaking water and rinsing beans can help make cooked beans more digestible. Some people choose to save the soaking liquid because some nutrients are leeched from the beans into the liquid during soaking. We prefer to drain our soaking liquid but you can decide what works best for you.

What happens if you don't rinse black beans? ›

"If you rinse your beans thoroughly, you will have a consistently flavored product, but if you do not rinse them, different amounts of salt will remain in the dish each time you cook it, and it will be hard to cook consistently," he says.

What is Hoppin John made of? ›

Hoppin' John is a Southern dish made with black-eyed peas, rice, and pork (usually bacon, but sometimes ham hock). It usually features an onion and other seasonings for flavor. Hoppin' John can be eaten throughout the year, but it's especially common on New Year's Day.

What is the tradition of black eyed peas and greens? ›

Black-eyed peas eaten with stewed tomatoes represent wealth and health. In some areas, actual values are assigned with the black-eyed peas representing pennies or up to a dollar each and the greens representing anywhere from one to a thousand dollars.

What do the ingredients in Hoppin John mean? ›

The ingredients in Hoppin' John have symbolic importance, and eating this dish on New Year's Day portends good fortune in the new year: black-eyed peas represent coins. collard greens represent greenbacks (dollars), or cash. corn bread represents gold.

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