I have an informal rule that anything requiring more than fifteen minutes of hands-on work is not a weeknight dinner. This one takes about eight. Everything goes in the crockpot cold, you turn it on, and six hours later you have food. The smokies don’t need browning. The beans come straight from the can. The potatoes just get halved. I made this last winter on a Sunday when I was trying to get through laundry and kept forgetting to think about dinner by the time I remembered, it was already done .
Smokies are those little cocktail-sized smoked sausages. I used to only think of them as a party appetizer thing but they’re actually a really good slow cooker protein. They hold up for hours without going rubbery or falling apart, and they spend the whole cook releasing their fat into the sauce. The beans and potatoes absorb all of it.
Feeds six. Reheats well.
Contents
Why It Works
The smokies spend six hours slowly rendering their fat into the sauce, it sounds passive but it’s doing a lot by the end the beans taste like they were cooked with the sausages from scratch rather than tipped out of a can, You can’t rush that on a stovetop, The low sustained heat is the whole point
Regular diced potatoes russets especially tend to fall apart and go gray over a long cook . Baby potatoes don’t, leave them halved and unpeeled and they’ll still have some bite when everything else is done, but they’ll have soaked up enough sauce to taste like they’ve been in there the whole time . Because they have.
The sauce is BBQ sauce , diced tomatoes, brown sugar, smoked paprika , and mustard . The tomatoes thin it so it doesn’t just caramelize into a sticky glaze . The sugar and the mustard pull in opposite directions — one sweet, one sharp — and by the time it’s done cooking it’s thickened down into something that coats everything in the pot .
Crockpot food rewards patience . Check the potatoes with a fork , not the clock .

Ingredients
| Ingredient | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Cocktail smoked sausages (smokies) | 500g / 1 lb | The little ones — Lit’l Smokies or similar |
| Baby potatoes, halved | 500g / about 3 cups | Don’t peel them |
| Kidney beans, drained and rinsed | 2 cans (400g / 14 oz each) | White beans work too |
| Diced tomatoes | 1 can (400g / 14 oz) | Don’t drain these |
| BBQ sauce | 3 tbsp | Use your regular favorite |
| Brown sugar | 1 tbsp | |
| Smoked paprika | 1 tsp | Regular paprika is fine in a pinch |
| Dijon mustard | 1 tsp | Yellow mustard also works |
| Onion, diced | 1 medium | |
| Garlic cloves, minced | 3 cloves | |
| Salt and black pepper | To taste | The smokies are already salty — taste before adding more |
Let’s Make It
Prep the crockpot . No greasing needed. Just make sure it’s big enough you want at least a 5-quart pot for this amount .
Layer in the potatoes and onion first . Put them on the bottom so they’re closest to the heat and have the most time to soften . Scatter the garlic over them .
Add the smokies and beans on top of the potatoes . No particular order here.
Mix the sauce in a small bowl or just directly in a measuring cup: BBQ sauce, diced tomatoes (with all the liquid from the can), brown sugar, smoked paprika, mustard, a good pinch of salt, and some black pepper , Stir it together and pour it over everything in the crockpot.
Kitchen chatter : Don’t stir the pot once everything is in. Let it layer. The smokies on top will start to caramelize slightly against the lid as it cooks, which is not a bad thing.
Cook on low for 6–8 hours or on high for 3-4 hours . The potatoes should be completely tender when you poke them with a fork and the sauce should have thickened noticeably
Kitchen chatter : Check the potatoes at the low end of the time range. Different crockpots run at different temperatures and the potatoes are your doneness indicator. If they’re soft, you’re done.
Taste and adjust before serving . Add a bit more salt if needed , a splash more BBQ sauce if you want more sweetness, or a pinch of chilli flakes if it’s not quite there yet .
Serve straight from the crockpot. This is not a plated dish.
Tips, Swaps, and Storage
If you want to add some heat, a diced jalapeño thrown in with the onion at the start works well. So does a teaspoon of hot sauce stirred into the sauce mixture.
Frozen smokies go in from frozen — no need to thaw, just add 30–45 minutes to the cook time.
This works with other beans too. Cannellini beans hold up well and are a bit milder. Baked beans (canned) can replace the kidney beans and the sauce — they’ll make the whole thing sweeter and stickier, which some people prefer. If you go that route, skip the brown sugar.
A handful of baby spinach or sliced bell peppers stirred in during the last 30 minutes adds some veg without much effort.
Leftovers are arguably better the next day. The sauce thickens further overnight and the smokies absorb even more of it. Reheat in a pot on the stove over medium-low with a small splash of water if it looks too thick. It keeps in the fridge for 4 days and freezes well — the potatoes do get a bit softer after freezing but the flavor is completely fine.
Nutrition (Per Serving, Serves 6)
| Per Serving | |
|---|---|
| Calories | ~420 kcal |
| Protein | 18g |
| Carbohydrates | 38g |
| Fat | 20g |
| Saturated Fat | 7g |
| Fibre | 7g |
| Sodium | ~880mg |
| Sugar | 9g |
Estimates based on standard cocktail smokies, kidney beans, and the full sauce quantity. Values will vary by sausage brand.

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