Bean and Cheese Enchiladas

Loading…

By Reading time
Servings 4–6 people

Corn tortillas, red enchilada sauce, and a blanket of melted cheese make these bean and cheese enchiladas the kind of dinner that disappears fast from the pan. The filling stays creamy and sturdy enough to roll, the sauce soaks into the edges without turning everything soggy, and the top bakes into that bubbling, slightly crisp layer that makes everyone reach for a second piece.

The trick is in the balance. Refried beans give the filling body, while black beans add texture and keep each bite from tasting flat. Warming the tortillas before rolling matters more than people think; cold corn tortillas crack, and once they split, the filling escapes into the pan instead of staying tucked inside the enchilada where it belongs.

Below, I’ve included the small details that keep the tortillas flexible, the cheese from clumping, and the sauce from turning the whole dish heavy. There’s also a few useful swaps and storage notes for the nights you want to get ahead.

The tortillas stayed soft instead of tearing, and the filling held together without turning dry. I loved that the sauce thickened in the oven and the cheese browned around the edges just enough.

★★★★★— Maria L.

Save these bean and cheese enchiladas for the nights when you want a meatless Tex-Mex dinner with creamy filling and bubbly red-sauce cheese on top.

Save to Pinterest

Why the Tortilla Warming Step Keeps These Enchiladas from Splitting

Corn tortillas are the part that usually gives people trouble. Straight from the package, they crack the moment you roll them, and then you end up patching the pan instead of making enchiladas. A minute in the microwave under a damp paper towel changes the texture enough that they bend without breaking, which is the difference between neat rolls and a filling leak.

The other common mistake is overfilling. Bean filling sounds sturdy, but if you stuff each tortilla too full, the pressure opens the seam while it bakes. Two to three tablespoons is the sweet spot here because the beans spread once they’re in the oven, and the tortillas stay wrapped instead of bursting open.

  • Refried beans — These are the glue in the filling. They hold the black beans in place and keep the center creamy after baking. A chunky homemade refried bean mix works too, but it needs to be mashed well so the filling rolls cleanly.
  • Black beans — These add a little bite and keep the filling from tasting one-note. Drain them well so extra liquid doesn’t thin the filling or make the tortillas slippery.
  • Red enchilada sauce — This is the flavor backbone of the dish. Use a sauce you actually like, because it goes on top, underneath, and into every bite. If your sauce tastes thin, simmer it for a few minutes before assembling so it clings better.
  • Corn tortillas — Don’t swap these for flour if you want the classic texture. Flour tortillas get soft and bready here, while corn tortillas hold up to the sauce and bake into something closer to the enchiladas most people expect.

Building the Filling So It Stays Creamy, Not Dense

Mixing the Bean Base

Stir the refried beans, black beans, cumin, garlic powder, and a little cheese together until the mixture looks evenly combined and spreadable. You want a filling that mounds softly on a spoon, not a stiff paste, so if it seems too tight, mash in a spoonful of enchilada sauce to loosen it. The filling should hold its shape when scooped but still spread a little as you roll.

Rolling Without Tearing the Tortillas

Warm the tortillas just until they bend easily. If they’re too hot, they can dry out and crack as they cool; if they’re still stiff, they’ll split the second you try to fold them. Keep the stack covered with a towel while you work so the ones waiting their turn don’t go brittle.

Layering the Pan for the Best Bake

Spread sauce in the bottom of the dish before the enchiladas go in. That thin layer keeps the tortillas from sticking and gives the bottoms a chance to soften instead of drying out. Once the rolled enchiladas are snug in the pan, pour the remaining sauce over the top all the way to the edges, then finish with the rest of the cheese so every roll browns evenly.

Baking Until the Cheese Bubbles

Bake just until the sauce is hot and the cheese is melted with browned spots around the edges. If you keep baking until the pan looks dry, the tortillas get tough and the filling can tighten up. Pull the dish when the center is hot and the sauce is still glossy; it settles as it rests.

How to Adapt These Enchiladas for Different Tables

Make Them Dairy-Free

Use your favorite dairy-free shredded cheese and skip the sour cream at serving, or replace it with a dairy-free plain yogurt. The enchiladas will still bake up saucy and satisfying, but the cheese layer won’t brown quite the same way, so watch for melting instead of deep browning.

Make Them Gluten-Free Without Changing a Thing

These are already naturally gluten-free as long as your enchilada sauce is certified gluten-free. That’s the main label worth checking, because packaged sauces sometimes use thickeners or additives that aren’t obvious from the front of the can.

Add a Little Heat

Stir chopped jalapeños or a pinch of chipotle powder into the filling if you want more kick. The best place to build heat is inside the beans, not just on top, because it seasons every bite instead of sitting at the finish.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers covered for up to 4 days. The tortillas soften more as they sit, but the flavor stays good.
  • Freezer: Freeze baked enchiladas in a tightly wrapped dish or portion them into airtight containers for up to 2 months. Thaw in the refrigerator before reheating so the center heats evenly.
  • Reheating: Reheat covered in a 350°F oven until hot, or microwave single portions in short bursts with a spoonful of extra sauce on top. The common mistake is blasting them uncovered, which dries out the edges before the middle is warm.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I use flour tortillas instead of corn tortillas?+

You can, but the texture changes a lot. Flour tortillas turn softer and more bready in the sauce, while corn tortillas give you the classic enchilada bite and hold up better during baking. If you swap them, keep an eye on the bake time because flour tortillas can go too soft fast.

How do I keep the tortillas from cracking when I roll them?+

Warm them until they’re pliable, not hot and dry. The damp paper towel step softens the tortillas without making them soggy, and keeping the stack covered while you work keeps the rest from drying out. If one still cracks, it usually needs another few seconds of heat.

Can I assemble bean and cheese enchiladas ahead of time?+

Yes, and this is one of the easiest ways to get ahead. Assemble them, cover tightly, and refrigerate for up to 24 hours, then bake when you’re ready. Add a few extra minutes in the oven since the dish will start cold.

How do I stop the enchiladas from getting soggy?+

Use just enough sauce to coat the pan and cover the tops, not drown the tortillas. Also drain the black beans well before mixing so extra liquid doesn’t leak into the filling. The bake needs to be hot enough to thicken the sauce, which is what keeps the finished dish from turning wet.

Can I freeze these before baking?+

You can, but the texture is best if you freeze them after baking. Unbaked frozen enchiladas can pick up a softer tortilla texture once thawed, especially if the sauce sits on them too long. If you do freeze them unbaked, wrap the pan tightly and bake from thawed for the most even result.

Bean and Cheese Enchiladas

Bean and cheese enchiladas with corn tortillas baked in vivid red enchilada sauce until the cheese turns golden and bubbly. Black beans are rolled into each tortilla, with cilantro and sour cream added right before serving for a classic Tex-Mex finish.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Servings: 6 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Tex-Mex
Calories: 425

Ingredients
  

Refried beans
  • 1 can (16 oz) refried beans
Black beans
  • 1 can (15 oz) black beans, drained
Red enchilada sauce
  • 2 can (10 oz each) red enchilada sauce, divided
Corn tortillas
  • 12 corn tortillas
Mexican cheese blend
  • 2 cups Mexican cheese blend, shredded, divided
Ground cumin
  • 1 tsp cumin
Garlic powder
  • 0.5 tsp garlic powder
Sour cream for serving
  • 1 sour cream for serving
Cilantro for serving
  • 1 cilantro for serving
Jalapeños for serving
  • 1 jalapeños for serving

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Prepare and assemble
  1. Preheat the oven to 375°F and spread 1/2 cup enchilada sauce in the bottom of a 9x13 dish.
  2. Mix refried beans, black beans, cumin, garlic powder, and 1/2 cup cheese together until well combined.
  3. Warm the corn tortillas in a damp paper towel in the microwave for 1 minute until pliable.
  4. Fill each tortilla with 2–3 tablespoons of bean mixture, roll up, and place seam-side down in the dish.
  5. Pour the remaining enchilada sauce over all the enchiladas and top with the remaining cheese.
Bake and serve
  1. Bake at 375°F for 20–25 minutes until the cheese is bubbly.
  2. Serve the enchiladas with sour cream, cilantro, and jalapeños.

Notes

For cleaner, easier rolling, warm tortillas in small batches so they stay pliable, then assemble right away. Refrigerate leftovers in a covered container for up to 4 days; reheat in the oven or microwave until hot. Freezing is OK: freeze baked enchiladas for up to 2 months, thaw in the fridge overnight, then reheat until bubbly. For a lighter option, use reduced-fat Mexican cheese blend and keep the same bake time.

Loved this recipe?

Save it for later, print a clean copy, or leave a quick rating so others know it’s a keeper.

Save to Pinterest

Leave a Comment

Recipe Rating