Bush's Best Original Baked Beans: Labelgrade C+ (67/100)
C+ 67 / 100 — Very low saturated fat and notable sugar load.
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Bush’s Best Original Baked Beans delivers 6g of protein and 140 calories per 0.5 cup (USDA FDC 2243970). Per 100mL that’s 4.8g of protein; per fl oz, 1.4g. The Labelgrade is C+ (67 / 100): Very low saturated fat and notable sugar load.
Why this Labelgrade
| Dimension | Grade | Score | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein density | C- | 57 / 100 | 4.8g per 100mL — below the high-protein bar; not the right product for protein hunting |
| Ingredient quality | B- | 72 / 100 | 19 ingredients, recognizable, no significant additive flags |
| Saturated fat load | A+ | 100 / 100 | 0g saturated fat — perfect |
| Sodium load | D | 52 / 100 | 550mg per serving (130mg per fl oz) — meaningful per 100mL |
| Sugar load | D | 52 / 100 | 12g sugar; USDA omits the added-sugar line, but the ingredients list a sweetener — scored as added, not naturally-occurring |
| Fiber | C- | 58 / 100 | 5g per serving — modest fiber contribution |
| Overall | C+ | 67 / 100 | Weighted blend: protein 25% · ingredients 22% · saturated fat 18% · sodium 15% · sugar 12% · fiber 8% |
Read that table top to bottom and the verdict writes itself: every grade tied to the bean is fine, and every grade tied to the sauce is a D. Protein, fiber, and saturated fat — the legume’s contribution — all land in respectable territory. Sugar and sodium — the sauce’s contribution — are what pull the score from a would-be B-range food down to a C+. This is the flip side of what makes beans great: the base is excellent, but it’s been candied.
A great base food, dragged down by its sauce
White beans are a genuinely good thing to eat. On their own they bring plant protein, fiber, iron, and almost no sugar or salt — the same profile that lets a bean-based chili score a B+ elsewhere on this site. Bush’s starts from that good base (6g of protein and 5g of fiber per ½ cup is real, legume-driven nutrition) and then does the thing that defines the baked-bean style: it pours on a sweet, salty sauce.
That sauce is where the grade goes. The recipe lists brown sugar and sugar near the top of the ingredients, and the result is 12g of sugar in a half-cup side — more than you’ll find in many actual desserts by the spoonful. Stack 550mg of sodium on top (a quarter of a day’s limit in one scoop) and the two worst dimensions on the card are both coming from the same place: the glaze, not the bean. It’s the cleanest illustration on this site of a simple rule — beans win; candied beans win less. Nothing is wrong with the legume. The sugar and salt poured over it are the entire reason this isn’t an A.
How to read it next to a canned chili
The most useful comparison for these beans is a bean-based chili, and the trap is the serving size. Bush’s lists its numbers per ½ cup — a side-dish scoop. A product like Amy’s Medium Organic Chili lists its numbers per can — a full meal. So when you see Amy’s showing 312mg of sodium and Bush’s showing 550mg, you’re not comparing like with like: the chili’s figure covers an entire hot meal, while Bush’s 550mg covers a small side. Per equivalent amount of food, the gap is even wider than the raw numbers suggest.
The honest framing is this: both start from beans, but one keeps the bean’s clean profile intact and the other sweetens and salts it heavily. If you’re eating beans for the protein-and-fiber payoff, a plain or lightly-seasoned bean dish gets you there without the 12g of sugar. Bush’s is a flavor choice — a sweet, comforting side — and it’s fine in that role, as long as you read it as the side it is and not as a health food the bean base might have let it be.
How it compares
| Product | Protein per serving | Per 100 g | Per oz | Calories |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bush’s Best Original Baked Beans (this product) | 6g | 4.8g | 1.4g | 140 |
| Amy’s Medium Organic Chili | 18g | 4.3g | 1.2g | 320 |
| Plain cooked chicken breast (benchmark) | — | 31g | 8.8g | ~165 |
Scope
This page covers Bush’s Best Original Baked Beans (398 mL), UPC 039400036111, as represented in USDA Branded Foods FDC 2243970. Bush’s Best sells multiple variants in this product line — other sizes, flavors, or fat levels may have different macros and Labelgrade scores. Manufacturers periodically reformulate; always cross-reference the actual package label, especially if you have allergies or dietary restrictions.
Ingredients (from the USDA Branded Foods entry)
WHITE BEANS, WATER, BROWN SUGAR, SUGAR, BACON, SALT, PREPARED MUSTARD (WATER, VINEGAR, MUSTARD SEED, SALT, TURMERIC, SPICES), MODIFIED CORN STARCH, ONION POWDER, CARAMEL COLOUR, SPICES, EXTRACTIVES OF PAPRIKA, GARLIC POWDER, NATURAL FLAVOUR.
Where to buy
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Quick Facts
Per serving · 0.5 cup
See how this fits your day — protein calculator · macro calculator
Full nutrition facts
| Nutrient | Per Serving (0.5 cup) |
|---|---|
| Calories | 140 |
| Protein | 6g |
| Total Fat | 1g |
| Saturated Fat | 0g |
| Trans Fat | 0g |
| Total Carbohydrates | 29g |
| Dietary Fiber | 5g |
| Total Sugars | 12g |
| Sodium | 550mg |
| Cholesterol | 0mg |
| Calcium | 40mg |
| Iron | 2.52mg |
Scope: This page applies specifically to Original Baked Beans (398 mL) · UPC 039400036111. Other sizes, flavors, or formulations may differ.
How this fits each diet
Each score is computed from the same USDA nutrition + ingredient data, against the published rules of each diet. They tell you "does this food fit this diet" — not whether the diet is right for you.
contains animal-derived ingredients
contains meat, fish, or gelatin
no wheat, barley, rye, or malt detected in USDA ingredient list
Frequently Asked Questions
Are Bush's Best Original Baked Beans healthy?
It's a mixed bag, and that's the honest answer. The bean base is genuinely good for you — 6g of plant protein and 5g of fiber per ½ cup, which is real nutrition. The problem is everything poured over the beans: the brown-sugar sauce brings 12g of sugar, and the recipe carries 550mg of sodium per ½ cup. So you're getting a nutritious legume wrapped in a dessert-level sweet, salty sauce. Beans are great until they're candied — and these are candied.
Why do Bush's Best Original Baked Beans score C+ (67/100)?
Because a great base food got dragged down by its sauce. The beans earn solid marks — a C- on protein density and a C- on fiber (5g is a real contribution) — and saturated fat is a perfect A+ at 0g. But two dimensions sink the grade: sugar scores a D (12g, driven by the added brown sugar and sugar in the recipe) and sodium scores a D (550mg, about a quarter of a day's limit in a ½-cup side). Strip the sweet-salty sauce and you'd have an A-grade legume; with it, you get a C+.
Why do baked beans have so much sugar?
Because the sauce is the whole point of the style. 'Baked beans' in the American sense are defined by a sweet, sticky sauce, and Bush's builds it from brown sugar and sugar (the ingredient list names both near the top), giving the molasses-like flavor people expect. That's where the 12g of sugar per ½ cup comes from — it isn't naturally in the white beans, it's added to the sauce. The beans themselves contribute almost none of it; the candying is a recipe decision, not a property of the legume.
What is a serving of Bush's Best Original Baked Beans?
Half a cup. The USDA serving size (FDC 2243970) is 0.5 cup, and every number on this page — 6g protein, 5g fiber, 12g sugar, 550mg sodium, 140 calories — is per that ½-cup serving. That's a side-dish portion, not a meal. Worth keeping in mind when you compare it to a canned chili that lists 'per can': the chili's numbers cover a full meal, these cover a scoop on the side, so don't read the raw per-serving figures against each other.
How can I cut the sugar and sodium in baked beans?
The cleanest fix is to start from plain canned white or navy beans and make your own lightly-sweetened sauce — you control the sugar and salt. If you're buying these as-is, treat them as a small side rather than a main, rinse isn't an option here (the sauce is the product), and look for 'reduced sodium' or 'no sugar added' bean varieties if the 12g sugar and 550mg sodium are dealbreakers. Pairing a small portion with a lean, unsalted protein keeps the meal's totals in check.
When was this data last verified?
2026-06-05, against USDA FoodData Central FDC 2243970. We re-verify top-traffic pages monthly and update within 7 days when a manufacturer reformulates.