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Butteryum food blog recipes

Filtering by Tag: green bean recipes

Pickled Green Beans

Patricia @ ButterYum

easy.pickled.green.beans.recipe_butteryum

If you garden or shop your local farmer’s market, you probably have a lot of fresh green beans available this summer. We love to eat them fresh, or cook them a number of different ways - Sautéed with Garlicky Mushrooms, Southern-Style, and Asian-Inspired are some of our favorite recipe. Today I’m going to show you how to make delicious refrigerator pickled green beans. No special equipments or canning technique needed to make this simple recipe. Let me show you!

how to make pickled green beans.  how to make pickled string beans.

I like to start by trimming the stem end off of washed green beans. You don’t have to trim the stem ends, but I find they are not very palatable so away they go.

pickled green beans.  can I pickle green beans?  how to pickle green beans?

Place the trimmed green beans in a clean jar - any jar with a lid will do (for the recipe below, use a pint-size jar). Add the garlic, bay, coriander seeds, crushed red pepper flakes, and whole pepper corns to the jar as well.

can I pickle green beans.  can you pickle green beans.  refrigerator pickled green beans.  wine pickled green beans.

Next, bring the pickling liquid (below) to a boil for 2 full minutes, then pour over the green beans, cover the jar, cool to room temperature, and refrigerate for at least 2 days before enjoying. These green bean pickles will last in the fridge for up to 6 months. Enjoy!

Items used to make this recipe:

(affiliate links)


Easy Pickled Green Beans

makes 1 pint

Printable Recipe

Ingredients

  • 6 ounces fresh green beans, washed and trimmed to fit in jar

  • 1 clove garlic, peeled and cut into 4 wedges

  • 1 dried bay leaf

  • 1/2 teaspoon coriander seeds

  • 1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes

  • 8 whole black peppercorns

Pickling Liquid:

  • 1/2 cup apple cider vinegar

  • 1/2 cup white wine

  • 1/2 cup water

  • 1 tablespoon granulated sugar

  • 1 teaspoon fine salt

Directions

  • In a pint-size jar, place the trimmed green beans, garlic, bay leaf, coriander seeds, crushed red pepper flakes, and whole pepper corns.

  • In a small, non-reactive saucepan, heat the vinegar, water, wine, sugar, and salt until it boils; boil for 2 minutes, then remove from the heat.

  • Pour hot pickling liquid over green beans. If liquid doesn’t cover green beans, top off with boiling water; cover jar and allow to cool before storing in refrigerator for a minimum of 2 days before eating.

Notes

  • Keep refrigerated - unopened jars can be refrigerated for up to 6 months.

  • Fresh wax beans may be substituted.

Momma's Southern Green Beans

Patricia @ ButterYum

ButterYum - Southern Green Bean Recipe. How to make southern green beans with bacon and onions. low and slow green beans. southern-style green beans with bacon recipe.

Story Time. Years ago, while living in Missouri, I had a friend named Missy. Missy had just moved to Missouri from Mississippi, and Missy missed her Momma! Now, Missy was a new momma herself, but she wasn’t afraid to tell anyone and everyone how much she looooooved her Momma, and her Momma’s home cookin’. When I asked Missy what recipe she missed most, her immediate response was, “Momma’s green beans”. I don’t really know what I had expected her to say, but it definitely was not green beans! So naturally, I asked all about them.

Missy went on to tell me how her Momma would simmer fresh green beans, for hours, with a little liquid and lots of drippin's. The only green beans I ate growing up came straight out of a can so I couldn’t grasp the concept of Missy’s Momma’s green beans, but I never forgot the way she talked about those beans. Food truly is love!

Missy didn’t have much experience in the kitchen, and I never had the pleasure of meeting her Momma, but in the 20+ years since that conversation, I’ve asked many of my southern friends how their mommas cooked green beans. Some used bacon, others drippins; some used onions, others didn’t - but the basic technique remained the same - low and slow. Here’s my interpretation.

fresh-green-beans

Start by washing and trimming green beans - I only trim the stem end, but a lot of people like to trim both ends.. You do you.

I love using my salad spinner when I wash produce - I use it just about every day. Great invention!

cooking-bacon-for-southern-green-beans-butteryum

Time to start cooking - fry the bacon in a skillet over medium-high heat, stirring frequently. Use a skillet large enough to hold the green beans (at least 4 quart capacity).

making-southern-green-beans-with-bacon-and-onions

When the bacon is brown and has rendered most of its fat, add sliced onions and continue stirring for several minutes.

I’ve made these beans with and without the onions - they turn out fine either way, but I always have onions on hand, and I’m one of those people who actually likes to chop onions, so you can guess what I usually do.

fond-in-pan-butteryum

Anyway, about 5 minutes after adding the onions, you’ll notice a nice brown layer of “fond” form on the bottom of the pan - that fond is full of flavor so be careful not to let it burn (have the chicken stock nearby so you can add a splash or two to any spots of fond that get too dark).

fresh-green-beans-southern-style-butteryum

Add the washed and trimmed green beans to the pan.

cooking-southern-style-green-beans-butteryum

Next, add low or no-sodium chicken stock. I’m using my own homemade chicken stock which is unsalted. Be sure to use very low sodium stock because a) the bacon contains quite a bit of salt, and b) we’re going to reduce the chicken stock down quite a bit so we don’t want the finished dish to be to salty.

jar-of-bacon-drippings-butteryum

Now this part isn’t completely necessary, but fat equals flavor so I do like to add a little extra bacon fat to the pan - just a tablespoon or so.

You keep a jar of rendered bacon fat in your fridge, don’t you? Good stuff!

adding-bacon-drippings-to-southern-green-beans-butteryum

Note - adding additional bacon fat really depends on how much fat rendered into the pan when you cooked your bacon. My bacon was pretty lean so I definitely felt the need to add a little extra.

how-to-cook-southern-style-green-beans-butteryum

To recap, we have the bacon, onions, green beans, chicken stock, and a little extra bacon fat in the pan. Heat until the chicken stock starts to boil.

simmering-green-beans-butteryum

Reduce the heat to low and cover the pan; simmer for 1 hour.

best-southern-green-beans-recipe-butteryum

After an hour, uncover the pan and give the beans a stir; increase the heat to a medium-low and continue cooking, uncovered, for about another hour or until the chicken stock reduces down to just a few tablespoons.

southern-beans-butteryum

Here’s what the reduced chicken stock should look like after about an hour. And there you go - your green beans should be ready to serve. The bacon and chicken stock add enough flavor that I never feel the need to add salt, but you should taste yours carefully before serving and adjust if needed.

mommas-southern-style-green-beans-with-bacon-butteryum

Enjoy!

Items used to make this recipe:

(affiliate links)


Momma’s Southern Green Beans

makes 1 1/2 pounds

Printable Recipe

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 pounds fresh green beans, washed and trimmed

  • 6 ounces bacon, cut into bite-size pieces

  • 6 ounces yellow onion, sliced

  • 2 cups low or no-sodium chicken stock (try my awesome recipe) - see note below

  • 1 tablespoon bacon drippings (optional)

Directions

  1. In a 4-quart skillet or casserole pan over medium-high heat, cook bacon until brown, stirring frequently.

  2. Add sliced onions to the bacon and continue cooking for about 5 minutes, stirring frequently.

  3. Add green beans, low or no-sodium chicken stock, and optional bacon drippings; bring stock to a boil.

  4. Reduce heat to low and cover pan; simmer for 1 hour.

  5. Remove cover and stir green beans.

  6. Increase heat to medium-low; cook for an additional hour, uncovered, until stock reduced down to just a few tablespoons.

Note

  • If you don’t have low or no-sodium chicken stock, substitute 1/2 cup regular chicken stock plus 1 1/2 cups water.