While these are sterilizing, place your green beans in a pot and cover with water. Bring to a light boil.
When steam escapes from the vent hole (located on the left) for roughly 10 minutes, then you can place on the weight. Basically what you are doing here is letting all the excess air escape from the canner.
After you have the weight on the canner, your canner will start to "seal up" and your pressure will begin to build. For green beans, you want your canner to reach 10 pounds of pressure.
You will notice in the picture that in between the weight and the pressure gauge, there is another thing sticking up. This is called the vent lock. It is naturally flush with the lid, but when it starts to seal up the vent pops up, then it starts to build pressure.
Your canner needs to maintain at 10 pounds of pressure. You will notice that in the picture my gauge is reading a bit over 10 pounds. This isn't a huge deal, but you do not want it much over that..and NEVER under. If your canner ever goes under 10 pounds of pressure, you will have to start your timing back over. I've noticed, atleast for my stove, that once my canner reaches it's pressure point, I can turn the heat down to medium or medium-low and it will stay there.
When processing green beans, you need to process quarts for 25 minutes, and pints for 20.
Once your time is up, turn off the heat and let the canner cool off on it's own. Once the pressure has returned to zero and the vent lock has went back down, it is now safe to remove the weight. I must say, that nothing devastating will happen if you remove it before the vent lock pops down--just a massive amount of steam. Which is rather scary, and not recommended. :)
After removing the weight, let the steam escape, and remove the lid. Be very careful, the canner still contains steam.
Using your jar lifter, remove the jars from the canner and place on a towel to begin cooling. If you take a close look you will see lots of bubbles rushing to the top. Once they start to cool, you will hear the music to a canner's ears.
*Ping*
The ping is letting you know that they have sealed properly. If you are uncertain if one has sealed, you can check them by pressing in the middle of lid. If it doesn't give, then they have sealed properly. Let them cool completely before checking their seals, or you may cause them to "false seal." The cooling process usually takes about 24 hours.
Now you are able to enjoy fresh from the garden green beans, all year long!
Home canned green beans work for me!




4 comments:
To sterilize your jars you can also run them through the dishwasher without soap. They get super hot on the dry cycle and the great thing is you can take them out one or two at a time, shut the door and they stay hot.
Great tut! I have canned 25 pints so far with more beans needing picked! So rewarding to see the bold colored jars cooling on the counter! Well done.
Great Tutorial! I recently found 30 pounds of green beans at one of our local gardens for $10. I was able to can 40 pints of green beans plus have enough left to can 14 quarts of veggie soup. Like you I was afraid of using the pressure cooker at first. If you are careful and keep an eye on the gauge it is safe.
I am so jealous! I want a pressure canner but can't currently afford one so I am freezing my beans.
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