The secret to non-mushy canned beans is to soak them, rinse them, bring them just to a boil in new water, then pop them into the jars either with boiling water or your baked bean sauce and process them. Nice al dente beansCorn Woman said:No canning today and I actually feel a little guilty about it, I was hoping that someone here can share a recipe for canned baked beans or pork and beans. Any other suggestions on how to not get mushy canned beans will be much appreciated.
moolie said:All the recent talk about canning baked beans had me take a look at my pantry to find that I only have
one jar left, so I set some navy beans to soak yesterday to can up today:
I heated the beans into a large pot with the sauce ingredients (water, onions, brown sugar, molasses,
salt, tomato sauce).
Then I fried up some bacon and divided it among the jars while the beans and sauce were heating:
Then I used a slotted spoon to fill the jars 2/3 full with just the beans:
And poured the sauce in, leaving 1" headspace:
I quickly put on the lids and rings and got them into the pressure canner:
And just took them out about half an hour ago, once the pressure had subsided and
the canner had cooled down:
moolie said:Oh, should post the recipe for the beans--it's a hybrid of two recipes from an old 1960s Better Homes and Gardens Canning cookbook:
1/4 lb cooked bacon, crumbled
2 onions, chopped and sauted in the bacon fat
4 cups dry navy beans, soaked overnight
3/4 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup molasses
1/2 cup tomato sauce
2 tablespoons dry mustard
salt
Cook bacon, remove from pan, crumble and set aside.
Saut onions in bacon fat.
Drain soaked beans and put into large pot, cover with new filtered water and add all sauce ingredients except bacon.
Heat through, skim foam if necessary.
Divide bacon evenly among 8 pint jars, then use slotted spoon to add beans to jars till 2/3 full.
Pour in sauce, leaving 1" headspace.
Process pints 75 minutes.