how i freeze green beans in red sauce, and 14 more food-storage tips
SO MANY GREEN BEANS, so little time. That’s how I always feel around now: how to keep up with the glut of one of my favorite vegetables. I don’t like them canned (all olive green and overcooked!) and they can lose crunch or get ice-encrusted when blanched and frozen plain, so I put mine up in canning jars in the freezer, doused in homemade tomato sauce. Read how I freeze green beans and many more garden-fresh goodies.
freezing green beans in tomato sauce
MY METHOD FOR FREEZING green beans is simple, and results in one of my favorite red-sauce variations for serving over brown rice or pasta. Instead of blanching beans in boiling water, then quick-chilling them in ice water before freezing plain, I cut them up and put them into my homemade tomato sauce at the very last moment that it’s cooking. Assuming the sauce is bubbling, they’ll “blanch” in it immediately, so I take it off the heat at once and let it cool. The beans will turn bright green (as water-blanched ones so), but you don’t want them to cook through.
Ladle the bean-filled sauce into wide-mouth jars (freezer bags, as below, will work, too), leaving headroom for expansion of the food if it’s liquidy such as this one, and freeze. Straight-sided jars (rather than ones with “shoulders”) are best for freezing, and again: wide mouths.
Alternatively, for maximum control of the beans’ degree of crunch: Blanch or steam the beans very lightly, quick-chill in ice water, then put into red sauce that’s already cooled and ready to freeze.
Barely blanched beans in the sauce seem to hold up better than those frozen “naked”–no ice crystals form on the beans, and they have better texture when I warm them up to eat later on my rice or pasta. With a heavy-handed drizzle of good olive oil and plenty of fresh-grated Parmesan on top, of course.
14 more food-storage tips
- Why I’m not just canning, but also freezing in glass such as Mason or Weck jars: It’s about mounting evidence on the dangers of Bisphenol A (BPA). And glass is just great. Weck jars have BPA-free rubber seals; many canning lids containing BPA, so you need to ask when shopping, and buy the proper lids separately in some cases. (Plastic freezer bags will work in a pinch, of course, for many things, and I confess I still use some.)
- I grow a year of parsley, then stash it in freezer “logs,” or…
- …a year of most any green herbs can be stored in green ice cubes (pestos), such as parsley, sage, chives, garlic scapes, rosemary, cilantro…you name it. A roundup of how to freeze herbs.
- Frozen whole tomatoes: Why buy tins from the store? Pop whole fruits into bags, jars or freezer boxes; pop some out as needed. Before freezing, you can drop them in boiling water for a minute then ladle into a bowl of ice water to easily slip skins off first if you are anti-tomato skin, but I freeze mine as they come from the garden.
- Tomato junk: What to do with the last dregs of the vegetable garden? Make an all-purpose base to soups, stews, chilis. Waste not…
- Freezing garlic: Why put up with withering cloves in winter and spring when you can have peak-of-perfection garlic on hand? I freeze garlic and onions in Weck and Mason jars.
- Frozen peppers: They’re cheap at peak harvest time, pricey in winter, and so easy to freeze. (So is rhubarb, by the way, and asparagus, though that last one wants the quickest blanching first.)
- Fast broth or stock: Don’t waste your trimmings or less-than-perfect veggies. Make stock.
- Easy refrigerator pickles: A hand-me-down recipe (and A Way to Garden’s most popular story ever). And an fyi on pickling salt: Why some batches of pickles get too salty; mystery solved. Oh, and you’ll need pickling spice, too.
- Prefer bread and butter pickles? This 1952 vintage recipe, good in the fridge or hot-packed, is a new-to-me classic.
- Applesauce? I freeze the year’s worth every fall, and here’s how. Same with love-apple sauce (meaning: tomato sauce!). Again, I do it fast and furious, leave skins on in both cases (more vitamins, more fiber), but you can remove them.
- I freeze some peaches each summer, too, in canning jars with apple-juice concentrate as the “syrup.”
- Baked beans: My recipe is delicious, good for you, and freezes beautifully, so make a double batch.
- A final tip: With soups, broth, and other liquids, I don’t dilute as much as I would if I were serving immediately. “Concentrated” liquids take up much less freezer space.
how to enter to win the weck jars and books
THERE ARE 3 WAYS TO WIN [UPDATE: this giveaway is now closed], and each of the six winners chosen at random will win won a set of mini-tulip Weck jars; a signed copy of “And I Shall Have Some Peace There” from Margaret Roach, and Gayla Trail’s recipe-filled “Drinking the Summer Garden” (delivered as a digital bundle). Two winners will be were chosen on each of our three websites.
All you have to do is answer this question:
Besides for putting up food, what do you use canning jars for?
(If your answer is “nothing,” tell us what you can in them, or go ahead and just say “Count me in” if you’re feeling shy or have no jars yet. We’re easy! And you can cut and paste the same answer all three places.)
Winners will be were drawn randomly after entries closed at midnight on Tuesday, September 4, 2012, and informed by email. Good luck to all, and I hope we’ve inspired you to spend some of your holiday weekend putting up the harvest.
My daughter keeps her beta fish in a large weck jar (without the lid).
Wow, fantastic giveaway. An old chipped jar makes a great vase. Zinnias look particularly nice in one. Trust me, if I win I will find a more distinguished use for these beautiful jars.
As I’m a New Yorker with a small space, it’s rare that I have any empty jars hanging around. (Picture me carrying 50 pounds of tomatoes across Midtown for canning..) But, I’ve found they come in handy for drinks, pencils, even a stand-in for tupperware. Even a wish jar.
I use canning jars for all kinds of things. I used 6 1/2 gallon jars as part of the centerpieces for my wedding. Now I lacto-ferment in those same jars.
Canning jars are a safer and easier alternative to tuperware or ziplock containers.
I use canning jars for storing veggies seeds and organizing my desk supplies, since I don’t have a desk drawer
I use them to store scrabooking supplies, like ribbons and buttons.
Chipped or not, my canning jars are all over the place. Spring through Fall, I always make homemade flower arrangements for friends …or just to have around the house. Canning jars are my go-to vase. Of course I also use them to drink from, hold pennies and buttons and just about anything else you can think of. I Heart canning jars of all shapes and sizes!
I put a cute jar on the table to propagate a beautiful&small plant, so I can check the roots growing during every meal.
I store cotton balls and swabs in them and the bathroom looks quite cute. I use them to store leftovers in the fridge like soup and chopped vegies. I store jello and pudding in them as well. They take up much less space in the fridge than the average round storage container – don’t get me started on squat round storage containers for a tall rectangular refridgerator. Also I use them for housing new plant cuttings before transplating back into the garden (think: hens and chicks). My husband puts lemonade in the quart jars and guests might wonder what we’re putting on the table as a beverage. I could go on but I’ll stop here.
I like to bring cereal or snacks in mine to work. I drink out of them too. Do those cool recipes like cake or “pizza” in a jar. My son uses them to examine bugs and what not. There’s a kit to turn them into speakers that I want to give a shot too. Versatile lol!
count me in
I use them for storing nuts, grains, and spices.
Great giveaway! Besides using canning jars for preserving (mainly jams!), I use them for everything basically! I use them for storing herbs in my spice cupboard (that way I can buy them cheap from the bulk store), I use them to store my homemade beer nuts or granola (the big ones, of course!), and I use them to make salad dressing. Salad dressing is super easy to make in a jam jar, no whisking, just lots of shaking. I even use the grungy-looking ones in my garage to hold all sorts of knick knacks that would otherwise be loitering on the floor.
Make and store salad dressing and cooking sauces.
I use jars for storage, gifts, sweet little portable dessert containers for picnics. They work well for many uses besides all the canning I do. Thanks!
I use mine for lots and lots. Right now my desk pencils are in 1, dog treats in a blue quart with zinc lid, and 1/2 gallon jar used to fertilize potted Meyer lemon, fig and olive trees (winter indoors). LOVE the look of these Weck jars. Thanks!
I use them to store dehydrated stuff like squash, eggplant, and hot peppers (not risk of the hot peppers smelling up everything else in the pantry when stored in glass!). They’re also great as spice jars since I buy in bulk. They’re also great for stuff like rubberbands, paperclips, etc.
Please count me in. See you on the 8th!
They are great for keeping left over nails,screws, etc. Easy to see what you have and find the right size. I keep one for phillips screws and one for slotted head.
I use my canning jars for SO many things!
[well, except canning… it’s complicated :D]
Make flavored vinegar, storing cleaning products, freezing produce [much like you do], and I keep my dog “shampoo” in there too [a mixture of oils and cleanser] with a shaker top to be able to sprinke it on my pooches, storing art supplies, storing other various knick knacks, and I decorate with a sand-and-shell filled jar sealed with a pretty ribbon.
I save every jar I can! ♥
And those Weck jars are SO PRETTY! Maybe I really should delve back into canning just to use them…
As well as a ton of canning and keeping dried herbs, I put salad dressing in the bottom of the large ones and then layer salad in them to take to work for lunch. The salad stays crisp until I eat it and all I have to do is give it a quick shake to mix it up and dump on to my plate.
Seeds and spices :)
Count me in!!
I use canning jars for *everything*. Dry food storage. Fermenting. Flower vases. Homemade play-dough holders. And, of course, canning.
holding fabric scraps, buttons and beads. drinking glasses. flower vases. lunch containers. forcing spring bulbs. candle holders. rooting herbs in water. dog treat storage vessels. spice mix containers……