Dilly Beans
Dilly beans pack fresh green beans into pint jars with garlic, dill heads, and cayenne, then water-bath canned for shelf-stable spicy snap. A classic pickled green beans recipe for canning.
YIELD
16 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
20 minREADY
40 minCrunchy, garlicky, with just enough cayenne kick to remind you they have teeth. Dilly beans turn a glut of summer green beans into shelf-stable jars of pickled gold that last all winter. The water-bath process locks in the fresh-snap texture you cannot get from soggy store-bought versions.
Two weeks. That is the wait between sealing the jars and cracking the first one open. The brine needs that time to work its way into the bean and let the garlic, dill, and cayenne mingle. Pop a jar early and the beans taste flat and harsh, mostly vinegar and salt with no real depth.
Pack the beans lengthwise so they stand upright. Trim them to fit just below the shoulder of the pint, leaving the quarter-inch headspace the recipe asks for. That gap is what allows a proper vacuum seal during processing. Use whole garlic cloves rather than smashed for cleaner-looking brine.
Kitchen Tips
- Use only canning or pickling salt. Iodized table salt clouds the brine and can affect seal quality.
- Choose young, slim, blemish-free beans. Big tough beans turn rubbery in the jar.
- Wipe jar rims clean with white vinegar before lidding to remove any residue that could prevent a seal.
- Listen for the lid pop within an hour of removal from the canner. Any jars that did not seal go straight to the fridge for fresh eating.
Variations
- Add a sliced jalapeño to each jar for an extra heat layer.
- Toss in a teaspoon of mustard seed and a few black peppercorns for spiced dilly beans.
- Tuck a thin slice of lemon peel under the dill head for citrusy brightness.
Ingredients
Directions
Pack beans lengthwise into 4 hot pint jars leaving ¼ inch head space.
To each jar add: ¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper, 1 head dill and 1 clove garlic.
Combine remaining ingredients and boil.
Pour boiling hot over beans leaving 1 /4 inch head space.
Adjust caps and process 10 minutes in water-bath canner.
Note: Let beans stand at least 2 weeks to allow flavor to develop.
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