June 28, 2011


People either love them or have never heard of them.

People raised with a vegetable garden are most familiar with a dilly bean. When you grow beans, the dilly bean is ammunition against plants that produce green beans every time you turn your back. Where every day’s harvest is a big heap of beans.

Don’t despair. Dilly them.

And then put the crispy, vinegary, spicy delights in a Bloody Mary, alongside your pulled pork barbeque, or eat them right out of the jar. They are a great balancing element on a cheese and charcuterie plate, or wherever you might serve a dill pickle.

This was my first canning project ever. I can still remember it – standing up on a kitchen stool, next to my great grandmother Agatha, stringing beans over the sink, filling jars, and pouring the brine.

They are easy enough to make one jar at a time, or grab a few pounds of bright new green beans at the market this weekend and put up a dozen jars or so. As far as I’m concerned, you can never have too many.

(I’ve been playing around with flavors. I pickled one jar with juniper berries -omitting the red pepper, garlic and dill. The result was a perfect garnish for a Gin and Tonic!)

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Dilly Beans
vaguely adapted from the Ball Blue Book of Preserving
makes 4 pints

2 lbs. green beans
1/4 c pickling salt
1-1/4 c apple cider vinegar
1-1/4 c white vinegar
2-1/2 c water
4 tsp crushed red pepper
4 cloves of garlic, peeled and trimmed
4 T dill seed

Sterilize your jars. Wide mouth pint jars are best. If the beans are very long and elegant, the 12 oz jelly jars are gorgeous.

Trim the green beans. I leave the tails. Make sure they fit in the jars leaving 1/4″ headspace.

Bring salt, vinegars and water to a boil.

Divide the red pepper, garlic and dill seed between the jars.

Pour the hot brine over the beans.

Run a chopstick or other airbubble removing device around the jars.

Place lids and rings and process in a boiling water bath for 10 minutes.

Allow the beans to pickle for about a week before opening.

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I’ll be demonstrating pickling and canning – dilly beans and half-sour (lacto fermented) pickles July 16th, 9am, at Strosnider’s Hardware in Bethesda.

21 Responses to “a dalliance with dilly beans”

  1. i speak Foodie

    Thank you! I just ran out of my last jar that I picked up in Savannah and I need more – we serve them inside a thin slice of salami, rolled up. A huge hit at cocktail gatherings!

    Reply
  2. Linda

    They’re one of my favorites although I had never heard of them until I moved to north Idaho. I use fresh dill (from the garden, of course) and mustard seed with my garlic and hot peppers. I also throw in a grape leaf because it’s supposed to keep them snappy (old wives’ tale?). I love the juniper take for gin and tonic…. My recipe came from an older woman who was from north Idaho. She also used the same pickling recipe for carrots, zucchini, and any other non-leafy fresh garden veggie. At the moment, however, my beans are only 6-8 inches tall. Long, wet, cold spring this year.

    Reply
  3. Mike P

    I can’t wait to try these–my mouth was watering reading the recipe! Have you tried with different types of vinegars–champagne, red wine, etc.

    Thanks!

    Reply
    • Cathy

      This recipe is made to be fiddled with. Change up the vinegar, add spices or herbs, sweeten it… Enjoy the options! I made them last year with sherry vinegar and pomegranate molasses, a combo that morphed into a rhubarb pickle this Spring

      Reply
  4. Kimmy @ Lighter and Local

    Ooh – this is our first year growing green beans, and I’m sure they’re going to explode. These sound fantastic for just about anything… and work perfectly into my “canning adventure” for this year. 🙂

    Reply
  5. mpw280

    A friend does them with a whole cayenne pepper and uses them for Blood Mary’s, I am told they are great for that. mpw

    Reply
  6. Joyce @friendsdriftinn

    Always a family favorite, dilly beans are wonderful served cold at cocktail parties as an appetizer. Sometimes I even use them as a garnsih for bloody mary drinks. You just reminded me, I better go plant some fresh dill…the season will soon be upon us! YAY

    Reply
  7. Christine

    Hi, how long can you keep them? Need to putt in fridge after opening? I would like to give this recipe to mymparents who have a vegetable garden. Thanks! Cheers!

    Reply
  8. Cathy

    The beans are shelf stable for a year, and once opened will keep in the refrigerator for a month or so.

    Reply
  9. Jake

    I absolutely love dilly beans– and you’re spot on about how they work magic in a bloody mary. It’s funny, all these years I thought my aunt invented them mostly because I never heard anybody else talk about them.

    Thanks for the recipe and post.

    Jake

    Reply
  10. Rebecca Taormino

    My girls and I had these for the first time this weekend. Got them from the farmers market. All I can say is YUMMMMY , told my oldest (13 ) we are making these !!!

    Reply
  11. CathCarr Johnson

    Had this receipe years ago and of course………….lost it-Thanks for posting can’t wait to do! Like receipes that DON’T require hot bath! Thanx, CathCarr

    Reply

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