Canning Ham & Beans | prepperpenny Recipe (2024)

Instructions

Clean and soak beans overnight

Rinse Beans and return to large stockpot

Add all ingredients

Cover with water and cook for about an hour before proceeding to pressure canning

After having cleaned, rinsed and soaked your beans overnight or for several hours, chop your veggies and ham and dump it all into a large stockpot. Then cover it with water and put onto a low but sustained simmer.

Now is the time to get your jars, rings and lids ready and gather all your canning utensils. There are a few ways folks clean their jars. Some run them through the dishwasher. Personally, I wash everything in hot, soapy water then put into my oven at 200 degrees which gives me confidence that they are as clean and sanitized as possible. It’s also a habit of mine to run my bare finger across the rim to check for any flaws or chips. I also give a visual inspection of every jar to be sure there are no cracks or flaws in the jar. Any jar that shows signs of flaws should be set aside and should never be used for canning.

Canning jars absolutely must be kept warm to receive the hot ingredients. When I first began canning, I made a terrible mistake by not having them hot enough and had two jars fail (break) in the canner. Lesson learned. Now you want to add 2″-3″ of water and begin to heat your pressure canner.

With all things ready, lets begin to can your soup. Using a ladle and canning funnel, fill your hot jars with a 1″ head space. Make sure there are no air bubbles lurking in your jar. Using a plastic spatula, remove any bubbles. Failing to do so could cause your jar to break in the canner.

I can’t stress enough how important ALL sanitary measures are at every stage in canning. But making sure you wipe the rims after filling your jars is as crucial as any. Any trace of food or oil can prevent your jars from sealing, and can (and likely will) cause your food to spoil and go rancid. When canning anything oily, like meat, I use white vinegar which will satisfactorily remove the oils.

After having your lids and rings warmed in boiling water, carefully remove them and immediately place them on the jars.

Before the wax ring on you lid can cool, place your ring on the jar and tighten it enough to hold the lid in place. Don’t over tighten the rings. Simply finger tighten it. Immediately place your jar into the canner at this point.

Once your canner is filled, place the lid on it and follow your specific canner guidelines and process your jars at 10 pounds of pressure for 75 minutes in pint jars, 90 minutes in quart jars.

Allow the pressure in your canner to completely dissipate before trying to remove the pressure weight. Once the pressure is zero, you may remove the lid. However, everything is still very hot! Please use proper caution and care.

Using a canning jar lifter, remove your jars from your canner and gently place them onto a towel and carefully tighten the rings. Leave your jars to cool for at least 10 hours. When you remove your jars, you will see they are still boiling. This is normal. You will begin to hear that heavenly confirmation that all canners love so much. The ping. That is the indication that your jars are sealing properly. Don’t be discouraged if one or more does not seal. It sometimes happens.

Once your cans have set and cooled (usually overnight), remove the rings and test the seals. As indicated above, you can test by sound by tapping a spoon on the lid (I have never done that), give a physical inspection looking to see if the raised nipple has con caved. It is quite easy to see if a lid hasn’t sealed because the nipple will protrude if it didn’t seal properly. If you are not quite sure, press on the center of the lid. It should not give and should be hard. I always pick up my jars by the very top rim. If the lid isn’t sealed, it will pull off the jar. If this happens, you can put your contents into a container and either refrigerate it and eat it within a few days, or freeze it for later use.

Now you will want to wash each jar with hot, soapy water, add your label with the content and date you canned it.

This batch I just canned wound up yielding 14 jars. To help protect them, I put my jars back into the box they came out of. Notice here, when I opened this box, I cut off the top of the plastic wrap leaving the bottom of it intact over the box. If one of your jars happens to break or leak without you noticing it, the plastic will save you from having an even bigger mess.

Canning Ham & Beans | prepperpenny Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Can I can leftover ham and beans? ›

Pressure canning ham and bean soup is a great way to make ahead quick meals to use later. The next time you have a leftover ham, be sure to make this family favorite!

Can you can beans that are already cooked? ›

You'll pack the now-cooked beans into clean, hot jars, cover with hot water and salt, and then pressure can for 75-90 minutes (depending on the size jar you are canning). If you are canning at more than 1,000 feet you'll need to adjust your canning pressure.

Can ham green beans and potatoes be canned? ›

Fill 2 to 3 quart size jars about 1/2 full of green beans, potato, and ham mixture (use a slotted spoon) and finish topping off with broth to 1" headspace. Remove air bubbles, add more broth (or hot water if you run out of broth if needed), assemble lids.

How do you get the gas out of ham and beans? ›

**Soak beans overnite in water with 1/4 cup of vinegar (Key ingredient for "removing gas") Have the beans well covered with water for soaking-remember they expand quite a bit and you don't want them to expand above the water level."

Can you can already cooked ham? ›

Actually no you would not be able to can ham as it falls under the category of cured meats. The National Center for Home Food Preservation (NCHFP) says "We cannot support the canning of cured, brined, or corned meats with the procedures for fresh meats.

Can you cook pinto beans and then can them? ›

Cover beans soaked by either method with fresh water and boil 30 minutes. Add my spice mix above to each cleaned pint jar. Fill jars 3/4 full with beans and add cooking water to 1-inch headspace. Pressure Can Pints 75 Minutes / Quarts 90 Minutes.

Why are my canned beans hard? ›

Although canned beans are steeped in a helpful concoction of salt, water, and starch, cooking them improperly could sadly dry them out. To get perfect, tender beans every time, finding a balance between the amount of liquid you add to your beans is vital.

Can you can beans without a pressure canner? ›

Because green beans are low in acidity, they have to be canned in a pressure canner so they're safe to eat up to a year later. But if you're willing to increase the acidity of your green beans by pickling them, you can process them in a water-bath canner.

What happens if you use too much pressure when canning? ›

If the pressure gets too high, the weight jiggles and releases steam and pressure. No blowing up. You do need to monitor your pressure canner while it is building pressure and during processing. Like a deep fryer, you don't just fill it and go in the other room or outside while it is doing its thing.

Does a fully cooked ham have to reach 140? ›

If reheating is desired, hams that were packaged in processing plants under USDA inspection must be heated to 140°F as measured with a food thermometer. Leftover spiral-cut hams or ham that has been repackaged in any other location outside the plant, must be heated to 165°F.

Can bacon be pressure canned? ›

My latest canning adventures have included everything from canned cheese to canned butter to canned bacon. To can bacon all you need are quart jars, 12-inch-wide masking paper, pressure canner, and bacon. Cut a piece of masking paper 18 inches long and lay your bacon out in a single layer.

How to can green bean soup? ›

Instructions
  1. Prepare your pressure canner to the specified instructions.⁠
  2. Clean and cut the beans into bite-size pieces. ...
  3. Pour boiling water over the prepared beans retaining that ½-inch of headspace.⁠ ...
  4. Place on prepared lids and rings. ...
  5. Pressure for 25 minutes at 10 pounds pressure, adjusting for altitude.
May 9, 2022

How do you preserve leftover ham? ›

To freeze your cooked ham, wrap it tightly in plastic wrap, then store in a sealed freezer bag or container, taking care to release as much air as possible from the container.

Can I can leftover baked beans? ›

Canning your own baked beans is really simple! Other than rinsing and draining the beans, it's really just a matter of adding all the ingredients to each jar (dried beans, syrup ingredients and very hot water), then processing the jars. Beans are a low acid food so they must be pressure canned.

How to can pinto beans with ham? ›

Place 1 heaping cup of par cooked beans into each hot jar. Add the diced ham hock evenly between the jars, then fill with about 1 1/4 cup sauce or until until 1 inch head space is reached. Remove any bubbles, wipe the rims, add the lids and rings to finger tight, then place into pressure canner.

Can you store leftover beans in the can? ›

Low-acid canned goods, such as meat, poultry, fish, gravy, stew, soups, beans, carrots, corn, pasta, peas, potatoes and spinach) can be stored three to four days. Although it's safe to store the food in the can, it will retain better flavor if transferred to a glass or plastic storage container.

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