How long would you trust beans past their shelf life printed on the plastic bag?
I thought about storing them in cold mason jars, without a canning method.
I thought about storing them in cold mason jars, without a canning method.
I agree with storing them in mason jars, with no canning method. I wonder if oxygen absorbers would make them harder?How long would you trust beans past their shelf life printed on the plastic bag?
I thought about storing them in cold mason jars, without a canning method.
You are not the first person that I have heard say that they do not care for beans. It may be a texture thing, or it may be a seasoning or lack of seasoning thing. I think that storing dry beans for the long term is very important. In another thread I shared that in a group someone posted that they cooked up some beans and they were horrible. I asked what he seasoned them with? Nothing! I have actually seen that response before and in other places. Storing beans and rice might be the known prepper thing, but the spices to make them palatable is so important if we are going to be able to stand eating them. Garlic, onion, cumin, salt, pepper, and other seasonings are what makes them palatable.I really don't care for beans that much, but I think it would be wise to have some in storage. I do want to make my own beenie weenies and pork and beans some day and can them.
I'm a pretty decent cook. I specialize in mostly outdoor cooking; grilling, over fire, smoking food and drying. For inside I make chili, ketchup, hot sauce, seasonings, rubs, etc. I just started looking up recipes for making pork and beans. It looks simple and sounds tasty. I'll start out with a small batch and see how it turns out.You are not the first person that I have heard say that they do not care for beans. It may be a texture thing, or it may be a seasoning or lack of seasoning thing. I think that storing dry beans for the long term is very important. In another thread I shared that in a group someone posted that they cooked up some beans and they were horrible. I asked what he seasoned them with? Nothing! I have actually seen that response before and in other places. Storing beans and rice might be the known prepper thing, but the spices to make them palatable is so important if we are going to be able to stand eating them. Garlic, onion, cumin, salt, pepper, and other seasonings are what makes them palatable.
For all the people expecting someone else, such as a wife, to cook them for you, please realize that men can cook! Some men are much better cooks than women. Take a turn in the kitchen periodically. Just like women should know how to change a flat tire, men should know how to make something to eat.
What kind of beans do you have?
A friend in a wheel chair bought #7 (?)/gallon can of Navy beans, when Y2K was over she gave us a few can. The bean where tough, tasted uncooked, did not have a pressure cooker or this site.We recently finished eating dried black beans that we had stored in preparation for Y2K. These beans were in a plastic bag inside of a box. This was a 25# box of beans. They were very edible. We had to cook them in a pressurized Instapot 2 to 3 times longer than the recommended cooking time to soften them.
I would think that canned cooked beans would likely not last as long as dried beans. The canned cooked beans would also lose some of their flavor and nutrition content.A friend in a wheel chair bought #7 (?)/gallon can of Navy beans, when Y2K was over she gave us a few can. The bean where tough, tasted uncooked, did not have a pressure cooker or this site.
I have heard that this problem has been fixed/repair now, but I have not tried the canned survival
kits. I can get beans cheaper & store them in freezer & five gallon buck.
Canned food has been found that is over 100 years old. The cans were in good condition and the food tested out to be safe and nutritional. The trick on canned goods is to keep the cans in good condition.I would think that canned cooked beans would likely not last as long as dried beans. The canned cooked beans would also lose some of their flavor and nutrition content.
I was not clear, the free bean were not cooked, they were raw dried beans & were hard after they were cook. I was talking about dry bean in the rest of my post.I would think that canned cooked beans would likely not last as long as dried beans. The canned cooked beans would also lose some of their flavor and nutrition content.
Its fine. It darkens but its mostly salt and sugar, highly preserved. Lasts almost forever.I believe that catsup is not great in storage. My store bought stuff looks pretty nasty, dark colored, at a year or so past best by date. I will use it in chili where I can ‘hide’ it but no more stocking up on catsup for me. We just don’t use that much of it. I can always make a small batch from other stored tomato products.
Old beans can benefit from long soaking, long cooking, and pressure cooking. They can also be ground into bean flour. Cooking old beans the normal way leaves you with partly cooked beans. The beans are fine for several decades but the cooking requirements change.I was not clear, the free bean were not cooked, they were raw dried beans & were hard after they were cook. I was talking about dry bean in the rest of my post.
If every thing you posted is fact,(I have no ideal) I would eat can cooked beans first, because they are there & easy to cook/heat up. Then any bean in the freezer, no power, freezer not running.
The start on the vacuum packed dry beans.
By that time my garden & orchard should be producing in the spring & summer, by fall we would have winter squash, apples, pears, muscadine other fruits & vegetables to help with the vacuumed supplies & greens from Brassica family, carrots, onions, sun chokes, potatoes & jars of green bean from the summer garden hopefully a few rabbits & chickens.
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