Every frugal site worth its salt promotes dried beans as the ultimate in cheap, nutritious meal foundation.
Using dried beans takes planning.
You’ve got to soak overnight, cook carefully without adding salt or acidic ingredients, then pull it all together in a meal before the beans turn to mush.
This means you have to remember that you planned to eat beans several hours before the children are gnawing on your leg demanding dinner, a skill that is not my strong suit.
Canned beans are so much more convenient, especially if you need to stretch a meal or throw something together fast, but they come at a premium. Canned beans are cheap – but they still cost twice as much or more than dried, take up more room in the pantry, and create more trash. What’s a harried housewife (or a bon-bon eating housewife, for that matter) to do?
You can make dried beans just as convenient at the canned stuff. Just use your freezer!
1. Rinse and pick your beans. I do 2-4 pounds at a time, might as well minimize dirty pots!
2. Quick soak. Bring beans to a boil for 4-5 minutes, then let soak, covered, for 1 hour. Note – the package will tell you to boil for 1 minute, but add the extra time so they’ll be more tender when you get them out of the freezer. Kidney beans need to boil for a minimum of 5
minutes to kill the toxins. Use plenty of water and don’t add salt!
3. Drain beans.
4. Package in quart sized ziplocs. A 15 oz. can of beans contains *around* 2 c., give or take. Use that as a guideline. Or you can freeze them in muffin tins and then package up your bean “pucks”. A muffin cup will hold 1/2 c., so 4 muffin pucks of beans = 1 can of beans.
5. Put your beans in the freezer. Try to lay them flat, so they’ll stack easily and also so they’ll break up easily when you want to get them out of the bag.
6. When it’s time for a meal – use the frozen beans just like canned beans (you’ll have to heat a little bit more.) Freezing causes the water inside to expand, tenderizing them. I like my beans on the firm side, but if you don’t just cook them a little bit and they’ll soften up. The smaller the bean the more tender they’ll be out of the freezer – small navy beans don’t take much cooking at all, but you’ll definitely need to cook garbanzos (chick peas) to soften them.
An added frugal bonus – full freezers use less energy, and therefore cost less to run.
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{ 13 comments… read them below or add one }
Hey that is what I do. I used to fill up both crock-pots and let them cook overnight. I would put different kinds of beans in each one. Then package and freeze them.
One of the crocks was dropped so I need to get another one.
Awesome! Thanks I never knew you could do this with beans!!
You don’t finish cooking them? Just do the quick-soak?
By the way, I like your byline/subtitle.
That’s cool! I’m going to try that. Thanks for the info.
Good advice! We eat a LOT of dried beans.
What a great tip! I had no idea you could do this with dried beans. I’ve used the quicksoak method, but have never frozen them without cooking them the rest of the way. Thanks!
Thank you for this idea! As a vegetarian I eat lots of beans, but never knew about freezing them after the 2 hour quick soak. This will make life soooo much easier!
Just make sure you boil for a little bit longer and let it have a good, long soak and you should be fine!
What a great idea! Thank you for sharing this! I’ll be doing this soon.
I love this tip. When I have more freezer space I plan on employing it. For now though, I like to use my pressure cooker to soak and cook beans. I can usually have them soaked and cooked within an hour (includes a little time to let the pressure come down off of the cooker) and it works really well!
I always cook them all the way and then freeze the extras. This is an interesting twist. I see you want to make HM tortillas – I experimented a lot this winter and finally found a great recipe for 100% whole grain tortillas that taste just like storebought and are so easy to roll out. There were a lot of frustrations along the way! Feel free to grab the recipe at http://www.kitchenstewardship.com/recipes/
Great Tip
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I found your advice on the 100 days real food on a budget website. Wow this sounds so easy. I just bought some lovely local heirloom beans. I’ll have to try this! Thank you!
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