Top L, counter-clockwise: Heating beans in stockpot with strainer, Bringing sauce to a boil in microwave, enjoying our beans with a sandwich, filling jars with beans and pork, finished product |
Although
Myrna and I are fans of Boston style baked beans, my husband likes what he
calls “pork and beans”, meaning the tomato sauced version of baked beans. So he helped me can these beans just for him. We usually can ours in half-pints, so we don’t
have leftovers for just the two of us. You can also use regular sugar instead of brown sugar. My husband actually prefers Great Northern beans in this and no cloves...your choice.
Home Canned Beans with Pork and Tomato
Sauce
4 cups Navy Beans -- about 2 pounds
4 cups tomato juice
1 cup chopped onion -- 6 ounces
3 tbsp Brown Sugar -- packed
2 tsp salt
¼ tsp
cloves (optional)
¼ lb
salt pork -- cut into enough pieces for your jars
Cover beans
with cold water; let stand 12 to 18 hours in a cool place.
Place 6 clean
pint or 13 clean 1/2 pint or 3 quart mason jars on rack in pressure canner; add
water and heat jars to a simmer (180°F/82°C). Set screw bands aside; prepare
lids according to manufacturer's directions.
Drain beans;
cover with boiling water by 2 inches; boil 3-5 minutes. Remove from heat; let
stand 10-15 minutes; drain. Combine tomato juice, onion, sugar, salt and
spices; heat to boiling (I use a 2 quart measuring cup in the microwave).
Pack 1/2 cup
(250 ml) beans into a hot half pint jar or 1 cup into a hot pint jar. Top with
a piece of pork; fill jar 3/4 full with beans. Ladle hot tomato sauce to cover
beans to within 1 inch (2.5 cm) of top rim (headspace). Using nonmetallic
utensil, remove air bubbles. Wipe jar rim removing any stickiness. Adjust lids.
Repeat for remaining beans, pork and sauce, adding to canner filled with
simmering water on the rack.
When canner
is full, adjust water to level as directed by canner manufacturer. Lock canner
lid in place and follow manufacturer's heating instructions. Vent canner-allow
steam to escape steadily-for 10 minutes; close vent.
When canner
reaches the pressure appropriate for your altitude (10# for up to 1000' or 15#
for over 1000'), begin counting processing time. Process for time indicated:
Jar
Size Time
pint or half
pint 65 minutes
quart 75 minutes
When
processing time is complete turn off heat. Allow canner to stand undisturbed until
pressure drops to zero. Wait 2 minutes, and then remove cover, tilting it away
from yourself. Remove jars without tilting. Cool upright, undisturbed 24 hours;
DO NOT RETIGHTEN screw bands. After cooling check jar seals. Sealed lids curve
downward. Remove screw bands; wipe and dry bands and jars. Store screw bands
separately or replace loosely on jars, as desired. Label and store in a cool,
dark place.
"Adapted from Bernardin"
Yield: "6 Pints or 13 Half Pints"
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