Skip to main content

A spring favorite: Our top tips for buying, cleaning, and how to cook green beans

Hate green beans? Learn how to cook (and love) this misunderstood veggie

plate of fresh green beans
Image credit: Adobe Stock Image used with permission by copyright holder

Green beans may be a traditional side dish for holidays like Thanksgiving, but the veggie doesn’t always get a lot of love for regular weeknight meals. The truth is though green beans are a great dish to add to your table. Green beans are a good source of fiber, low in sodium, have protein, vitamins, and minerals. The key to adding this healthy and versatile vegetable to your list of go-to sides is knowing how to cook green beans. So, let’s get cooking.

green beans in a bowl
Image credit: Adobe Stock Image used with permission by copyright holder

Buying green beans

When it comes to making a green bean recipe, fresh green beans are always the better pick. Frozen green beans can work in a pinch, but fresh green beans are more flavorful. Choose fresh over precut green beans too. Whenever buying green beans, make it a point to cook them not long after buying. Green beans are more flavorful if eaten or cooked right away. Pick smaller green beans with a rich hue. Avoid green beans with a yellow or brown tinge.

Storing green beans

If you can’t cook green beans right away, place in the refrigerator in the plastic bag. Don’t wash green beans before storing.

Trimming green beans

Before you get ready to cook your green beans on the stove or in the oven, wash them first. Then, chop off the ends. You can tell if your green beans are fresh and delicious if they snap when you break in half.

green beans sauteing in a pan
Image credit: Shutterstock Image used with permission by copyright holder

How to cook green beans on the stove

Cooking green beans on the stove is probably the quickest and easiest way to make a green bean side dish. Once your beans have been cleaned and trimmed, sauté them in a pan.

  • Heat up a tablespoon of olive oil a pan.
  • Add in the green beans.
  • Cook for around five to eight minutes or until the beans have a bright gloss.
  • Lightly season the beans with a bit of salt, pepper, and garlic; fresh garlic works best.
  • Sauté with seasonings for another minute.
  • Add a half a cup of water to the pan.
  • Cover and let the green beans simmer for a couple of minutes.
  • Serve right away.
roasted green beans on a pan
Image credit: Shutterstock Image used with permission by copyright holder

How to cook green beans in the oven

Roasting green beans in the oven is another simple way to bring the veggie to the table. It’s easy and healthier than tossing tater tots or French fries into the oven.

  • Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
  • Place green beans in a bowl.
  • Drizzle olive oil.
  • Toss to coat.
  • Sprinkle salt and pepper to taste.
  • Toss again.
  • Place on a baking sheet.
  • Cook in oven for 15 to 20 minutes or until crisp.

Tip: Roasted green beans are done when they look a bit shriveled.

Green bean recipes

Once you’ve mastered the basic green bean side dish of cooking the veggie on the stove or the oven, there are green bean recipes that go beyond grandma’s green bean casserole. This green bean and kale salad from the Food Network is a standalone meal that is ready to eat in around an hour. Love bacon? Try this quick and easy green bean and bacon recipe from A Taste of Home. It’s a simple, no-fuss green bean/bacon recipe that tastes great after a long day.

Adding green beans to the menu

If you’re looking to change up the sides, green beans are a tasty and healthy vegetable to add in. Don’t let those green bean nightmares from your childhood keep you from eating this veggie. Learning how to cook green beans isn’t difficult and the end result tastes great and is good for you.

Editors' Recommendations

Dawn Miller
Dawn Miller began her professional life as an elementary school teacher before returning to her first love, writing. In…
The best bars in New York City: Our top picks
Here's where to belly up to the bar in NYC
The Quixote Bar.

If you're known as The City That Never Sleeps, you probably have a few good bars to your name. New York is the ultimate beehive, going strong regardless of the borough or time of day. That makes for a pretty rich NYC bar culture.

Sure, there are trending establishments that draw huge lines—look at you, Double Chicken Please. But there are also excellent dives, tremendous wine bars, and watering holes that make you reexamine the definition of a great cocktail.

Read more
How a passion for scuba diving inspired one of our favorite rum brands
Rum according to a well-traveled distillery owner
Todd Thrasher.

Thrasher's Rum is not your typical spirit company. The D.C.-based rum outfit started in 2018 and is headed by a man who forged an interest in fermented sugarcane while diving around the world.

Thrasher is no stranger to the scene, having run many esteemed beverage programs in the past. The Virginia native grew up spending summer days at his grandparent's rural house and got his first bartending gig when a barkeep failed to show up for their shift at an Arlington watering hole. The rest is history.

Read more
Kolsch-style beers are perfect for spring, and these are our favorites
Perfect for spring, this beer style is known for its hoppy, criso flavor.
Close-up of a glass of beer

If you’ve never heard a Kölsch before, what are you waiting for? Not only is this beer style great any time of year, but it’s also particularly fantastic during the spring months. Made with top-fermenting yeast like an ale before being conditioned at cold temperatures like a lager, this hoppy, crisp beer has its origins in Cologne, Germany. But there’s a little more to it than that.
Kölsch is more than a name

Kölsch is similar to Cognac, Scotch, or Tequila in that, as of 1997, it has a protected geographical indication. Just like those other forms of alcohol that have specific geographic parameters, technically, Kölsch must be brewed within 31 miles of the city of Cologne. This hasn’t stopped American brewers from trying their hand at this fresh, crisp style. While some don’t pay close attention to the rules and call their beers Kölsch, others pay tribute to Germany by calling their brews Kölsch-style beers.
What does Kölsch taste like?

Read more