
Why You’ll Love These Southern-Style Green Beans
Slow-cooked in a bacon-infused broth until melt-in-your-mouth tender, these green beans deliver true down-home flavor with almost zero fuss. They’re perfect for weeknight suppers, holiday spreads, or any time you need a comforting Southern side dish that’ll have folks lining up for seconds.
Can I use canned or frozen green beans instead of fresh?
Yes, you can! Canned green beans are already soft, so they need less cooking time—just be sure to drain and rinse them first. Frozen green beans are a closer match to fresh and can go straight into the pot, but they may add extra moisture, so watch your liquid levels. Fresh is best for that true Southern texture, but either option works in a pinch!
Serve these Southern Style Green Beans with Crock Pot Beef Roast and Twice Baked Potatoes Casserole for a classic family dinner perfect for Sunday supper or entertaining.
What Kind Of Green Beans Are Best To Use?
Choosing beans that can withstand the long cooking process without turning mushy is important.
- Blue Lake Bush – is known for its crispiness and sweet flavor.
- Kentucky Wonder – easy to grow and great for canning or cooking fresh.
- Half Runners – a cross between a bush and green beans that are great to make “snap beans” cooked fresh or canned.
Ingredients Needed To Make The Best Green Beans

- Bacon: The heart of Southern comfort cooking, bacon brings an irresistible rich, smoky flavor.
- Fresh Green Beans: They bring a fresh, earthy flavor that balances beautifully with the richness of bacon.
- Vegetable or Chicken Stock: This flavor enhancer adds a light vegetable sweetness or a hearty chicken depth to the beans.
- Garlic Powder: A convenient and quick way to add a warm, slightly spicy undertone.
- Salt: Salt brings out the natural flavors of your ingredients. It is the essential seasoning that sharpens and defines all the other tastes in your dish.
- Black Pepper: Adds a slight kick and complexity, and pepper introduces a subtle warmth that perfectly complements the savory notes of bacon and the freshness of the green beans.
How To Cook Fresh Green Beans, Southern Style

- In a heavy-bottom pan or Dutch oven, cook the bacon over medium heat until crispy. Remove and drain on paper towels.
- Add green beans to the bacon drippings and sauté over medium-high heat until bright green. Pour in broth, then season with garlic powder, salt, and pepper.
- Stir in the cooked bacon.
- Reduce heat to low, cover, and simmer for 1 hour, stirring occasionally, until the beans are tender. Taste, adjust seasoning, and serve warm.
Flavor Boosters & Variations
Pot-luck trick: Keep beans warm on LOW in a slow-cooker set to “keep warm.”
Ham hock or smoked turkey neck for deeper smokiness
Dash of apple-cider vinegar right before serving to brighten rich flavors
Diced onion sautéed with the bacon for extra savoriness

How Long Should I Cook Green Beans On The Stove?
Southern-style green Beans get their distinct, melt-in-your-mouth texture and flavor from being slow-cooked on the stove. Generally, you’ll want to simmer the beans on a low heat setting for about an hour for the most flavor-infused results. This cooking duration allows the ingredients, to be thoroughly cooked into the dish, resulting in terrific flavor and great to serve with any main dish.
Make-Ahead, Storage & Reheating
Freeze: Beans freeze beautifully up to 2 months; thaw overnight in the fridge, then warm as above.
Up to 2 days ahead: Cook completely, cool, and refrigerate in an airtight container.
Reheat: Simmer gently on the stove with a splash of broth or pop in a 325°F oven, covered, until hot.
Commonly Asked Questions
A slow cooker is a great tool for making Southern Style Green Beans. You can follow the same recipe, setting your slow cooker on low for about 4-6 hours, or until the beans are tender and flavorful.
If you don’t have bacon grease, season the beans with other fats like butter, olive oil, or even rendered sausage fat for a unique flavor. You can also use smoked turkey necks or ham hocks.
More Of My Favorite Green Bean Recipes

What To Serve With Southern Green Beans
There’s nothing like a home-cooked meal with these green beans, baby red potatoes, and Crock Pot Chicken Thighs. They’re also perfect for a Sunday supper buffet with Slow-Cooker Beef Roast, Stuffed Baked Potatoes, Southern-Fried Corn, and Garlic Rolls.
More Classic Southern Recipes
If you tried this Southern Style Green Bean Recipe or any other recipe, please leave a 🌟 star rating and let me know how it went in the comments below. Thanks!
Ingredients
- 3 slices bacon – cut into ½″ pieces
- 1 ½ pounds green beans – washed, trimmed and snapped into about 2″ lengths
- 1 ½ cups vegetable or chicken stock
- ¼ teaspoon garlic powder
- 1 teaspoon salt
- ½ teaspoon pepper
Instructions
- Cook bacon pieces in a heavy bottom pan until done. Remove the bacon from the pan and place on a paper towel to drain. Set aside.
- Add green beans to the pan and cook on medium-high heat. Toss beans in bacon drippings to coat. Continue to cook until beans turn bright green.
- Carefully pour in the stock and add garlic powder, salt and pepper. Stir to incorporate. Add bacon pieces back to the pot with beans.
- Turn burner to low, cover beans with lid – slightly off center, and cook for about 1 hour until beans are tender, stirring every 15 minutes. Taste and adjust seasoning. Serve immediately.
Video
Notes
- Store any leftover seasoned green beans in an airtight container in the fridge for up to three days.
- A slow cooker is a great tool for making Southern Style Green Beans. You can follow the same recipe, setting your slow cooker on low for about 4-6 hours or until the green beans are tender and flavorful.
- If you don’t have bacon grease, you can season the beans with other fats like butter, olive oil, or even rendered sausage fat for a unique flavor. You can also use smoked turkey necks or ham hocks.
Nutrition

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We love green beans fixed this way…..I add some onion to the bacon grease…..and we like to sprinkle a little vinegar on them at the table.
I like the three way green beans, and adding onions is a must, I love onions also together withe the bacon/beans.
Pole beans are what you need for this recipe, with a longer cooking time, but pole beans are awfully hard to find. Grandma Ollis would die if you put garlic in green beans. I don’t think she ever heard of garlic, let alone used it in anything. I love to add a chopped up potato or two. Cook ’em down, put them in the fridge overnight (the potatoes absorb much of the bacon grease) and re-heat for a feast fit for a queen!.
These are the green beans my family expects at Thanksgiving! It’s another of those recipes that brings out the “These are so good why don’t we have them more often?” comments.
You are so right Daryl! My boys love these beans. They will be on my Thanksgiving table too.
Thanks so much for stopping by.
~Donya
This is how I cook my beans most of the time….but if I don’t have bacon, I just cut up a whole onion and cook with the beans, add garlic, salt near the end of cooking, and maybe just a teaspoon of what ever oil I have….. they are better for you than with the bacon grease,,,,but I agree not as good tho….but still good….this is what I call country cooking….. I don’t buy green beans in the winter….I only like certain kind of fresh green beans….have never cooked any that I liked in the winter….we use to can beans or dry them…but I don’t do that anymore…..
I did dry a few strings of green beans couple of years ago….Do you know what those are ? they are yummy cooked…..
I use to love to help my mom snap “the mess” of green beans after we picked them out of the garden. I’ll definitely try this recipe. I’ve never been able to make anything as well as she did even though she never used recipes.. She would sometimes add new potatoes to her green beans. Thanks for the recipe!
Looks delicious! Thanks for sharing at the What’s for Dinner link party!
Thanks for hosting a great party!
XO,
~Donya
I do them this way sometimes and they are great! My family likes them best with some finely diced onion cooked in the bacon grease before you put the “bean beans” in, as my grandbaby calls them. She loves her Nana’s bean beans!
Sounds so good, Mama Jane. Thank you for stopping by. I love to hear from my readers and enjoy the stories of great food memories.
XO,
~Donya
Nom nom this reminds me of childhood!
I know, Paula. Brings back great memories for me too.
Thanks for stopping by!
XO,
~Donya