Sorry, I don't calculate, I just soak up a bag at a time and then can it. Usually works out to full jars and I can it off with soup that's on the go so I have two layers of jars in the pressure canner when I run it. I just do it for convenience as needed--I run my canner every few weeks so it's not something I plan in advance for any particular number of jars.KnittyGritty said:So, moolie, if I do decide to soak, how do you calculate how many lbs. of dry beans to soak for how many finished pints?
I've read that, but our family eats beans (navy, kidney, black turtle, pinto) and other legumes (lentils and split peas don't need soaking but chick peas do) regularly and we find a real difference with soaking--both my younger daughter and I experience lots of gas with commercially canned beans (my MIL uses cans of beans from the store for things like Chili, Black Bean Soup, 3 Bean Salad etc.) that we don't get with soaked beans, but YMMVBritesea said:The gas effect tends to go away as you eat more beans and acquire more of the enzymes needed to digest them. Most people don't eat beans all that often.