A good green beans and potatoes recipe gives you tender bite-size potatoes and snappy green beans in one pot, with no fuss and very few dishes. It's a stovetop side built on pantry staples, and it works as easily on a weeknight as it does beside a Sunday roast. This version keeps the potatoes creamy inside and the beans bright, never mushy.
The method matters more than the ingredient list. We simmer the potatoes first, then add the beans later so each vegetable hits the right texture at the same time. You end up with a homestyle dish that pairs with almost anything off the grill or out of the oven. If you enjoyed this, our green smoothie bowl is worth trying next. Making this green beans and potatoes at home is surprisingly straightforward once you know the key steps.
Why You'll Love These Green Beans And Potatoes
- One pot means less cleanup and more concentrated flavor in the broth.
- Budget friendly using staples you likely keep on hand year round.
- Naturally vegetarian and gluten free as written, no special products needed.
- Flexible timing so the beans stay green instead of olive drab.
- Reheats well, making it solid for meal prep lunches.
Ingredients You'll Need
- 1 lb Yukon Gold potatoes, peeled and cut into 1-inch cubes — waxy potatoes hold shape better than russets.
- 1 lb fresh green beans, trimmed and snapped in half — look for firm pods without blemishes.
- 3 tbsp olive oil — gives body to the light pan broth.
- 1 medium yellow onion, diced — builds a sweet base as it softens.
- 3 cloves garlic, minced — added late to keep it from turning bitter.
- 3 cups low-sodium vegetable broth — controls salt while simmering the potatoes.
- 1 tsp fine salt, plus more to finish — season in layers.
- 1/2 tsp black pepper — fresh cracked gives more aroma.
- 1/4 tsp smoked paprika — adds a quiet smoky note without bacon.
Ingredient Substitutions
Yukon Gold potatoes: Replace with an equal weight of red potatoes for a slightly waxier, firmer bite. Red skins can stay on if scrubbed, which saves prep and adds color. The cook time stays the same, though the interior is a touch less creamy than Yukon Gold. The green beans and potatoes works well for weeknight cooking when time is limited.
Fresh green beans: Use 12 oz frozen cut green beans if fresh aren't in season, adding them straight from the freezer. They release more water, so reduce broth by 1/2 cup to avoid a thin result. Expect a softer pod and a milder grassy flavor than fresh. Storing leftover green beans and potatoes correctly keeps it tasting good for days.
Vegetable broth: Swap in an equal amount of chicken broth if you don't need the dish vegetarian. The broth turns richer and the potatoes pick up a savory depth. No change to timing, but check salt since chicken broth is often saltier.
Olive oil: Use 2 tbsp butter for a rounder, silkier finish if you want a more classic southern feel. Butter browns faster, so keep the onion step at medium-low heat. The pan sauce will coat the vegetables more heavily than oil alone.
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Warm 3 tbsp olive oil in a 4-quart Dutch oven over medium heat, then add the diced onion with a pinch of salt. Cook 5 minutes, stirring, until the onion turns translucent and softened at the edges.
- Add the cubed potatoes and stir to coat in the oil and onion. Pour in 3 cups vegetable broth, bring to a gentle boil, then lower to medium-low heat and simmer 12 minutes until the potatoes are fork-tender but not falling apart.
- Drop in the trimmed green beans, cover the pot, and continue at medium-low heat for 10 minutes. The beans should be bright green and crisp-tender when tasted.
- Stir in the minced garlic, smoked paprika, black pepper, and remaining salt. Cook uncovered 3 minutes until the garlic smells toasty and the broth reduces slightly to a loose glaze.
- Taste and adjust salt, then spoon into a shallow bowl. Serve immediately while the potatoes are hot and the beans still snap.
Pro Tips
Cut the potatoes to a uniform 1-inch size so they finish in the same window; mismatched cubes leave you with raw centers or blown-out edges. A bench scraper makes quick, even work of a pound of spuds.
Don't rush the onion step. Letting it go soft and faintly golden builds a sweet base that carries the whole pot, a point covered well by braising basics from experienced home cooks.
Keep the lid on once the beans go in. Trapped steam cooks them evenly and protects the green color better than open simmering, which can spot-cook the tops.
Finish with a squeeze of lemon only if you want a brighter edge. Acid lifts the broth but isn't traditional; add it off heat so it doesn't flatten the smoked paprika.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Adding the beans with the raw potatoes is the most common error. They overcook into a dull, stringy mess while the potatoes catch up. Hold them back by 10 minutes as the steps show.
Using high heat to speed the simmer breaks the potatoes before the centers cook. Stay at medium-low heat so the cubes soften from inside out instead of shedding starch into the broth.
Skipping the garlic timing lets it scorch and turn bitter. Stir it in during the last 3 minutes with the spices, not at the start with the onion.
Serving Suggestions
Plate this alongside beef hotpot for a comforting dinner, or pair it with roasted chicken on a busy night. The light broth soaks up pan juices from meats without competing for attention.
For a meatless plate, add a fried egg and call it lunch. The runny yolk turns the pot liquor into a loose sauce that clings to the potato edges.
A sprinkle of feta crumbles on top adds salt and a cool contrast if you want a modern twist on the classic side.
Storage and Reheating
Cool the leftovers within 2 hours and store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days. The potatoes firm slightly but regain creaminess with gentle heat.
Reheat in a covered skillet over medium-low heat with a splash of water, stirring now and then, until steaming throughout. Yes, this green beans and potatoes recipe freezes acceptably for up to 2 months, though the beans soften after thawing.
If frozen, thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating to keep the texture from going watery. Avoid the microwave on high, which turns the potatoes mealy.
Recipe Variations
Smoky Bacon Version
Render 4 strips chopped bacon in the pot before the onion, then proceed using the bacon fat plus 1 tbsp oil. The broth picks up a deep smoky pork note and the beans taste closer to a southern Sunday side. Drain excess fat if it looks greasy before adding broth.
Tomato Braised Version
Stir in 1 cup crushed tomatoes with the potatoes and reduce broth to 2 cups. The result is a tangier, deeper-red stew closer to tomato green beans with added heft. Expect a softer potato and a more pronounced acidic finish.
Stewed Potato Style
Follow the stewed potatoes method by mashing a few cubes against the pot at the end for a thicker base. The beans then sit in a creamy potato gravy rather than clear broth. This suits those who want a spoonable side over a chunky one.
Creamed Pea Swap
Replace half the beans with 1 cup peas and stir in 1/4 cup cream at the end for a richer take inspired by creamed potatoes and peas. The peas add sweetness and the cream rounds the smoked paprika. Serve it as a holiday-style side instead of everyday.