Soul food flavor, pressure cooker speed. These Instant Pot soul food green beans are tender, savory, and rooted in Southern tradition, but ready in minutes. Cooked in chicken stock with scallions, butter, thyme, and bold seasoning, they capture the comforting depth of Grandma’s stovetop pot without the long simmer.

Whether you’re feeding a crowd, prepping for Sunday dinner, or craving a taste of home on a busy weeknight, this Instant Pot recipe delivers big flavor with modern ease. The pressure cooker does the heavy lifting—you bring the appetite.
This Instant Pot soul food green beans recipe was created, tested, and seasoned with intention by Shaunda Necole of The Soul Food Pot®, where heritage flavor meets modern tools without sacrificing soul.

Why Black folks cook it this way
Flavor adapts to convenience. Long before pressure cookers, our people perfected slow-simmered greens and beans. The Instant Pot shortens the clock but not the seasoning. We still layer broth, butter, herbs, and intention—depth of flavor is the tradition.
Why pressure cook green beans?
Pressure cooking locks in flavor, tenderness, and nutrients in a fraction of the time it takes on the stovetop. In soul food, green beans are often simmered low and slow with smoked meat and seasoning until deeply savory and melt-in-your-mouth tender. The Instant Pot recreates that depth of flavor in minutes rather than hours.

How long do green beans take to cook in a pressure cooker?
Fresh green beans cook quickly in an Instant Pot — just 2 minutes on high pressure. Frozen green beans work with the same 2-minute cook time. Canned green beans don’t need pressure cooking; use the Instant Pot’s Slow Cook setting with these seasonings for a rich, simmered flavor.
Shaunda says: Don’t skip the natural pressure release. Letting the Instant Pot release naturally for a couple minutes lets the beans finish tenderizing and soak up the seasoned broth. Fast cooking still deserves a little patience at the end.
Ingredients
At the heart of this recipe are fresh or frozen green beans simmered until tender and full of flavor. The savory base starts with chicken stock, which adds depth and a comforting, slow-simmered taste in a fraction of the time. A touch of butter brings richness, scallions add a mild onion note, and thyme and garlic powder provide aromatic warmth. Salt and black pepper finish the dish—simple, bold, and ready to pair with any main on your soul food table.

How to cook Southern green beans in the Instant Pot
To make these Southern-style green beans, add green beans to the Instant Pot with chicken stock, butter, chopped scallion, fresh thyme, and the dry seasonings. Seal the lid, pressure cook on high for 2 minutes, then allow a natural pressure release for about 2 minutes. The result is tender, flavorful beans that taste like they simmered for hours but are ready fast.
Make-It-Your-Way
If you prefer the longer, simmered stovetop experience, try the classic Southern method where the beans gently simmer and the broth reduces for that old-school pot liquor flavor.

Common side dishes served with green beans
Soul food green beans pair beautifully with classic Southern and comfort-style sides. With the Instant Pot doing the beans, your stovetop is free for the rest of the feast. Favorites include oven-baked meatloaf or Instant Pot meatloaf, baked macaroni and cheese, and candied yams—each complements the savory, seasoned beans.

Instant Pot Green Beans The Soul Food Way
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Equipment
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Instant Pot pressure cooker
Ingredients
- 1 pound green beans fresh or frozen
- ½ cup chicken stock (use vegetable broth for vegan/vegetarian)
- 1 tablespoon unsalted butter (use a butter swap for vegan)
- 1 scallion chopped
- ½ teaspoon fresh thyme about 5–6 sprigs
- ½ teaspoon dried thyme
- ¼ teaspoon garlic powder
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- ½ teaspoon black pepper
Instructions
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Add the chicken stock, green beans, butter, scallions, fresh thyme, and dry seasonings (dried thyme, garlic powder, salt, and black pepper) to the Instant Pot.
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Close the lid, make sure the valve is set to seal, and pressure cook on high for 2 minutes.
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When the cooking time ends, allow a natural pressure release for at least 2 minutes.
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Move the valve to venting to release any remaining pressure, then open the lid carefully.
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Serve the green beans immediately and enjoy.
Nutrition
❤️ Shaunda’s Soul Food Standard
Created and tested by Shaunda Necole of The Soul Food Pot® in a real kitchen. This recipe is rooted in African American culinary traditions with modern shortcuts that preserve flavor and legacy. Every measurement, timing note, and technique has been written, cooked, and verified by Shaunda.
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