Del Monte Fresh Cut French Style Green Beans: Labelgrade B- (73/100)

B- 73 / 100 — Very low saturated fat and effectively zero sugar.

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Protein
51/100
📋
Ingredients
80/100
🧈
Sat fat
100/100
🧂
Sodium
66/100
🍬
Sugar
99/100
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Fiber
36/100

The short answer

Del Monte Fresh Cut French Style Green Beans delivers 1g of protein and 20.6 calories per 0.5 cup (USDA FDC 2658702). Per 100g that’s 0.8g of protein; per oz, 0.2g. The Labelgrade is B- (73 / 100): Very low saturated fat and effectively zero sugar.

Why this Labelgrade

DimensionGradeScoreWhy
Protein densityD51 / 1000.8g per 100g — below the high-protein bar; not the right product for protein hunting
Ingredient qualityB+80 / 100Short 3-ingredient list, no additive flags
Saturated fat loadA+100 / 1000g saturated fat — perfect
Sodium loadC+66 / 100380mg per serving (89mg per oz) — moderate
Sugar loadA+99 / 1001g sugar, no added sugar listed
FiberF36 / 1000.968g per serving — modest fiber contribution
OverallB-73 / 100Weighted blend: protein 25% · ingredients 22% · saturated fat 18% · sodium 15% · sugar 12% · fiber 8%

How it compares

ProductProtein per servingPer 100 gPer ozCalories
Del Monte Fresh Cut French Style Green Beans (this product)1g0.8g0.2g20.6
Hunt’s Diced Tomatoes1g0.8g0.2g30.2
Del Monte Fresh Cut Cream Style Sweet Corn1g0.8g0.2g70
Green Giant Whole Kernel Sweet Corn2g1.7g0.5g79.9
Plain cooked chicken breast (benchmark)31g8.8g~165

Nearly a free vegetable — 20 calories a serving

Green beans are the lightest thing in the canned-vegetable aisle, and the comparison table makes it obvious: at 20 calories per 1/2 cup, this can has roughly a quarter the calories of the corn and a clean three-ingredient label of green beans, water, and sea salt. There’s effectively no sugar (1g) and no fat. If your goal is to fill out a plate, add crunch, or hit the “half your plate vegetables” target without spending calories, green beans are close to free.

That near-zero calorie count is also why the B- here is the most context-dependent grade in the group. These beans aren’t a worse food than the peas or corn — they’re just a lighter one, so they carry less protein and fiber to score on, and they happen to be salted more heavily. Don’t read 73 as “mediocre.” Read it as “an almost perfectly clean vegetable with one fixable flaw,” and the flaw has an obvious fix.

The one knock is sodium — and you can rinse most of it away

Every canned vegetable carries some brine sodium; on these green beans it’s the highest of our canned veg at 380mg per serving, and that single number is the entire reason they sit a notch below the peas and corn. It’s the one honest thing to flag — and it’s also the one thing you control.

The fix is the standard canned-veg move, and it pays off more here than anywhere: drain and rinse. Pour off the liquid, rinse the beans under the tap for a few seconds, and you wash away on the order of 40% of the sodium — dropping these from 380mg toward 230mg per serving for free. Do that and a near-calorie-free, three-ingredient vegetable goes from “watch the salt” to “genuinely one of the smartest cheap things you can keep in a cupboard.” Season them yourself afterward and you decide how salty they are, not the can.

Scope

This page covers Del Monte Fresh Cut French Style Green Beans (8 oz/227 g), UPC 024000013983, as represented in USDA Branded Foods FDC 2658702. Del Monte sells multiple variants in this product line — other sizes, flavors, or fat levels may have different macros and Labelgrade scores. Manufacturers periodically reformulate; always cross-reference the actual package label, especially if you have allergies or dietary restrictions.

Ingredients (from the USDA Branded Foods entry)

GREEN BEANS, WATER, SEA SALT.

Where to buy

Affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. The Labelgrade score is independent of affiliate relationships. More.

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Quick Facts

Per serving · 0.5 cup

Size 8 oz/227 g
UPC 024000013983
Verified 2026-06-05 · checked monthly
20.6
Calories
1g
Protein 2% DV
3g
Carbs 1% DV
0g
Fat 0% DV
per 100 g
0.83g protein · 17 cal ·0.83g sugar ·314mg sodium
per oz (1 oz)
0.23g protein · 4.8 cal ·0.23g sugar ·89mg sodium
Sugar 1g
Fiber 0.968g · 3% DV
Saturated fat 0g
Trans fat 0g
Sodium 380mg · 17% DV
Cholesterol 0mg
Calcium 39.9mg · 3% DV
Iron 0.363mg · 2% DV
Potassium 100mg · 2% DV

See how this fits your day — protein calculator · macro calculator

Full nutrition facts
Nutrition Facts
Nutrient Per Serving (0.5 cup)
Calories20.6
Protein1g
Total Fat0g
Saturated Fat0g
Trans Fat0g
Total Carbohydrates3g
Dietary Fiber0.968g
Total Sugars1g
Sodium380mg
Cholesterol0mg
Calcium39.9mg
Iron0.363mg
Potassium100mg

Scope: This page applies specifically to Fresh Cut French Style Green Beans (8 oz/227 g) · UPC 024000013983. Other sizes, flavors, or formulations may differ.

How this fits each diet

Each score is computed from the same USDA nutrition + ingredient data, against the published rules of each diet. They tell you "does this food fit this diet" — not whether the diet is right for you.

Vegan
A+ 100/100

contains no listed animal products

Vegetarian
A+ 100/100

contains no listed meat or fish

Gluten-free
A+ 100/100

no wheat, barley, rye, or malt detected in USDA ingredient list

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Frequently Asked Questions

Are canned vegetables healthy?

Yes — canned vegetables are a genuinely smart, cheap pantry staple, and green beans are about the most innocent thing in the aisle. Canning keeps most of the nutrients of fresh produce, the cans never spoil, and they cost almost nothing, which makes it easy to actually hit your daily veg servings. These French-style green beans are nearly calorie-free — just 20 calories per 1/2 cup — with a three-ingredient label of beans, water, and salt. The one real catch is the sodium that comes with the brine, and on this product it's the highest of our canned vegetables (380mg). The fix is simple: drain and rinse before eating to wash a big chunk of it away.

Why do these green beans grade B- (73/100)?

Because they're an almost perfectly clean vegetable that gets dinged on exactly one dimension. Saturated fat is a perfect A+, sugar is an A+ (just 1g), and the three-ingredient list earns a B+. Protein density and fiber both grade low — structural, since the scorecard measures against high-protein, high-fiber foods and green beans are a light, low-calorie vegetable, not either. The single thing pulling these below the peas and corn is **sodium**: at 380mg per serving it grades C+, the highest of our canned veg. That one number is the whole reason for the B- instead of a B — and it's the one number you can cut yourself by draining and rinsing.

Does draining and rinsing really cut the sodium?

Yes, and on these green beans it matters most. Studies of canned vegetables find that draining off the liquid and giving the contents a quick rinse removes roughly 40% of the sodium. For these beans that takes the 380mg per serving down toward 230mg — turning the one weak spot on the label into something quite manageable. It costs nothing but a colander and a few seconds under the tap, and it's the single most worthwhile thing you can do with any can of vegetables, these especially.

Are canned green beans as nutritious as fresh or frozen?

Close. Canning preserves most of the fiber and minerals; the main losses are some heat-sensitive vitamin C and a little that leaches into the liquid. Frozen green beans hold onto slightly more vitamins because they're frozen near harvest, and fresh has the most — but both cost more and spoil. Since green beans are already a low-calorie, low-vitamin-density vegetable, those differences are small in absolute terms. The meaningful gap is the added sodium in the can, which fresh and frozen don't carry — and which a rinse mostly closes.

What's a serving, and how should I use them?

A serving is 1/2 cup — about 20 calories, so you can be generous. Drain, rinse, and warm them through (they're already cooked, so don't boil them soft); finish with a little butter, garlic, lemon, or black pepper. They're a near-free way to add volume and crunch to a plate, fold into a casserole, or round out a quick dinner. Because they bring so few calories, they're an easy 'fill half your plate with vegetables' move — just season them yourself after rinsing so you control the salt rather than the can.

When was this data last verified?

2026-06-05, against USDA FoodData Central FDC 2658702. We re-verify top-traffic pages monthly and update within 7 days of a reformulation.