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Thread started 07/30/10 9:10am

Mach

Canning ~

Anyone here do any canning ? ~ what do you Can ?

I did Beets last night biggrin

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Reply #1 posted 07/30/10 9:13am

TotalANXiousNE
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No, it's one of the things, I've always wanted to try and never got into. That and making jelly.

What else do you can?

I've reached in darkness and come out with treasure
I layed down with love and I woke up with lies
Whats it all worth only the heart can measure
It's not whats in the mirror but what's left inside
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Reply #2 posted 07/30/10 9:13am

kewlschool

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Nice picture!

99.9% of everything I say is strictly for my own entertainment
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Reply #3 posted 07/30/10 9:17am

CuddlyBear

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I used to do tomatoes. Wish I still could. sad

Christopher damn!
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Reply #4 posted 07/30/10 9:26am

ActOfGod319

As kids, my sister and I grew up on canning and jam-making and home preserving!! We even had our own honey untill all our bees caught a contagious disease and all died off!! We made our own pickled onions, chutneys, jams, u name it!!!

Now my parents hardly do anything like that cos they are senior citizens now and find it all too tiring 2 do now!!!!sad sad sad

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Reply #5 posted 07/30/10 9:26am

Mach

TotalANXiousNESS said:

No, it's one of the things, I've always wanted to try and never got into. That and making jelly.

What else do you can?

Both are pretty easy to do hun ~ jump on board with it !

Jelly/Jams

Peppers

Tomatoes

Pickles

Relish

and so on ... biggrin

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Reply #6 posted 07/30/10 9:27am

Mach

kewlschool said:

Nice picture!

Thanx biggrin

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Reply #7 posted 07/30/10 9:27am

Mach

CuddlyBear said:

I used to do tomatoes. Wish I still could. sad

Why can you not ?

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Reply #8 posted 07/30/10 9:28am

Mach

ActOfGod319 said:

As kids, my sister and I grew up on canning and jam-making and home preserving!! We even had our own honey untill all our bees caught a contagious disease and all died off!! We made our own pickled onions, chutneys, jams, u name it!!!

Now my parents hardly do anything like that cos they are senior citizens now and find it all too tiring 2 do now!!!!sad sad sad

So do you still do them then ? ~ it's not really hard specially if you do small batches biggrin

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Reply #9 posted 07/30/10 9:30am

Poiple

I've never canned, but my grandparents used to can like they thought a zombie invasion was imminent. They would can any and everything--beets, green beans, corn, pickles, soup starter (tomatoes, corn, butterbeans, green beans), almost any kind of preserves you can think of, apples, pears, peaches, you name it.

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Reply #10 posted 07/30/10 9:31am

Mach

Poiple said:

I've never canned, but my grandparents used to can like they thought a zombie invasion was imminent. They would can any and everything--beets, green beans, corn, pickles, soup starter (tomatoes, corn, butterbeans, green beans), almost any kind of preserves you can think of, apples, pears, peaches, you name it.

Cool !

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Reply #11 posted 07/30/10 9:36am

Poiple

Oh, and one other thing Gramma used to can was chow-chow. Don't know if you're familiar with it, but it includes cabbage, green tomatoes, onions, and I think maybe okra and/or squash, and various spices. May sound disgusting, but it was fabulous as a relish.

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Reply #12 posted 07/30/10 9:40am

MoniGram

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I would love to can...but I am actually afraid to try it.

Proud Memaw to Seyhan Olivia Christine ,Zoey Cirilo Jaylee & Ellie Abigail Lillian mushy
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Reply #13 posted 07/30/10 9:45am

XxAxX

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used to can raspberry and blackberry jam with grandma when i was younger.. drool

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Reply #14 posted 07/30/10 9:48am

Genesia

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I'd love to, but I just don't have enough storage space for preserved food. pout

I do make sauerkraut, though - just a couple jars at a time. nod

We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #15 posted 07/30/10 9:52am

Mach

Poiple said:

Oh, and one other thing Gramma used to can was chow-chow. Don't know if you're familiar with it, but it includes cabbage, green tomatoes, onions, and I think maybe okra and/or squash, and various spices. May sound disgusting, but it was fabulous as a relish.

I love chow chows ~ so mant different wats to make and use it biggrin

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Reply #16 posted 07/30/10 9:53am

Mach

MoniGram said:

I would love to can...but I am actually afraid to try it.

Oh GURL ~ it's NOT hard to do ~ small batches rock

so come on ova and we'll do a run of something hug

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Reply #17 posted 07/30/10 9:55am

Mach

XxAxX said:

used to can raspberry and blackberry jam with grandma when i was younger.. drool

Yum ! smile

The 1st thing I ever did was peach jam ~ and omg it was amazing !!

Michael did some Mint ( fresh mint from my herb garden ) Jelly last year and it was YUM ~ still have 1 jar razz

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Reply #18 posted 07/30/10 9:56am

Mach

Genesia said:

I'd love to, but I just don't have enough storage space for preserved food. pout

I do make sauerkraut, though - just a couple jars at a time. nod

I need to try sauerkraut ~ I LOVE it but have never done my own ... yet

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Reply #19 posted 07/30/10 10:00am

XxAxX

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Mach said:

XxAxX said:

used to can raspberry and blackberry jam with grandma when i was younger.. drool

Yum ! smile

The 1st thing I ever did was peach jam ~ and omg it was amazing !!

Michael did some Mint ( fresh mint from my herb garden ) Jelly last year and it was YUM ~ still have 1 jar razz

i'd do it again, and in fact think it would be really great to be one of those people who hand delivers those lovely little jars of goodies to people, with a bow and a flowery note. however, it's far more likely that i'll just accidentally kill a bunch of people via botulism. neutral

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Reply #20 posted 07/30/10 10:02am

Mach

XxAxX said:

Mach said:

Yum ! smile

The 1st thing I ever did was peach jam ~ and omg it was amazing !!

Michael did some Mint ( fresh mint from my herb garden ) Jelly last year and it was YUM ~ still have 1 jar razz

i'd do it again, and in fact think it would be really great to be one of those people who hand delivers those lovely little jars of goodies to people, with a bow and a flowery note. however, it's far more likely that i'll just accidentally kill a bunch of people via botulism. neutral

eek

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Reply #21 posted 07/30/10 10:03am

XxAxX

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Mach said:

XxAxX said:

i'd do it again, and in fact think it would be really great to be one of those people who hand delivers those lovely little jars of goodies to people, with a bow and a flowery note. however, it's far more likely that i'll just accidentally kill a bunch of people via botulism. neutral

eek

well not on PURPOSE, of course.

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Reply #22 posted 07/30/10 10:08am

Genesia

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Mach said:

Genesia said:

I'd love to, but I just don't have enough storage space for preserved food. pout

I do make sauerkraut, though - just a couple jars at a time. nod

I need to try sauerkraut ~ I LOVE it but have never done my own ... yet

It's super easy. Shred a cabbage, sprinkle in a tablespoon of salt, add 1/4 c. of whey (drained from a container of yogurt), and pound the living crap out of the lot. (You want the cabbage to release some juice.) Stuff the cabbage into a couple of clean quart jars (leave some headroom, the kraut will "grow" during fermentation) and screw on the lids (not too tight, you want some of the gas to be able to escape). Try to get the cabbage below the level of the juice - but you needn't worry if it isn't fully submerged. It's going to "heave" no matter what you do.

Just leave the jars on your countertop for a few days. No need to refrigerate - you need some warmth for the fermentation. You'll probably get some juice dribbling out around the lids - just put the jars on a kitchen towel or a couple layers of paper towels. After three days or so, just wipe the jars off, screw the lids down, and put the lot in the frig. The flavor will be mild to begin with, but will deepen for up to six months.

Fermentation isn't nearly as worrisome as canning in terms of safety because the lactic acid kills pathogens. If your kraut is unsafe, it will smell like the dickens. (Normal: a slight sulfur-y odor while it's fermenting. Shouldn't be objectionable.) You'll know if it's spoiled.

We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #23 posted 07/30/10 10:09am

Ottensen

Mach said:

TotalANXiousNESS said:

No, it's one of the things, I've always wanted to try and never got into. That and making jelly.

What else do you can?

Both are pretty easy to do hun ~ jump on board with it !

Jelly/Jams

Peppers

Tomatoes

Pickles

Relish

and so on ... biggrin

...but don't you need special equipment for it? The process always sounds so intimidating, although canning is really popular here for fruits, jams, and pickles. I'm just starting to get back into baking my own bread dead , the idea of canning is completely daunting to me stickpoke

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Reply #24 posted 07/30/10 10:13am

Mach

Genesia said:

Mach said:

I need to try sauerkraut ~ I LOVE it but have never done my own ... yet

It's super easy. Shred a cabbage, sprinkle in a tablespoon of salt, add 1/4 c. of whey (drained from a container of yogurt), and pound the living crap out of the lot. (You want the cabbage to release some juice.) Stuff the cabbage into a couple of clean quart jars (leave some headroom, the kraut will "grow" during fermentation) and screw on the lids (not too tight, you want some of the gas to be able to escape). Try to get the cabbage below the level of the juice - but you needn't worry if it isn't fully submerged. It's going to "heave" no matter what you do.

Just leave the jars on your countertop for a few days. No need to refrigerate - you need some warmth for the fermentation. You'll probably get some juice dribbling out around the lids - just put the jars on a kitchen towel or a couple layers of paper towels. After three days or so, just wipe the jars off, screw the lids down, and put the lot in the frig. The flavor will be mild to begin with, but will deepen for up to six months.

Fermentation isn't nearly as worrisome as canning in terms of safety because the lactic acid kills pathogens. If your kraut is unsafe, it will smell like the dickens. (Normal: a slight sulfur-y odor while it's fermenting. Shouldn't be objectionable.) You'll know if it's spoiled.

Wow ~ sounds pretty easy

TY

I will try this when I return from my TX vacation

hug

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Reply #25 posted 07/30/10 10:21am

Genesia

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Mach said:

Genesia said:

It's super easy. Shred a cabbage, sprinkle in a tablespoon of salt, add 1/4 c. of whey (drained from a container of yogurt), and pound the living crap out of the lot. (You want the cabbage to release some juice.) Stuff the cabbage into a couple of clean quart jars (leave some headroom, the kraut will "grow" during fermentation) and screw on the lids (not too tight, you want some of the gas to be able to escape). Try to get the cabbage below the level of the juice - but you needn't worry if it isn't fully submerged. It's going to "heave" no matter what you do.

Just leave the jars on your countertop for a few days. No need to refrigerate - you need some warmth for the fermentation. You'll probably get some juice dribbling out around the lids - just put the jars on a kitchen towel or a couple layers of paper towels. After three days or so, just wipe the jars off, screw the lids down, and put the lot in the frig. The flavor will be mild to begin with, but will deepen for up to six months.

Fermentation isn't nearly as worrisome as canning in terms of safety because the lactic acid kills pathogens. If your kraut is unsafe, it will smell like the dickens. (Normal: a slight sulfur-y odor while it's fermenting. Shouldn't be objectionable.) You'll know if it's spoiled.

Wow ~ sounds pretty easy

TY

I will try this when I return from my TX vacation

hug

It really couldn't be easier. I've also done a version called curtido that has grated carrots, thinly sliced onions, a little dried oregano, and some red pepper flakes.

[Edited 7/30/10 10:22am]

We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #26 posted 07/30/10 10:21am

Cerebus

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Mach said:

Genesia said:

I'd love to, but I just don't have enough storage space for preserved food. pout

I do make sauerkraut, though - just a couple jars at a time. nod

I need to try sauerkraut ~ I LOVE it but have never done my own ... yet

I was just thinking the exact same thing. Totally want to try it.

I don't can as much as I used to, would like to, or should, probably. Most of what is grown in the garden gets eaten by me, friends or family. I've done peppers a couple times, but that's really as far as it goes with whole vegetables. I do can sauces, though, because I have more dry storage space than freezer space. As a family we make apple butter (and sometimes apple sauce) CLOSE to every year (not always, but most). It's a family tradition back to at least my great grandmother when the whole clan lived in Washington and Oregon. I've got a ton of mason jars, but I just end up using them for dried herbs, rice, beans and other bulk purchased dry goods.

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Reply #27 posted 07/30/10 10:27am

Mach

Ottensen said:

Mach said:

Both are pretty easy to do hun ~ jump on board with it !

Jelly/Jams

Peppers

Tomatoes

Pickles

Relish

and so on ... biggrin

...but don't you need special equipment for it? The process always sounds so intimidating, although canning is really popular here for fruits, jams, and pickles. I'm just starting to get back into baking my own bread dead , the idea of canning is completely daunting to me stickpoke

Yes if you are doing larger runs ~ We have all the "stuffs" but when I do small batches I just use boiling water in a pot and a couple/few jars

Michael is into the larger runs with all the gear

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Reply #28 posted 07/30/10 10:28am

Mach

Genesia said:

Mach said:

Wow ~ sounds pretty easy

TY

I will try this when I return from my TX vacation

hug

It really couldn't be easier. I've also done a version called curtido that has grated carrots, thinly sliced onions, a little dried oregano, and some red pepper flakes.

[Edited 7/30/10 10:22am]

Ohhh that sounds good !

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Reply #29 posted 07/30/10 10:35am

Cerebus

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Mach said:

Genesia said:

It really couldn't be easier. I've also done a version called curtido that has grated carrots, thinly sliced onions, a little dried oregano, and some red pepper flakes.

[Edited 7/30/10 10:22am]

Ohhh that sounds good !

It does. nod Although I may leave out the dried oregano. Do you prepare it the same as you described above? Add the extra ingredients before or after pounding?

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