Yesterday's veggie soup |
I
typically hot water bath can all my produce.
Others may pressurize, freeze, ferment or dehydrate. It’s about your favorite method and what
works well with specific ingredients.
Here
are a few simple suggestions for canning:
Pack
as many different vitamins and minerals into everything you preserve by adding
extra ingredients. Example: Most any vegetable can be added to tomato sauces.
Making
a basic tomato sauce allows you to use it for more recipes than specific ones
such as those with hot peppers or anything in the cabbage family.
Basket of peaches |
Most
fruit preservation recipes call for heavy sweet syrup. It’s not necessary to use that much sweetener. Less is healthier and works better in most
recipes.
Some
herb flavors don’t hold up to preservation.
A rule of thumb, if the leaves are tender/soft the flavor won’t stand up
to heat. Basil, parsley, celery herb and
chives are a few. If the leaves are
tough, they tend to hold the flavor. A
few are rosemary, thyme, and sage. Add a
larger quantity of the tender and go easy on the tougher varieties.
Squashes
can be preserved alone. Winter squash
can be baked, pureed and added to tomato sauce.
Summer squash can be chopped, without peeling, and added to most any
soup mixture. Pumpkin is another squash
that can be preserved or combined into other mixtures.
Onions
are rich in antioxidants and can be added to most vegetable mixtures. If your family doesn’t like onions, cook,
puree and no one will be the wiser.
Garlic
is a bit tricky when preserving. With
the exception of pickling, I don’t usually put it in preserved foods. It can pretty much ruin the taste of the
recipe if it becomes so strong it becomes bitter.
There
are choices for making vegetable stock.
Step one is use every vegetable you have in your garden or find at
markets and stores; cook until tender.
(A) Can or freeze it this
way. (B) Puree then preserve. (C) Or, you can take the extra step of
straining out the vegetable chunks after cooking and preserve only the
broth. Each has its benefits and uses.
Old photo of my set up for canning tomatoes |
Adding
meat to vegetable preservation requires pressurizing to kill bacteria.
I
mentioned the cabbage family of vegetables earlier. I caution you to preserve these by themselves
instead of adding to other soups or mixes.
In tomato soup or juice, it tends to become the dominate flavor – not
bad if that’s what you want. Some of
these are cabbage, broccoli, and cauliflower.
They all freeze, can, and pickle well.
I’ve
never dehydrated vegetables but if you have a dehydrating unit (homemade or
bought) or a convection oven, you can accomplish some pretty interesting
recipes.
The
point is to use fresh produce to insure the best flavor, the most nutrients, and
the least exposure to harmful pathogens.
Plus, have it all winter. Water
bath and pressurized preserved produce will still be good even if you lose your
power for an extended period.
For
the inexperienced, I recommend Ball’s Blue Book of canning or offer to help an
experienced cook for a few sessions of hands on training. Supplies may be bought new and most every
estate sale will feature a good supply of jars, rims, and cookers. Caution, every cooker and jar must be in
perfect shape or preservation won’t be accomplished. Nothing is sadder than to go to all that work
and have it fail. Worse yet is the
possibility of food poisoning.
Want
to have some real fun? Do like they did
in grandma’s era – get a group of family and friends together for a day of
preserving your garden produce. Everyone
brings their food, bags, jars, etc. and each person does a task. Stay to clean up the mess if you ever want to
be invited back!!! At the end of the
day, everyone takes home a share and it was a great time to catch up with
the lives and events of those close to you.
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