Category Archives: canning

Getting Started with Home Canning

"Of Course I Can" WWII poster

As I was growing up, I remember mountains of produce and days spent processing enough food to keep our family of 8 through the winter.  Mom didn’t have air conditioning or even a ceiling fan.  It was hot work and long days.  Both my mom and my grandmother kept their canned goods stashed in a dark, cool corner of the basement, away from the wood stove.  Mom told me that her mom used to do all her canning on the wood cook stove. Every fall they’d butcher and can up a mess of pork and chicken, along with the garden produce during the season (no freezers or refrigerators available back then).  Mom was a little girl during the Great Depression and WWII.  Before she passed we talked about the “ration points” mentioned in the poster above – she still had some tucked away in a bureau.

At the moment we’re not facing rationing, but food prices are expected to continue to increase.  Home canning allows you to preserve almost any food in season, and even to can entire meals that are ready to go straight from the jar.  Once your jars are sealed, all you need is a cool, dark space to stash your bounty.  Below I cover some basic canning equipment that you can buy online or in most hardware stores.  You may also be able to find some of it used.

Basic Canning Equipment

Basic Equipment Needed for Canning

Starting at top left in the above photo and working clockwise.

Water Bath CannerWater bath canners are used for canning high acid foods (having a pH of 4.6 or lower).  Fruits, most soft spreads, tomatoes, pickles and other high acid foods can be safely processed in this canner.  Different commercial options are available, but you can also use any large pot, as long as you have enough room in the pot to cover the jars with at least one inch of water.  You must not allow jars to sit directly on the bottom of the pot, or they will be more likely to break.  One option is to make a “rack” of canning rings in the bottom of the pot.  IMO, real canners are fairly inexpensive and well worth the investment if you plan to do any amount of canning.  You can use your pressure canner for water bath canning – just leave the vent open.

Jelly Strainer Bag – The white baggie thing in the middle of the photo is a jelly strainer bag.  I love this thing.  Not only to I use it for straining jellies, I also use it for straining stocks and herbal infusions.

Pressure Canner/Steam Pressure Canner – A steam pressure canner is required for all low-acid foods, such as veggies, meat, soups and stews.  I don’t recommend canning things like bread, pumpkin butter or chocolate syrup at home. Botulism can be deadly.  If I had a nickel for every time I’ve heard someone say, “Well I know so-and-so who has done it this way for years and they never got sick”, I could retire early.  All it takes is one jar of food gone bad.  What’s your family’s health worth to you?  You should get your canner tested every 3-5 years at a local extension office to make sure it is holding pressure properly.

Kitchen ScaleKitchen scales are a necessity when you get into recipes like salsas or sauces, but they also come in handy for gauging how many jars you’ll need for the amount of produce you have, for knowing how much syrup to make to cover your fruit or for measuring sugar for jams and jellies.  The one I have used to be my grandmother’s.  It’s been around a while (okay, it’s much older than my kids), but it still works just fine.

Canning Ladle – A big, stainless steel ladle that holds at least 1 1/2 to two cups of product will allow you to fill jars much faster than a standard kitchen ladle.

Chopstick or thin non-metal spatula – You need some sort of long, thin object to run around the outside of jars to remove air bubbles.  We have chopsticks on hand, so I just use one of those.  Don’t use a knife or other metal object, as you may scratch the inside of the jar and damage it.

Kitchen tongs or a magnetic jar lid lifter – Again, since I have kitchen tongs on hand, I just use those, but magnetic jar lid lifters can also be used.  You want to hold your lids in nice hot water (not boiling) to get them ready to seal.  It’s a little hot to stick your fingers into.

Jar lifter – Another must have – canning jars get wicked hot, so you really need a proper jar lifter to move them about.

Jar Funnel – A good jar funnel will make it MUCH easier to fill jars, even wide mouth ones.  Big ladle, big funnel, and you’re done filling in half the time.

Food strainer

Food strainer – useful for making sauces.  Mine get used most for marinara sauce and apple sauce.

Apple Master

Apple Peeler/Corer/slicer – I use this more for dehydrating, but if you’re interested in canning apple pie filling, this would be handy.

What Foods Are Easiest to Can?

Full sugar jams and jellies are probably the easiest foods to start with, because they process for only short amounts of time in a water bath canner and are really hard to screw up.  Low sugar versions are only a bit trickier.  Plain tomatoes or tomato juice is also very simple, as are fruits and fruit juices.

Do I Really Need a Pressure Canner?

If you want to can vegetables, meat or meals – YES.  I pressure can more green beans than anything else out of my garden.  They’re my boys’ favorite veggie.

Is It Hard to Use a Pressure Canner?

Not really.  It takes more patience than anything else.  With a water bath canner, you lower jars into boiling water and start your timer.  With a pressure canner, you must let the canner exhaust steam for ten minutes.  Then you put the pressure regular in place.

pressure regulator and pressure gaugeSee the little round black thing on the right?  That’s the pressure regulator.  once the regulator is on, you wait for the pressure to build.  Once the pressure gets high enough, there’s a little button (the air vent/cover lock) that pops up to stop steam from venting (at least on my canner).

Air vent - cover lock

Once the button sets in place, you wait for the pressure to build some more, until you reach processing pressure.  Then you hold itat pressure for the required amount of time.  Then you turn off the heat and let the pressure drop to zero on it’s own (the little button will also pop back down).  When the button is up, you can’t open the lid.  This helps prevent you from doing something stupid by either burning yourself and/or busting all your jars.  Complicated – no, time consuming – yes.  Mom told me it’s a lot faster than when gramma had to water bath can everything for a really, really long time.

Will My Pressure Canner Explode?

Not very likely, unless you use some plastique.  It may be possible with older canners, which have been damaged or were improperly forged, but recently made steam pressure canners are pretty tough.  Mine is equipped with a locking mechanism, others bolt shut.

Pressure canner lock

You can’t operate the canner unless it’s locked tightly, and that is some pretty thick metal.  It also has a little overpressure plug that will blow if the pressure gets too high.

General Canning Tips

  • Get your jars, lids and all your equipment prepped before you start preparing your product.
  • Work from one direction to the other – from right to left or left to right, depending on how your stove is set up.  Don’t cross back and forth – it gets messy.
  • Keep everything hot.  You’ll remember this tip very quickly if you lower a cold jar into boiling water, or ladle hot syrup into a cold jar.  Jars break rather impressively and make a huge mess.
  • Always check and double check the edges of your jars and your lids.  Any imperfection along the edge of a jar, and it is unlikely to seal properly.
  • Keep everything clean.  You’ll have drips and spills, sure, but remember this is food prep, so try to keep your work space clear of outside contaminants such as hair or dirt.

For additional information on canning and other home food preservation methods, see “New to Food Preserving – Start Here“.

To view canning recipes on this site, visit the Recipes page and scroll down to Canning and Preserving Recipes.

Other posts in this series:

Become More Self-Reliant – Start Here

New to Gardening – Start Here – Tips for Beginners

What topics would you like to see in our “Getting Started” series?  Leave me a comment below.  We’re planning more on home food preservation, chickens and living frugally, for starters.

This post has been added to Homestead Barn Hop #47 at the Prairie Homestead, Fat Tuesday at Real Food Forager and Simple Lives Thursday #83 at  A Little Bit of Spain in Iowa.

Ground Cherry Lemon Jelly

Ground Cherry Lemon Jelly

If you happen to raise ground cherries, you may end up finding yourself swamped with an excess of the little fruits.  This recipe will help you use up a LOT of them in a hurry.  The lemon cuts the sweetness of the ground cherries, and my family prefers a jelly over a jam for ground cherries because their large number of seeds makes a jam almost gritty.

I created this recipe when I was still using standard pectin, so there is quite a bit of sugar.  I think you could successfully cut the sugar in half if you used Pomona’s Pectin or other low sugar pectin products, but I wouldn’t cut it more than that because the large amount of lemon juice.

This jelly tastes like the best old-fashioned lemon drop you ever had.  Serve it on toast with a bit of honey or almond butter and you’ve got a little slice of lemony heaven.

Ground Cherry Lemon Jelly Recipe

Ingredients

3 ½ cups ground cherry juice
½ cup fresh squeezed lemon juice
1 tablespoon lemon zest (preferably organic)
¼ teaspoon butter
1 package powdered pectin (1.75 oz) (I use Sure Jell)
6 cups sugar

Directions

To prepare ground cherry juice, husk and wash ground cherries, run them through a food processor.  I used around two 11″x22″ cardboard strawberry picking flats full of ground cherries to get 3 1/2 cups of juice.

ground cherries in the husk
husked ground cherries

Cook gently for at least 15 minutes, until very soft. Drain through jelly bag for several hours or overnight. Avoid squeezing bag to keep juice clear.

Prepared ground cherry juice and lemons

Grate one tablespoon of zest from 1-2 lemon(s).  I use a Microplane zester.  Juice the lemon(s) to obtain ½ cup juice (you either need a large lemon or lemons or can substitute a little bottled juice to make up the difference).

Sterilize seven 8-ounce jars, keep hot.  Heat lids and rings in hot water, keep warm but not boiling.  Fill water bath canner and bring to boil.

Measure sugar and set aside. Combine juices and zest, stir in pectin and butter. Bring to full rolling boil over high heat, stirring constantly. Immediately add all of the sugar. Bring back to full rolling boil and boil 3 minutes, stirring constantly.

Ladle jam into sterilized jars leaving 1/4″ headspace. Wipe rims clean and screw on the lids. Process for 10 minutes in water bath canner (add 1 minute for every 1,000 feet above sea level).  Makes around 7 half pint jars. This time around I ended up with 6 1/2 jars (the half went into the fridge).

These make beautiful and unique Christmas gifts, too (you know no one has ever gotten lemon ground cherry jelly before).  Ground cherries can produce a lot of fruit in a small area, so four to six plants should be plenty for a batch or two of jelly and fresh eating.  I’m sure you could substitute Cape Gooseberries instead of ground cherries, if you have them.  I know it late this year for most folks to try them (unless you’re in the southern hemisphere), but keep this in mind for next season.

This post has been added to the Homestead Barn Hop #34 at the Prairie Homestead.

Spiced Crabapples and Honey Cinnamon Crabapples

Last week I got a call from my neighbor, Betty, about crabapples being ripe at another friends’ home.  (Everyone should have a neighbor like Betty.  :-)   Never one to let produce go to waste, I warned the boys that we were going to go pick crabapples.  My eldest, wanting to get done sooner, headed out to the wild trees at the border of out field.  These are normally so bug infested as to be inedible, but this year one had a bumper crop, and we were able to pick quite a few that were in nice shape.

My apple pickers.

I went picking over at the neighbor’s, too.  Our apples were smaller, firmer and greener.

There’s were larger, softer and dead ripe.  Just a bit past prime for canning whole, as they softened up and fell apart a bit during processing, but they were still delicious.

I canned the apples whole two ways – as honey cinnamon apples and and spiced apples.

How to Prepare Crabapples for Canning

Because the neighbor’s apples had been sprayed (not a lot, I was told, but still sprayed), I washed them first in water with a squirt of my non-toxic dish detergent, then rinsed them in water with white vinegar in it, them rinsed again with clean water (and took the water out after to water the flowers).  I worked from right to left, soap wash, vinegar rinse, clean rinse and into the dish drainer.

Cut out the blossom end of the apple, but leave the stem intact.  You don’t need to core the apple.  Both of these recipes could be made with sliced apples, too, if you don’t have crabapples available.  After removing the blossom end, poke the apple with a fork five times to allow even penetration of syrup.

Note:  You want to prep all your canning equipment and syrup before you start cutting out the blossom ends, so you can get the apples in the syrup right away to minimize browning.

Preparing Your Canning Equipment

Apples can be canned in a water bath canner.  For full instructions on water bath canning, I recommend the Ball Blue Book of Canning and PreservingCanning equipment includes:

  • your water bath canner
  • clean and sterilized quart jars (I run mine through the dishwasher and time it so they are hot when I’m ready to can)
  • lids and rings in hot (not boiling) water
  • jar lifter
  • tongs or lid lifter to grab rings
  • funnel
  • clean cloth to wipe jar rims
  • ladle
  • wooden spoon for stirring
  • chopstick to remove air bubbles
  •  syrup (recipe below)

Honey Cinnamon Crabapple Recipe

This recipe was inspired by the book Putting it up with Honey, where they feature instructions for apple slices canned with honey.

Ingredients

5 pounds whole crabapples (original recipe called for 15 pounds of apples, which were washed, cored, peeled and sliced)
1 1/2 quarts water
1 3/4 cup honey
3 cinnamon sticks

Directions

Prepare syrup by adding honey to water and heating until the honey is dissolved (this is a nice way to use crystallized honey straight from the jar).  Add cinnamon sticks, simmer five minutes.  Add apples (with blossom ends removed) to syrup.  Simmer five minutes (just to heat through), you don’t want to overcook them, as they will cook more during processing.  Apple skins will darken as they cook (think applesauce or baked apples).

Load hot apples into hot quart jars, fill with syrup to 1/2 inch headspace.  Run you chopstick or small non-metallic spatula between the peaches and the jar to remove air bubbles (metal may scratch the inside of the jar).  Add extra syrup if needed.  Wipe rim clean, screw on lid (not too tight – air must escape during processing).

* Note:  if using Tattler lids, use 1 inch headspace, tighten rings, then unscrew 1/4 inch.

Place jars on rack in canner.  When all apples are packed (you should have 4-5 jars), lower jars into water.  Make sure jars are covered by 1-2 inches of water.  Bring to boil, process (boil gently) 20 minutes.  (See peach post for photos of canning setup and jars in canner.)

When the cooking time is up, remove jars at once and place on a rack or on towels away from heat and away from any draft.  If using Tattler lids, tighten rings as soon as they are removed from the water bath.  This is not necessary for standard canning lids.

After 12-24 hours, check lids for seal.  Standard lids should be concave in the center and held down tightly.  Tattler lids should be snug if you try to pull them off.  I love listening to the “ping” as the jars seal.

Spiced Crabapple Recipe

This recipe is from my neighbor, Betty, who has been making it for years.

Ingredients

60-65 whole crabapples (enough to fill 5-6 quarts – I used 70 apples ~ 6.5 pounds, because my apples were small)
9 cups water
1/2 cup vinegar
6 cups white sugar
1 cup brown sugar
1 1/2 tablespoons whole cloves, placed in a spice bag

Directions

Prepare syrup by mixing all ingredients except apples and heating until the sugar is dissolved.  Boil one minute.  Add apples (with blossom ends removed) to syrup.  Simmer five minutes (just to heat through), you don’t want to overcook them, as they will cook more during processing.  Apple skins will darken as they cook (think applesauce or baked apples).

Load hot apples into hot quart jars, fill with syrup to 1/2 inch headspace.  Run you chopstick or small non-metallic spatula between the peaches and the jar to remove air bubbles (metal may scratch the inside of the jar).  Add extra syrup if needed.  Wipe rim clean, screw on lid (not too tight – air must escape during processing).

* Note:  if using Tattler lids, use 1 inch headspace, tighten rings, then unscrew 1/4 inch.

Place jars on rack in canner.  When all apples are packed (you should have 4-5 jars), lower jars into water.  Make sure jars are covered by 1-2 inches of water.  Bring to boil, process (boil gently) 20 minutes.  (See peach post for photos of canning setup and jars in canner.)

When the cooking time is up, remove jars at once and place on a rack or on towels away from heat and away from any draft.  If using Tattler lids, tighten rings as soon as they are removed from the water bath.  This is not necessary for standard canning lids.

After 12-24 hours, check lids for seal.  Standard lids should be concave in the center and held down tightly.  Tattler lids should be snug if you try to pull them off. 

I finished with four quarts of honey cinnamon apples (and about eight apples I couldn’t squeeze into jar that I just put in the fridge) and six quarts of spiced apples.  Honey cinnamon apples are to the rear and spiced are in front.

I ended up using our home apples for the spiced apples and Betty’s apples for the honey cinnamon apples.  Our home apples were smaller, so more of them fit into a jar.  I noticed that while the honey cinnamon apples were processing, they became quite soft (some of them fell apart a bit), so I decided to process the balance of the very ripe apples into apple sauce and fruit leather.

How to Make Applesauce and Apple Fruit Leather

Apple sauce is super easy, especially when your apples are really ripe.  Just place clean apples in a heavy bottom pot with enough water to cover the bottom of the pan so it doesn’t burn.  Cook until mushy.  I noticed my apples had a lot of liquid, so I put them in a colander to drain off some of the juice before processing further.  (Save the juice in another bowl if you have an excess – it’s quite tasty.)

Employ child labor (if available) to turn crank on food strainer (my son loves turning the crank).  Load  the apples, turn the crank and you have applesauce.

We ended up with a big bowl of applesauce and nearly two quarts of juice.

If you don’t have a food strainer, you can peel and core apples and cook until soft, and them puree with a potato masher.  This will give a chunkier sauce.  A food mill or chinois will also work, but I really like my food strainer.  Add a pinch of salt and a bit of maple syrup if you like (my apples were really sweet and tasty, so I skipped this).

To make fruit leather, oil your dehydrator’s fruit leather sheet with coconut oil or other neutral oil. Spread sauce uniformly over sheet, between 1/8 to 1/4 inch thick.  Too thick and it will take a very long time to dry, too thin and it will be brittle instead of elastic.  Dry at 135 F until leathery.  I usually run my dehydrator overnight and it is done by morning.  When dry, simply peel it off the sheets and store in a sealed container.  You could refrigerate for longer shelf life, but it’s not necessary.  Ours usually doesn’t last very long anyway.  :-)

That’s my first experience with crabapples.  So far, so good.  The honey cinnamon apples are sweet with just a hint of spice.  I haven’t sampled the spiced apples yet, but they smelled good.  To eat the apples, you just nibble them off the stem and core.

Thanks for stopping by, and I hope you enjoyed the post.

This post has been added to Preparedness Challenge #26 at Homestead Revival,
Domestically Divine for September 20, 2011 at Far Above Rubies and
Simple Lives Thursday at A Little Bit of Spain in Iowa.


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