Author Topic: primitives discuss canning  (Read 1105 times)

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Offline franksolich

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primitives discuss canning
« on: August 10, 2012, 09:09:58 PM »
http://www.democraticunderground.com/115712944

Oh my.

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grasswire (34,503 posts)

Are you canning/preserving this season? If so, what's cooking?

I have requests from family in Seattle for a lot of applesauce from farmers market apples, so I need to lay in some more jars -- it seems that almost all of my jars were given away last year!

Blackberry syrup is on my game plan. Bread and butter pickles. Dilled green tomatoes. Nothing too exotic there.

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NRaleighLiberal (22,881 posts)

1. we've got spiced beets (5 pts), roasted sauce (14 pts) and tomatoes (21 qts) canned - froze lots of blackberries, blueberries and cherries, froze some roasted sauce, and are dehydrating cherries, tomatoes and peppers (to make paprika). We are in pretty good shape. Got some more paprika to make as well as making some baked eggplant rounds to freeze.

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grasswire (34,503 posts)

3. you make paprika?

wow. From what variety of peppers?

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NRaleighLiberal (22,881 posts)

5. Easy! Take red, fully ripe sweet bells - mix in a few red Anaheims or Padrons - seed and core them - cut into thin slices and put in a dehydrator, run at 135 for several hours until the peppers slices/strips are dry and brittle. Whiz them in a food chopper or spice grinder until as coarse or fine as you wish - just incredible aroma and flavor, puts commercial stuff to shame. Mixing in hot peppers to titrate to the heat level you wish is easy.

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Rowdyboy (19,704 posts)

2. 2 gallons of dill pickles, frozen asparagus (only a couple of lbs-we ate the rest)....

and frozen squash, heirloom tomatoes and pesto. Still to come is muscadine jelly. And its a city lot!

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grasswire (34,503 posts)

4. never tasted muscadine jelly

what's it like?

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watrwefitinfor (1,097 posts)

11. It's like heaven.

Like nothing else you ever tasted. Especially if it's made with the wild black muscadines and the hulls are included. We call it grape hull preserves (or as my grandfather said, per-SARVES).

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sinkingfeeling (25,024 posts)

6. I already canned blackberries, made perserves, cherry jelly, and canned my grape tomatoes.

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Denninmi (2,936 posts)

7. Boy, this is really my off year.

April freezes wiped out virtually ALL fruit here, and the summer heat and drought took care of the few survivors such as blueberries and raspberries, yields and size were very low. Nothing there to put up.

I put about 50 quart bags of sweet corn in the freezer last week/weekend. My earliest corn harvest every by about 3 weeks.

I am good on most everything else, just want to use the 2011 up. All I will put up is salsa and tomato juice. My tomatoes are about 2-33 weeks out from main production starting, which is actually fairly average timing, generally my big tomato processing period is the first 3 weeks in September. I've got the usual sweet and mild hot peppers and onions out there to go into salsa.

And that's it.

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grasswire (34,503 posts)

8. black walnuts this year?

I fondly remember your telling of running over the nuts to crack them.

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Denninmi (2,936 posts)

10. Ah, thank God, NO!!!!

They are completely alternate bearing. Bumper crop, trees groaning with the load in the "on" year (which is the odd # years here in my area) and not a single nut, not even a single spring flower or catkin on any tree.

They synchronize somehow. ALL of the trees in the area are on the same cycle. I don't know how it works, or how big the area is in which trees all synchonize. I know that as I drive around in my area, my normal 20-ish mile range, they're all either bearing or not from year to year.

And I'm so glad. That was a LOT of work.

Oh now.

I have no idea why--I thought for sure the Great Barack Drought of '12 would depress the output--but the walnut trees here produced their usual bumper-crop.....just as they produced last year, and the year before, and the year before that, and the year before the year before that, and so on, no "cycle."

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Major Nikon (5,057 posts)

9. I've been making peach preserves

I started harvesting the first of my two peach trees a couple of months ago. By next weekend I should be done harvesting the last of them.

When franksolich wants canned goods, he gets them at the grocery store.

Cheaper, easier, cleaner, quicker.
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Offline Chris_

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Re: primitives discuss canning
« Reply #1 on: August 10, 2012, 09:15:53 PM »
She needs to "lay in" some more jars.  Well hot damn, it's gonna be a long spell before next year's crop.  Better do yer gettin' while ya kin.

 :whatever:
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Offline Carl

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Re: primitives discuss canning
« Reply #2 on: August 10, 2012, 09:39:06 PM »
What the hell is roasted sauce?

Offline GOBUCKS

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Re: primitives discuss canning
« Reply #3 on: August 10, 2012, 10:26:53 PM »
I'm surprised poor addled grasswipe Judy isn't canning watermelon.

Offline Chris_

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Re: primitives discuss canning
« Reply #4 on: August 10, 2012, 10:27:14 PM »
I'm surprised poor addled grasswipe Judy isn't canning watermelon.
She can't get them to fit in the jar.
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Offline obumazombie

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Re: primitives discuss canning
« Reply #5 on: August 10, 2012, 10:35:45 PM »
Anyone remember the Jack Nicholson movie "Going South" ? It might seem like a derail, but it relates directly to the topic. Well, almost directly.
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Offline Chris_

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Re: primitives discuss canning
« Reply #6 on: August 10, 2012, 10:39:37 PM »
Anyone remember the Jack Nicholson movie "Going South" ?

Just you. :p
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Offline obumazombie

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Re: primitives discuss canning
« Reply #7 on: August 10, 2012, 10:45:34 PM »
Just you. :p

Apricots just seem to work best...

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Offline delilahmused

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Re: primitives discuss canning
« Reply #8 on: August 10, 2012, 10:57:51 PM »
I just freeze everything. Canning requires too much work and preserving fruit takes way too much sugar. Chop them into usable portions freeze individual slices on a cookie sheet, put in seal a meal bags. When I need some for something I just take out what I need and reseal the rest. I dry a lot of stuff too. Zucchini chips are awesome. Garlic powder...a little salt and dry until crisp.

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