T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1887.1 | Comments on canning (jam/jelly) | BOOKIE::AITEL | Everyone's entitled to my opinion. | Fri Jul 21 1989 12:37 | 33 |
| I've found large canning pots in places like KMart and Purity
Supreme Supermarket. A cooks store would have them too, but
probably at a higher price. My canning pot setup came with
- pot
- rack, with handles to raise the rack and hang it from
the sides of the pot
- tongs shaped to pick up a hot jar out of the water, a
real necessity!
- a wide-mouth funnel, another necessity
The pot is really huge - probably 18" high and a good 16-18" in
diameter. You need a huge pot if you're going to can in quart
containers. If you're ONLY going to do jelly in half pint
jars, you might get away with a smaller pot. But good luck
finding a rack that will fit! Also, you don't want the jars to
touch either each other or the side of the pot. The canning
pots have racks with spots to put each jar, and are formed to
keep the jars from migrating. Since the canning pot was fairly
cheap and can be stored away in the basement most of the year,
I thought it was worth buying.
Make sure you have a good candy thermometer, too. You can try
doing the old-fashioned method of testing the jam/jelly by taking
a spoonful out, but the thermometer is much easier and you don't
risk sugar-burns. Get one that will clip onto the side of the pot,
if possible, so you don't have to hold the thermometer over that
pot of boiling sugar mix.
Have fun! Once you get the hang of it you'll be creating your
own yummy recipes. I made mango/peach jam once, and it was really
wonderful! Thanks to the produce department's reduced racks, I
got the ingredients cheaply and in quantity.
--Louise
|
1887.2 | Flea markets! | ALLVAX::LUBY | DTN 287-3204 | Fri Jul 21 1989 13:14 | 7 |
|
I saw some canning pots at a flea market this past weekend.
If there is a large one near you, check it out! The one
I was at was in Providence RI.
Karen
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1887.3 | | SADU::NICHOLSON | | Sat Jul 22 1989 12:50 | 14 |
|
For some good info on canning you should get the "Ball Blue Book".
This book has step by step instrustions on canning and freezing.It
also tell you what equipment you'll need. Try the insert in the
Surejell box(this is pectin).
Farm Journal also has a very good book on canning and freezing.
It has recipes for just about any kind of jelly or jams.
Lots of luck
Jackie
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1887.4 | more questions | AKOV12::GIUNTA | | Fri Aug 25 1989 16:00 | 10 |
| I've made some jams, and I'm really enjoying it, but I have a problem
that I was hoping someone could help me with. How do you keep the
fruit in the jam from floating to the top? One of the books that I
have says to invert the jars for 1/2 hour after removing them from the
water bath, but that doesn't seem to work. Should I leave them
inverted for longer?
Any advice would be appreciated.
Cathy
|
1887.5 | stir it first | SHIPS::GKE | red, white and blueberry all under | Sat Aug 26 1989 08:17 | 9 |
|
I always let my jam cool slightly before bottling it. I give it
a good stir with a clean sterilised metal spoon and then place in
sterilised jars that are hot. Seal with melted wax or waxed discs
cut to the size of the mouth of the jar cover.
It works a charm.
gailann
|
1887.6 | Help.. Pressure canner needed. | SNDCSL::HAUSRATH | Pass that by me again, please | Mon Aug 28 1989 15:05 | 8 |
|
Has anyone seen a Pressure Canner in any store around the Central
Mass. Area. I've looked in quite a few places with no luck...
Sure would be nice to can some non-acidic veggies and meat sauces!
/Jeff
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1887.7 | here's a few places | AKOV12::GIUNTA | | Mon Aug 28 1989 16:36 | 5 |
| When I was looking for canning equipment, I saw pressure canners in
quite a few places including Zayre's, Service Merchandise and Prime
Value Mart. If one of these is near you, give them a try.
Cathy
|
1887.8 | Spag's, Rt. 9, Shrewsbury | DICKNS::CIAMPAGLIA | | Tue Aug 29 1989 14:15 | 5 |
|
Go to the housewares dept. and ask a clerk. I believe they keep
them upstairs due to their large size.
|
1887.9 | Try the hardware store | HOONOO::PESENTI | JP | Wed Aug 30 1989 13:40 | 2 |
| Pressure canners are reliably carried by hardware stores like Aubuchon, or
True Value.
|
1887.10 | Screw-cover jars? | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Mon Feb 26 1990 15:48 | 5 |
| Is it possible to use screw-on cover jars for making jams? I have
a number of nice jars from spaghetti sauce, etc. and would love to use
these, since they are a good size for jellies.
|
1887.11 | | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Wed Feb 28 1990 04:51 | 10 |
|
why not? Having just ventured into marmalade making (not the season for
soft fruit yet), I could almost quote the cook book verbatim: "preserving jars
may be used but aren't essential, regular jars with push or screw tops may be
used, and indeed if you've lost the top cover with cling-film and secure with
an elastic band. Cover the marmalade, jam, or preserve with a disc of paper of
the kind sold for the purpose (though don't use the paper cover on chutneys
since the vinegar will evaporate, the chutney dry, and the jar become useless)"
/. Ian .\
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1887.12 | Paraffin is sold with other canning supplies. | REORG::AITEL | Never eat a barracuda over 3 lbs. | Wed Feb 28 1990 16:21 | 6 |
| You might get paraffin to seal the jam-jars. That will keep the
critters out and give you a somewhat air-tight seal. Jam is usually
fine with just paraffin. Other stuff, like pickles, needs the safety
of hot-water or pressure canning.
--Louise
|
1887.13 | Canning Question | BUFFER::MACKONIS | The Write Stuff | Mon Aug 27 1990 10:12 | 7 |
| Question for your canners out there...
My girlfriend is running out of room in her freezer and was wondering
if anyone has ever tried canning soups? Like vegetable or anything
with meat in it??? Thanks.
|
1887.14 | Canning soups - pressure canner. | REORG::AITEL | Never eat a barracuda over 3 lbs. | Mon Aug 27 1990 11:37 | 15 |
| Soups must be canned with a pressure canner to avoid food-poisoning
dangers. You can't just use a hot-water bath canner as with
pickles and jams and tomatoes. However, once over the hurdle of
paying for and mastering the use of a pressure canner, I think it's
not too difficult to can soups.
As for specific directions - the canner will come with them. Since
each canner has slightly different directions, it might be dangerous
to give suggestions. Usually a pressure canner will come with
a little cookbook, too, which gives time and weight/pressure
figures.
Have fun!
--Louise
|
1887.16 | pressure hot water bath whats the difference? | ROULET::ETHOMPSON | I`m the NRA | Mon Aug 27 1990 17:51 | 15 |
|
What is the difference between a pressure cooker and a pressure cannier?
I have a SEB 8 qut. aluminum super cooker (no spring gauge or weight gauge).
It's like the type used at Kentucky Fried Chicken where all cooking is by
time and I can use oil too, but I was asking to find any one who may have one.
Can it be used for canning? Is there a way to tell the pressure and regulate
it?
In my wife's cook books low acid vegetables such as corn a pressure of
10 lbs setting is called for canning. Does corn need pressure canning or
can a water bath cannier be used with recipe changed?
In pressure canning does the pressure need to keep at say 10 lbs or can it
move up and down a little when doing canning?
|
1887.17 | only the vendor knows for sure... | FORTSC::WILDE | illegal possession of a GNU | Mon Aug 27 1990 21:08 | 27 |
| >>>>>-< pressure hot water bath whats the difference? >-
the difference between life and death if you aren't careful...really,
meat and other low-acid goodies grow really bad things unless treated
just right. The pressure canning process makes sure the food is
STERILE... and that means it can sit without refrigeration. Otherwise,
you can grow your own botulism...among other nasties - no fun at all.
Your pressure cooker book should tell you whether it is adequate/usable
for canning. My mother's pressure cooker is usable, but I suppose some
would not be. The pressure canner generally has lots more room in it,
for one thing, but I'm not sure of the other issues. If you've lost the
book, call the vendor and be sure. If you make a mistake with one of
these puppies, you can have real damage.
The pressure and duration requirements will be listed in recipes for the
food you are canning. Generally they will require that a certain level
of pressure be MAINTAINED for x minutes.....any fluctuations off the
pressure should be very slight and OVER not under the recommended pressure.
A good pressure cooker will reach the desired pressure and maintain it
just fine. If your cooker is fluctuating much, your seal may be inadequate
and that may be fine for cooking (although it will leave your kitchen steamy
and hot) but it isn't fine for canning.
This is one cooking trick I'm chicken to try - I won't can low-acid foods.
I just don't trust the results enough.
|
1887.18 | More on pressure canning | REORG::AITEL | Never eat a barracuda over 3 lbs. | Tue Aug 28 1990 11:02 | 20 |
| Well, there's a big difference between canning in a hot water bath
and canning in a pressure canner. The pressure canner is the only
way to safely can low acid foods other than things like jam and
jelly, which have loads of sugar. Also, it's the only way to can
anything containing meat, even if you put lots of tomatoes in
the jar also - you just don't fool around with meat. (Meat means
any animal product, whether furred, feathered, finned, or shelled.)
The main difference between a pressure cooker and a pressure canner
is size. Unless you have a huge pressure cooker, it would be
difficult to can in a regular pressure cooker. Remember, what looks
huge when you're thinking "stew" is not that big when you're thinking
of 6 jars of stuff, either pints or quarts, plus space between them
so they don't touch, plus a rack so they're not sitting on the
bottom. A pressure canner will also have the gadgets - a rack
in particular - that make canning possible. Anyhow, best bet is to
go to a store and LOOK at a pressure canner, and then you can see
if your current canner would work.
--Louise
|
1887.19 | | NITMOI::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Wed Aug 29 1990 09:11 | 11 |
| I recently heard that there are new "approved" directions for canning.
That include time to process for various foods, etc. The most
important piece of data was that canning should not be done in the old
style glass top jars with rubber ring seals. Only the new style metal
top seal with screw ring should be used. The news item said that any
"jar rubbers" as they are called (but you should have seen the look on
the clerk's face the last time I asked for them by that name) still on
the shelf were manufactured so long ago that they should be tossed.
So, save those glass top jars, folks... they'll be worth money as
collectibles soon!
|
1887.20 | great canisters, tho | TYGON::WILDE | illegal possession of a GNU | Wed Aug 29 1990 15:39 | 6 |
| > So, save those glass top jars, folks... they'll be worth money as
> collectibles soon!
my homemade apple butter and peach butter go in these....the filling goes
so fast I've never had a problem. Oh well, they also make great cannisters
for grains for cooked cereal and baking, and to hold staples.
|
1887.21 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Wed Aug 29 1990 19:57 | 17 |
| RE: .17
>the difference between life and death if you aren't careful...really,
>meat and other low-acid goodies grow really bad things unless treated
>just right.
The precise danger here is Clostridium botulinum, the anerobic bacterium that
releases the toxin that causes botulism. Botulism toxin is the most deadly
poison known to man. It can be fatal even in parts-per-billion concentrations.
RE: .18
The sugar content is irrelevant. Fruit jams and jellies are all high-acid
foods. Clostridium botulinum cannot grow in a high-acid medium.
--PSW
|
1887.22 | | NITMOI::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Thu Aug 30 1990 08:55 | 2 |
| By the way, the source for that info I posted a few back on the old
jars was an article in the Boston Globe Food section about a month ago.
|
1887.23 | How do you can tomatoes? | WAGON::HARRIS | | Fri Sep 07 1990 13:45 | 5 |
| I've seen a lot of references to canning tomatoes, but no specific
instructions. Can someone please explain how you do this. Do I
need a pressure cooker? Can I just heat them in a boiling water
bath? Also, do you cook the tomatoes long enough to cook down most
of the water? or do you wait until you reheat the sauce?
|
1887.24 | | CALVA::WOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Mon Sep 10 1990 15:14 | 30 |
|
Rep .23
No, you don't need a pressure cooker to can tomatoes. They are
aciditic enough not to need a pressure cooker. You can either just
can the plain tomatoes or make sauce and then can the sauce. I don't
can normally I just make the sauce and then freeze it in quart bags.
So far I have made 30 plus quarts in the last three weeks and I'm
getting sick of looking at tomatoes!!!!
I'm sure somebody has an exact recipe but for plain tomatoes you
normally just skin them and then pack them in sterilized canning jars.
You also have to make sure you don't over fill the jars and there is
enough juice to cover the tomatoes and about 1 teaspoon of salt is
also added. Then the jars are hot water processed for 20 minutes.
After going through the whole canning process I realized I usually
made sauce anyways so I chucked that step and went right to the sauce.
I also dry tomatoes and then pack then in olive oil or freeze them.
You take plum tomatoes and wash them and slice them in half. Then place
them a wire rack and into a 170f oven until they dry. This usually
takes about 12 hours. If you pack them in oil I would suggest you place
them in the refrigerator for storage as they will keep longer.
-mike
|
1887.25 | Do I need to re-process ? | CNTROL::JENNISON | | Mon Sep 24 1990 17:14 | 17 |
|
I canned tomatoes this weekend, but only processed them for 10 minutes
in a hot water bath. (I mis-read the directions!)
Later that day, I glanced through the Ball Blue Book, and it said 45 minutes.
The jars are well sealed even though I only processed them for 10 minutes.
Does anyone know if the time given for processing can vary (another reply
here said 20 minutes) ?
Should I open the jars and reprocess even though I have a seal?
(These are quartered tomatoes
with boiling water added)
Karen
|
1887.26 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Mon Sep 24 1990 20:16 | 5 |
| Given that it's tomatoes, I'd say you're safe in reprocessing them. If it were
something like beans or meat, I'd say throw it out because of the risk of
botulism.
--PSW
|
1887.27 | USDA Canning Cookbook | HORSEY::MACKONIS | Put it in Writitng.... | Fri Mar 22 1991 09:23 | 19 |
| A well-organized cookbook offering the most up-to-date information
on the subject. It contains tips, recipes and explains how to adapt canning
to different types of foods.
To order:
USDA's Complete Guide to Home Canning
$11.00
Item # 121W
Make check payable to: Superintendant of Documents
Mail to:
R. Woods, Superintendant of Documents
Consumer Information Center-T
PO Box 100
Pueblo, CO 81002
|
1887.28 | Have your pressure gage checked FIRST | PICKET::GROUPIDMR | | Thu Apr 23 1992 15:37 | 13 |
| One place to get info is your county extension service. Massachusetts
has lots of USDA publications you could (haven't been in a while) get
free as opposed to paying for them from Washington.
A word of warning regarding pressure canners. Before you use them BE
SURE you get the gage checked for accuracy. If it is low you will not
get an correct process and too high it could blow up. This word is
from the county ext. service who will check them for you.
See if they are having a canning/freezing talk somewhere. It is worth
the while.
Kris
|