T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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663.1 | They make perfect sized Gift sized Jam Jars | MR4DEC::JONES | | Fri Dec 31 1993 08:48 | 18 |
| I don't know what access you have to either storage space-i.e. over
the winter, or to friends with Gardens...if you don't garden, but
one of the things I have done with Baby food jars in years past
was to make jams and marmalade and give it away.
I grow a garden and have always had Rhubarb. One of the things you can
make with Rhubarb is Rhubarb Marmalade. However, when you offer it to
friends or workmates, they sometimes are not sure if they are going to
like it. A baby food jar is just about the right size to convince them
to try it. (Actually, if you follow the recipe, it is pretty good...no
credit taken for my skills). You can also make other kinds of jams
out of Pick-your-own-strawberries/blueberries/peaches, when you have
too many left over. Making a batch, once you have all the stuff, have
two hours and are organized is pretty quick and simple.
Otherwise, recycle them.
Jim
|
663.2 | Additional note on the caps...save them too | MR4DEC::JONES | | Fri Dec 31 1993 08:52 | 9 |
| p.s. on previous note, when you make jams etc, you seal the top with
parafin/wax. Keeping the lids does nothing except give you an
aesthetic cover until they begin eating your jam. Once you take off
the lid, its sealing qualities are not applicable to jam making.
Finally, before you ask, I am not interested in your jars..heh heh!
When I make jams, and can now, I use 1/2-1pint and 1quart jars.
jj
|
663.3 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Unto us, a Child is given | Mon Jan 03 1994 08:31 | 9 |
|
When we bought our house, there was a workbench in the cellar.
Along the back of the workbench are some racks with the lids
of baby food jars nailed to them. The jars are filled with
nails, tacks, and assorted hardware. When you need something,
you just unscrew the jar from the rack.
Karen
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663.4 | Snow domes | BSS::GROVER | The CIRCUIT_MAN | Mon Jan 03 1994 08:52 | 11 |
| Another thing to do with baby food jars is (if you're crafty) to make
those "snow domes"... You know, those things that have a scene in them
with white flakes... You shake them and it looks like snow..
If you're children are into Girl/Boy Scouting or other groups that do
crafts, donate the jars to that group, they'll put them to great use!
Later!
Bob
|
663.5 | | AYRPLN::VENTURA | Deck the halls ... DON'T SAY IT!! | Mon Jan 03 1994 09:32 | 10 |
| And yet another thing to do with them. A bit late for this year, but
you can always do it for next year.
I used my sister's babyfood jars and made advent calendars out of them.
Take 24 jars and glue them together to form a "tree". Put the numbers
1-24 on them, and put a little prize in each one of the jars. The
child opens up one jar every day of December until christmas eve.
Holly
|
663.6 | Like me! (; | POWDML::MANDILE | Cranky, me? Nah | Mon Jan 03 1994 10:27 | 3 |
|
Baby food jars make great storage containers for those who have
hobbies such as beadwork or jewelry making!
|
663.7 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Mon Jan 03 1994 10:45 | 5 |
|
Mind posting your recipe for Rhubarb Jam? (if not here in another
note?)
Wendy
|
663.8 | Recipe for Marmalde below | MR4DEC::JONES | | Mon Jan 03 1994 21:27 | 74 |
| Wendy, below is the recipe. Before I start on that, I have
two comments on Baby food jars in reference to the other noters.
It is nice to think of jars as consumables...they can be for
storing things in your workshops etc, but the two notes that
talked about using them for the snow and for a tree for a child
to access bothers me as a parent of three who were somewhat
inquisitive and accident prone. I think reusing jars for adult
purposes is laudable, but somehow recyling them for a childs use
when they are made of glass bothers me.
As to the recipe, it is for Marmalade...not jam.
Below is the recipe. I will preface it with this comment.
It uses entire oranges. It also requires you heat the chopped oranges
until they lobber. When I have made this with a bunch of other single
guys....none of whom had made anything like this before, you
can't imagine how comical it was trying to figure out what a lobber
was, when to tell if we were actually "lobbering yet", or what.
Basically what we finally understood after a series of trial and
error was that you heat it and let it cook down until you can pick
up a spoonful and let it drop off back into the pan. When it
becomes so thick that it forms an extremely long drop that kind of
hangs there in mid air for a second or two before dropping back into
the pan, you have achieved a "lobber".
ORANGE RHUBARB MARMALADE(passed along here without persmission from
------------------------ my major professor in college of 25 years
ago, now deceased...so I think it is ok.)
4 quarts of chopped unboiled rhubarb
3 oranges chopped medium
1 cup pecans chopped medium
14 cups sugar
3 boxes of Sur-Gel
Prepare rhubarb and oranges separately.
Boil rhubarb down until solid. Add no water
Heat 3 medium chopped (entire) oranges to a slow boil, adding
approximately 4 cups of sugar until liquid lobbers on cooled spoon
and orange peels look watery and transparent. Add pecans and bring
to a full final boil.
Remove from heat and combine with solid rhubarb.
Add 3 boxes Sur-Gel and bring to a rolling boil(cannot be stirred down)
Add remaining 10 cups of sugar and bring to a rolling boil again. Boil
for 1 minute and remove from heat. Stir for about 7 minutes, skimming
off foam and floating peels.
Now ladle(and or pour) through a formed jar funnel into clean, scalded
jars up to 1/2 inch from the top. Pour melted parafin onto top of
marmalade while still hot. Set aside to cool.
....find friends. distribute.
Be sure you have your utensils organized, a measured jar funnel that
fits inside the baby food jars, a container you do not mind melting
parafin in, etc. before you start. You will find that most jar funnels
are made for 1/2 pint large mouth and pint and quart jar mouths. The
thing that makes making jams and marmalades a mess is if you
continually drip the stuff down the side while you are pouring. You
then have to keep a wet and warm cloth to wipe the mouth out and the
sides...which is tough because the contents are now extremely hot and
it is a pain. That is why the jar funnel comes in handy.
Hope this is of interest.
Jim
|
663.9 | use em up! | KAOFS::M_BARNEY | Dance with a Moonlit Knight | Tue Jan 04 1994 09:38 | 19 |
| Wow, I'll bet that quantity uses up a lot of left over jars!
Question: What's Sur-Gel? I assume it is a brand of pectin? Any
particular type?
I too collected a box or two of them without knowing what to do
before I started dumping them in the recycling box. The amazing thing
is that 3/4 of the food I was giving Charlotte was home made, and
still I went through a LOT of jars.
Thanks to the previous noter who first mentioned that you can seal
with wax for preserves - I had forgotten that and had written off
putting jam in them since they do not seal well (after both my mom
and I tried to use them with jam).
This summer - fruit - canning - jars - (I'll be home on maternity
leave) 8-).....
Monica
|
663.10 | Child Potpourri Present | SAHQ::BAINE | | Tue Jan 04 1994 13:50 | 15 |
| Sometimes elementary school teachers can use the jars for older
students' craft projects. My daughter gave me a Christmas present
last year that was potpourri in a baby food jar, with a piece of
eyelet-type (with holes, etc), cloth on top and held on with a narrow
piece of ribbon. Very pretty and she loved making it.
As someone else said, anyone who does crafts can use the jars for
small amounts of paint and beads, or sewers can put buttons, hooks
and eyes, snaps, etc., in them. My husband also used them in his
workshop for screws, bolts, etc., but away from any little hands.
Kathleen (who is glad her kids are way beyond baby food, but know it
was easier to feed them then!)
|
663.11 | donate? | CNTROL::STOLICNY | | Tue Jan 04 1994 14:02 | 9 |
|
As alluded to in .10, if you don't have a personal use for the
jars, you might want to contact a local elementary school or
preschool and donate the jars. I know my son's pre-school is
famous for using things (babyfood jars, coffeecans, buttons,
fabric and wallpaper scraps, etc) for art projects that many
households would simply throw away.
Carol
|
663.12 | spice rack | BLUFSH::BARNDT | Ann Marie Barndt | Tue Jan 04 1994 18:11 | 6 |
|
I've seen babyfood jars in an old wooden pop-bottle
carrier used as a spice rack. The lids were painted
and labelled. It had a rustic "country" look to it.
Ann
|
663.13 | | BARSTR::PCLX31::satow | gavel::satow, dtn 223-2584 | Wed Jan 05 1994 08:39 | 6 |
| If you use them in a workshop for storing nails, screws, etc., .3 is the way
to do it. Don't do it if you're a clutterbug like me. Typically, workshop
floors are concrete; glass baby food jars don't take kindly to being dropped
on concrete.
Clay
|
663.14 | Party Favors | GRANPA::LIROBERTS | | Thu Jan 06 1994 08:25 | 16 |
| I used the empty jars to make favors for the baby shower that I gave
for my s-i-l in Sept. I purchased baby material and cut it into
squares. Put one dot of hot glue of the top. Then tied a piece of
pink or blue ribbon around the lid. I even put little tiny plastic
pacifiers on each ribbon.
I filled the jars with a variety of nuts that I roasted at home.
Everyone loved them. Since the shower, several people have called to
ask for the directions. They used them as table favors for the senior
citizens Christmas party. (They changed the material to Christmas)
Well, it's just another idea.
Lillian
|
663.15 | | GRANPA::LGRIMES | | Thu Jan 06 1994 10:50 | 9 |
| A friend of mine, a stay a home mom, supplements her income by crafting
with baby food jars. One of her best sellers are candles. She pours
green wax into the bottom, lets it set. Then she pours red wax on top.
She then paints black marks that look like seeds on the outside of the
jar. Ties a piece of twine around the top and voila a country candle
(looks like a watermelon slice). She sells them at craft fairs.
LG
|
663.16 | pesto too! | STUDIO::KUDLICH | nathan's & morgan's mom! | Mon May 23 1994 13:18 | 5 |
| I use them to freeze pesto in the tail end of summer when my basil is
about to get frosted; lasts through to the next crop, if we control
ourselves!
Adrienne
|
663.17 | | STOWOA::STOCKWELL | MOO MOO Mania | Tue Aug 30 1994 13:26 | 7 |
| I re-use them for Alyssa's yogurt or fruit - the perfect size for her
afternoon snack. Great size to pack left-over's in for her the next
day.
Also, I bring my salad dressing to work in them.
|
663.18 | Freeze food in them???? | TFH::CKELLER | | Mon Sep 19 1994 11:07 | 8 |
| I was thinking of grinding up some meats for my baby instead of using
that awful babyfood meat. I wanted to make a few of them ahead of time
to send to the babysitters. Can I freeze it in the old babyfood jars?
If not what does anyone suggest.
Thanks,
Cheryl
|
663.19 | | USCTR1::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Mon Sep 19 1994 11:54 | 9 |
| Try freezing the ground-up cooked meat in ice cube trays. Then remove
the cubes to a ziploc freezer bag. You can then remove one or two at a
time and take the the sitter - or, give the sitter a bag to keep in
their freezer.
Can also the same thing for vegetables and fruits (canned in juice,
then puree before freezing).
|
663.20 | use ice cube trays | PCBUOA::GIUNTA | | Mon Sep 19 1994 11:55 | 4 |
| I always froze all my kids' babyfood that I made in ice cube trays.
Once it's frozen, just remove the cubes and put them in ziploc bags in
the freezer so you can take out however many you need. I did that with
fruits, veggies and meats with good success.
|
663.21 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | skewered shitake | Mon Sep 19 1994 13:23 | 4 |
| just make sure you get them out of the trays and into plastic bags.
I wound up with interesting yellow water and peach leather on topfrom
forgetting about my ice cube tray for a month in the frost-free.
|
663.22 | don't freeze in glass containers | NAPIER::HEALEY | M&ES, MRO4, 297-2426 | Mon Sep 19 1994 14:33 | 9 |
|
Definately don't use the jars! They will expand in the freezer
and crack (not speaking from experience but I've always been
told not to freeze in glass).
Karen
P.S.. although, casserole dishes do not have that problem... must
be because they are so much larger?
|
663.23 | | NOTAPC::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Mon Sep 19 1994 15:33 | 9 |
| Actually, I think the issue with freezing in glass is to leave enough
air space in the jar for future expansion... to avoid just such
problems. Its not that glass itself is inherently bad in the freezer,
just that the results for poor planning can be messy.
imo,
- Tom
|
663.24 | | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Tue Sep 20 1994 09:24 | 10 |
|
The problem is when water freezes, it expands, as opposite
to contract. So, the resulting ice takes up more space than
the water. You can still freeze foods with high water contents
in jars if you leave enough air space and don't tighten the
lids until the food solidified. This will let out the air
that is displaced by the expanding food and ensure a tight seal.
Eva
|