Preserving Summer

pickles and fig preserves

 

KATHARINE TRAUGER: Get All You Can: Can All You Get

You put beans, salt, and boiling water into a jar, cap with a hot lid, set it in a pressure pan that has a couple of quarts of water in it, apply the lid and the pressure gauge, turn on the heat, wait a while, turn it off, take the jar out, and you are done. What could be easier? People do this all the time! 

Yet it took us about 4000 years or so to figure it out. The idea of canning, itself, did not come about until the early 1800’s. Tin cans were first used in the U.S. in 1839. Mr. John Mason invented the canning jar in 1858.  READ MORE

 

four quarts green beans

 

KATHARINE TRAUGER: Get All You Can – Can All You Get, Part 2

Now let’s consider the canning containers.

It’s not just the food; the jars must also be clean. Some mothers employ children for this chore because they think their own hands will not fit through the mouth of the jar. Actually, a wet, soapy, adult female hand will usually fit into a very warm jar. It is not a bad chore for a careful child, though.  READ MORE

 

romantic rose honey

 

KATHARINE TRAUGER: Canning Failure and the Moral of the Story

Let’s talk a moment about canning failure. Although any canned food that fails to seal is acceptable if refrigerated and eaten within 3 days, undetected failure gives you food that is spoiled. It is unusable, offensive, and poison.  READ MORE

For even more of Katharine’s canning tips visit her blog: Katharine Trauger

 

One comment

  1. Katharine says:

    Thanks so much for featuring my canning series here! It’s part of my heart for Arkansas, where the growing season is so nice and long! 🙂

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