Preserving (rec.food.preserving) Devoted to the discussion of recipes, equipment, and techniques of food preservation. Techniques that should be discussed in this forum include canning, freezing, dehydration, pickling, smoking, salting, and distilling.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to rec.food.preserving
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 501
Default Canning lesson

Middle grandson came to us yesterday and brought a big bag of sweet and
hot chiles and tomatoes plus a couple of big onions and some cilantro.
Wanted help in putting up his first ever batch of salsa. Got out my copy
of "So Easy to Preserve" and he found a recipe he liked. Showed him how
to clean out the chiles and peel the onions and then we put them through
the food processor and then chop them fine with a chef's knife. From
there we went to blanching the tomatoes, into the ice water, then peel
and core them. Also chopping the cilantro.

Took about an hour to do all of that and then into the cook pot along
with all the other ingredients and brought the salsa to a boil. Showed
him how to put the jars into the boiling water canning pot rack, add a
tad of vinegar (our drinking water is fairly high in calcium) and set
the burner on high. Water in the canner was boiling by the time
everything else was ready so we proceeded to filling the jars, wiping
down the jar lips to ensure a good seal, putting on the hot lids and
then the rings and back into the BWB for the required time period.

We ended up with six pints of a fairly decent salsa, he was a little
disappointed it wasn't hot to the taste but I just told him to use more
hot chiles next go around and less sweet chiles. He's happy with the
salsa. Says the pint we didn't process got eaten yesterday afternoon and
wife and kids liked it too.

I think I have installed the home preserving bug into him, he was asking
about where to get the necessary equipment, etc. We shall see how this
develops. We got him into gardening about a year ago and gave him a
vacuum sealer for a family Chrismas present and he uses it regularly so
I think he's hooked. Another preserving junky. Makes the fifth
generation in my family. He will find out it is addictive once he starts
going to estate and church sales looking for cheap jars and equipment.

Happy George
  #2 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to rec.food.preserving
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,994
Default Canning lesson


Nice report, George. I'd be so happy to have shared those skills with
another generation. My daughter-in-law and a group of friends took
an extension service class last year that taught them how to can peaches
and make peach jam. She's not an enthusiastic cook but did
enjoy the experience and is talking about doing it again this year.
California daughter has done a bit, makes her own citrus curd from
free local fruit and the passionfruit from their backyard vines.
I need a climate like that!

gloria p
----------------------

On 6/29/2014 4:40 PM, George Shirley wrote:
> Middle grandson came to us yesterday and brought a big bag of sweet and
> hot chiles and tomatoes plus a couple of big onions and some cilantro.
> Wanted help in putting up his first ever batch of salsa. Got out my copy
> of "So Easy to Preserve" and he found a recipe he liked. Showed him how
> to clean out the chiles and peel the onions and then we put them through
> the food processor and then chop them fine with a chef's knife. From
> there we went to blanching the tomatoes, into the ice water, then peel
> and core them. Also chopping the cilantro.
>
> Took about an hour to do all of that and then into the cook pot along
> with all the other ingredients and brought the salsa to a boil. Showed
> him how to put the jars into the boiling water canning pot rack, add a
> tad of vinegar (our drinking water is fairly high in calcium) and set
> the burner on high. Water in the canner was boiling by the time
> everything else was ready so we proceeded to filling the jars, wiping
> down the jar lips to ensure a good seal, putting on the hot lids and
> then the rings and back into the BWB for the required time period.
>
> We ended up with six pints of a fairly decent salsa, he was a little
> disappointed it wasn't hot to the taste but I just told him to use more
> hot chiles next go around and less sweet chiles. He's happy with the
> salsa. Says the pint we didn't process got eaten yesterday afternoon and
> wife and kids liked it too.
>
> I think I have installed the home preserving bug into him, he was asking
> about where to get the necessary equipment, etc. We shall see how this
> develops. We got him into gardening about a year ago and gave him a
> vacuum sealer for a family Chrismas present and he uses it regularly so
> I think he's hooked. Another preserving junky. Makes the fifth
> generation in my family. He will find out it is addictive once he starts
> going to estate and church sales looking for cheap jars and equipment.
>
> Happy George


  #3 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to rec.food.preserving
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 29
Default Canning lesson

On Sun, 29 Jun 2014 17:40:07 -0500, George Shirley >
wrote:

>I think I have installed the home preserving bug into him, he was asking
>about where to get the necessary equipment, etc. We shall see how this
>develops. We got him into gardening about a year ago and gave him a
>vacuum sealer for a family Chrismas present and he uses it regularly so
>I think he's hooked. Another preserving junky. Makes the fifth
>generation in my family. He will find out it is addictive once he starts
>going to estate and church sales looking for cheap jars and equipment.
>
>Happy George


Yay! I'm so glad you've clued in another grandchild about the rewards
of home canning. Good on ya! And it sounds like yummy salsa was
enjoyed by all. A win-win situation.
  #4 (permalink)   Report Post  
Senior Member
 
Location: Foat Wuth
Posts: 1,161
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by George Shirley[_3_] View Post
Middle grandson came to us yesterday and brought a big bag of sweet and
hot chiles and tomatoes plus a couple of big onions and some cilantro.
Wanted help in putting up his first ever batch of salsa. Got out my copy
of "So Easy to Preserve" and he found a recipe he liked. Showed him how
to clean out the chiles and peel the onions and then we put them through
the food processor and then chop them fine with a chef's knife. From
there we went to blanching the tomatoes, into the ice water, then peel
and core them. Also chopping the cilantro.

Took about an hour to do all of that and then into the cook pot along
with all the other ingredients and brought the salsa to a boil. Showed
him how to put the jars into the boiling water canning pot rack, add a
tad of vinegar (our drinking water is fairly high in calcium) and set
the burner on high. Water in the canner was boiling by the time
everything else was ready so we proceeded to filling the jars, wiping
down the jar lips to ensure a good seal, putting on the hot lids and
then the rings and back into the BWB for the required time period.

We ended up with six pints of a fairly decent salsa, he was a little
disappointed it wasn't hot to the taste but I just told him to use more
hot chiles next go around and less sweet chiles. He's happy with the
salsa. Says the pint we didn't process got eaten yesterday afternoon and
wife and kids liked it too.

I think I have installed the home preserving bug into him, he was asking
about where to get the necessary equipment, etc. We shall see how this
develops. We got him into gardening about a year ago and gave him a
vacuum sealer for a family Chrismas present and he uses it regularly so
I think he's hooked. Another preserving junky. Makes the fifth
generation in my family. He will find out it is addictive once he starts
going to estate and church sales looking for cheap jars and equipment.

Happy George
Sound great. Glad somebody was there to be the teacher. You are doing a fine job Sir!
  #5 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to rec.food.preserving
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,693
Default Canning lesson

George Shirley wrote:

....
> I think I have installed the home preserving bug into him, he was asking
> about where to get the necessary equipment, etc. We shall see how this
> develops. We got him into gardening about a year ago and gave him a
> vacuum sealer for a family Chrismas present and he uses it regularly so
> I think he's hooked. Another preserving junky. Makes the fifth
> generation in my family. He will find out it is addictive once he starts
> going to estate and church sales looking for cheap jars and equipment.
>
> Happy George





songbird


Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
History lesson TFM®[_2_] Barbecue 7 18-04-2009 04:15 AM
A lesson on steak? Amanda General Cooking 62 25-12-2006 07:54 PM
A Brief Lesson In Pharmacology Sheldon General Cooking 6 11-11-2006 03:38 PM
Lesson learned Mike Boucher Tea 2 11-01-2005 07:23 PM
Chemistry Lesson? Brian Mailman Preserving 0 06-08-2004 05:50 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 12:15 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 FoodBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Food and drink"