Canning — A Lost Art?

Canned Vegetables by Svadilfari

Canned Vegetables by Svadilfari

Gardeners and farmers everywhere are starting to realize the fruits of their labors. It’s the time of year when produce is being harvested. For farmers, it is off to the farmer’s markets to sell your harvest. If you are a gardener, more than likely you are starting to can or freeze your produce. Today we are going to talk about canning.

Canning brings back so many memories of my childhood. I remember my mother and grandmother carefully washing the Kerr jars, lids, and rings. While they air dried, I can remember them washing the cucumbers and making the brine for the dill pickles. Then taking the jars and filling them with either sliced cucumbers or whole small cucumbers. They’d pour the brine into the jars and lower them into the canner. After they boiled for a time, they’d carefully lift them out, line them in neat little rows, and cover them. We’d all anxiously wait for that loud “pop” that let us know that the jars were sealed properly. Oh the memories!!!

In today’s economy, canning is one way to cut your grocery expense. By taking the time to can, you can fill your shelves full of tasty foods that will last longer than frozen foods. This will ultimately save money because you will not have to thrown out any “freezer” burned food.

You don’t have to have a garden to be able to “can” vegetables or made pickles. The local farmer’s market more than likely will have an abundance of produce for you to choose some vegetables to “put up” for the winter. Some recipes call for “bushels” of vegetables. Some call for quarts. If you can in smaller batches then it will seem less like work and more like a small project. Try canning several quarts of beans, instead of several “bushels” of beans. It won’t take all day and you’ll likely want to choose another day and can some more vegetables.

There are some advantages to canning.

  1. If your electricity goes out for an extended time, you won’t lose your pantry full of canned goods like you would if you had a freezer full of frozen veggies.
  2. Canned goods have a longer shelf life than frozen foods.
  3. Most anything can be canned. Sauces, stews, chili, etc can be canned as well as pickles, preserves, jams, and jellies.
  4. You will also know what ingredients are in jar of food. You’ll know that there are not any added preservatives that you did not want in the jar. You’ll also know where the ingredients came from and that they were carefully washed.
  5. Jars and bands can be reused. Lids should not be reused.
  6. You can begin canning by using a water bath canner that is available at most discount stores for somewhere around $20. You know the one I’m talking about – the big blue pot with the wire rack and lid.

If you have never canned and are interested in trying to can, there are numerous good sites on the web that can give you detailed instructions. Just Google or Swagbuck it and you will find numerous sites.

Till next time,

JT Locke
The Frugal Housewife

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7 Comments

  1. My wife has canned for years. It’s a skill she learned from her mother — one that has been in the family for years.

    I’m hear to tell you — there’s nothing better than homemade, canned preserves, jelly, salsa, chili sauce, etc. It’s an art well worth preserving, indeed.

  2. I have not though about canning as a good way to save money. Thank you for the thoughtful post. I do wonder if canning is cost effective if you have to buy produce rather than grow your own.

  3. To me, the cost effectiveness would depend on whether someone wanted to take the time to plant a garden and put the time into taking care of it or whether it was just better for them to purchase from a Farmer’s Market. I wouldn’t purchase from a grocery store because their prices tend to be higher than those of the farmer’s prices.

    My neighbor’s planted a garden, tended it, and then started neglecting it. It’s produced but not to the extent that it could have. To me that has been a bit of a waste of their time.

    Also, if you have kind neighbors who share their overage of produce then the cost effectiveness is clear. It is only the time and money that you have put into the canning process.

  4. Here’s a web site that my local extension office shared at a food preservation program last week: http://www.uga.edu/nchfp/ It’s the National Center for Home Food Preservation.

  5. Lovely post!
    I love canning.
    I save all kinds of jars and bottles and make all kinds of things :)

  6. I agree with The Hawg. People don’t know what they’re missing out on :)

  7. I do wonder if canning is cost effective if you have to buy produce rather than grow your own.

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