Canning?...who does it anymore?

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And if you make that

WITHOUT the benefit of a food processor's slicing disc, you're either a superior person than I, or some sort of martyr!

Lawrence/Maytagbear
 
My mom and aunts used to sit on the back porch and peel and slice onions, while crying their eyes out, and we had a food processor she wouldn't touch!

Just stuck in the old fashion way to do things, I guess!

but yes, you definately need a food processor, and a victorio strainer, and other helpful items to make this easier!
 
Yes We CAN in Georgia

Love to can.

I do:
Romas
Salsa
Peach Jam
Apple Butter

Also a tip I use an electric turkey fryer to can in, just put in water and lower the basket with Jars and it makes a perfect canner for water bath.
 
Jay...what a great idea, never even occured to me, I can use this on the deck without heating the kitchen. thats the best tip ever!

I do use the dishwasher to clean and sterilize the jars, and stop in the middle of the last rinse to keep them HOT!
 
Love the dishwasher to prep the jars

I do the same with the dishwasher. Yes like to keep it outside to keep it cooler inside. I remember as a kid, when my Mom canned it was early morning and the kitchen would be so hot and she would finish around 1 in the afternoon and finally she would turn on the air.....hot hot hot. That is why the neighbor Hazel had an electric stove in her garage for canning. Smart lady.
 
My mom used to can all the time tomatoes, tomato juice, pickled beets, green beans. She would freeze corn (on and off the cob), lima beans, chopped onions & peppers, carrots, peas. Every other year she would make her own horseradish sauce.
 
Well spank me silly...

Every time I look through the Super thread list I think I see "Caning?...who does it anymore?" Need to get my mind out of the gutter.

Actually it's very cool to see all these people who still take an interest in CANNING and the like. It must give great satissfaction to show off a shelf full of your own creations.
 
Kimchee (from memory, haven't made any for a couple of months)

This is how I make kimchee:

It's in two basic steps:

1) Salting the cabbage

Dissolve 1 cup of sea salt, kosher salt, or water softener salt (make sure it is pure salt with no silicone or other additives) in 1 gallon water.

Chop up 5 lbs (about 2 big heads) napa or chinese cabbage. I like smaller pieces, about 1 inch by 2 inches. There's no law that says you can't make them bigger or smaller.

I usually grate some carrot, julienne a large daikon radish, etc. I had very good results with a green Japanese type of daikon - very flavorful. I've even added sliced broccoli crowns with good results. I've also used regular red round radishes, sliced thin. These add some color. In any case, put the cabbage and other veggies into a large pot (stainless is good) with the salt brine. Press down with a plate that just fits the pot, and weigh it down with a baggie filled with more brine - the idea is to keep the cabbage etc completely submerged. Let it sit overnight.

The next day, blend the following:

1/2 cup water
1/4 cup chinese hot pepper flakes (you can use fresh hot peppers if you prefer, but the color may not be the same)
1 or more cloves garlic, peeled
1 chunk of ginger, peeled and sliced (to break the fibers)
1 tablespoon sugar
1 teaspoon salt
2 tsp japanese bonita fish powder
Any other herbs or spices you like

If you use a more funky fish powder or sauce, you may want to boil the spice mix before adding to the cabbage. I don't with the bonita powder (it's very clean) and haven't had any problems.

Drain the cabbage and other salted veggies. Rinse in fresh tap water and drain in colander.

Add the blended spice mix, fold it into the drained salted cabbage mix thoroughly. Weight it down again with a plate that just fits the container. Let this sit at room temp for 1-3 days, until it starts bubbling. Then refrigerate (you can repack it in smaller containers at this point. But place the containers in a dish or tray and keep the covers loose - the fermentation may continue and cause an overflow).

The kimchee can be eaten at any point. Early on it's more crunchy and sweet tasting. Letting it ferment at room temp and later in the fridge causes lactic acid to form, so it becomes more sour with more complex flavors. When you run low, save some of the liquid to add as a "starter" the next batch in the spice mix step.

I like to eat this kimchee all by itself, or with rice and meals as a sort of side dish/condiment. I have also found it adds a lot of flavor to the lowly hotdog, in lieu of relish (but with some mustard). Oh, you can probably add some powdered mustard to the spice mix as well for a more interesting taste.

The salt and the lactic acid keeps the cabbage and other veggies from spoiling and growing toxic bacteria/mold. I have found the kimchee will keep for weeks in the fridge. It does get more sour and a bit more odorous, but I haven't found it to be objectionable like some people claim. I bought a half gallon of authentic Korean kimchee (refrigerated) and found that my home prep is similar, with a less strong fishy taste. The store-bought had bigger chunks of cabbage as well.

My Mandarin teacher says that kimchee is good for one's health. I don't know, I just like the taste. I tend to like things like garlic kosher dill pickles, or pickled ginger.

When the kimchee gets too much character in the fridge, I've read it can be added to soup. I've tried adding it to a mexican tortilla soup (campbell's harvest select) and was pleased with the results. And of course you can add it to ramen to make a real kimchee soup!
 
hey, I spelled it right, this time....lol

and yes I have to ask, what is caning?, I've done a lot of things, but this one I have never heard, don't hold out on me, could be something new I could get into, always willing to learn and experiment.....
 
We're waiting on our latest FleaBay purchase to get here, namely a 21.5 quart "All-American" pressure cooker/canner...the no-gasket clamp-down kind, made proudly in Wisconsin! We are about to dive into canning big-time due to the bounty of heirloom tomatoes we have growing. Can't wait to reach into the pantry and get out a quart jar of OUR OWN tomatoes! At over $3/can, the organic ones at the store are more than outrageously priced.

We always had a huge garden when I was growing up; my parents always put up tomatoes, pickles, sourkraut (this was done in a big crock), jam and jellies. One of my favorite things for snacks as a kid was always a jar full of mixed pickled veggies (string beans, sliced green tomato, okra, onion, garlic, carrot, etc.)

It's really good to see people getting back to the wonderful experience of having a veggie garden!!! It really is heartening to see...one good thing to come out of this latest economic mess!
 
Charbee---I've heard that the All-American is the Lexus of pressure canners. I looked at one last summer, but it was late in the season and most of my canning was finished. I'd love to know what you think of it when you've had some time to put it through its paces.
 
yogitunes...

caning, like punishment in an old English boarding school with a cane instead of a paddle...then you say the same thing that you do to a waiter holding a tray of H'orderve at an elegant dinner party..."please Sir, may I have another?"
 
Thank's Joe....

lapse in memory...rode the short bus today...call me slow...need the bolts in my neck tightened...

would that be todays version of a "B-SLAP"?....I could get into that, there's so many people I could line up, don't know about them, but I would feel better....lol
 
Frigilux, will do. Should have it in a day or two. When we decided to get a pressure cooker, we researched which one to get, and the All American was just *it* as far as mechanical design. No gasket to worry about is the main thing. As far as the size goes, we wanted something that would handle both quarts and half-gallon jars, and by the measurements this 21.5 qt. would probably be the smallest that will do that. We were able to get this one for a fairly reasonable price for the size ($140). Some sellers want upwards of $300 for this size new. Just looks like it will need a good cleaning when it gets here, otherwise I don't think there's much you can do to mess one of these up.
 
For anyone not familiar with the All-American Pressure Canner, here's some info from their website. To say their canners are Sherman tanks would not be overstating the case. This is the sort of durable good you pass down from one generation to the next.

User reviews on them are almost universally positive at canning sites.

6-17-2009-18-30-49--Frigilux.jpg.png
 
KIMCHEE

It's actually more nutritious for you if allowed to ferment, rather than if it's processed with heat. My mother got me started a few years ago on "The Body Ecology Diet", the cornerstone of which is fermented foods. I went to a health food store and bought a bottle of Jarrow brand acidolphilus capsules that also has other pro-biotics added in the mix. Just empty the powder out of about 6 capsules when you make your next batch of Kimchee or sauerkraut. In about 5 days you'll have a naturally cultured food the way our ancestors made it before there was such thing as canning.
 
see, I even have an ad for this thread

There are so many great recipes on this site I think someone should gather them all up and create the AutomaticWasher.org cookbook, first edition.

this is from 1925

6-18-2009-17-44-5--twintubdexter.jpg
 
We used to Bottle, Tomatoes, Plums, Peaches, Cherries, Apricots and the such.

All greens were frozen and Jams went into Wax sealed jars.

We used Fowlers Vacola bottles and had an electric kit that we'd set up on the verandah and keep the heat out of the house.

We'd use a saccarin syrup for the fruits and just add 1tb of lemon juice in with the quartered tomatos.

We dont have the space anymore and having moved north, the choice of bottling fruit isnt as good or as cheap as it was at home.

Dad's mum has a 30x15 room at the back of the garage. Its full of shelves with bottled fruit and has an 800L chest freezer that is full as well.

She could never shop again and they'd have more food than they could eat before they die. When we were down there a couple of months ago, we popped the top on a 15yo bottle of cherries and they were still as good as the day they went in.

http://www.google.com/aclk?sa=L&ai=...ver.ebay.com/rover/1/705-43719-5960-0/2?mpre%
 
The only heat involved in making Kimchee might be if one uses fresh or contaminated fish products in it. It's easy enough to tell from the strong odor of a fish poweder if it should be heated to boiling temp before adding to the spice mix (or the entire spice mix could be boiled briefly). Other than that, kimchee shouldn't be canned - although I have seen jars of it at room temp on market shelves. I've only bought the stuff that is fresh and in the refrigerated section, but I really prefer the stuff I make at home.
 
Also, kimchee goes through two distinctly different phases of fermentation. The fermentation at room temperature is from one sort of bacteria, and is usually followed by a longer fermentation at refrigeration temperature. The lactic acid is produced mostly at the refrigerated fermentation step. I forget which bacteria are predominant in each step, and of course it can vary with ingredients, ambient temps, etc.

The traditional way of making Kimchee was to coat whole sections of a cabbage head (as if you were to cut the cabbage head lenghwise into four or more sections), and then put that in a clay pot and bury it for several weeks. The even ground temp would control the fermentation. It's still done that way, but there are now available special Kimchee refrigerators with two sections - one for higher temp fermentation and another for longer term fermentation. People think that it's also to keep the aroma of the kimchee from affecting foods in a mixed refrigerator. However I haven't found this to be a problem with the stuff I make. Then again, I don't add raw oysters to it ;-).

I've have perfectly good luck making it at home without adding any store-bought "starter". I do save a bit of liquid from the previous batch to add to the next batch - that's the "starter", I guess. It's sort of like composting - you can buy "starter" at the garden centers but really there's no reason to need it - compost just happens!
 
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