Thursday, February 16, 2012

Canning

Canning....





What do you write about a subject that has been written about, and video blogged, a couple hundred thousand times?

How about several reason why it's a great idea.

In my ordered list, I'll start with,

1)  Making your dollar last longer.  Sure there are a few expenses to get started, but the long term goal is food storage.  A little expense is warranted.  


Now that aside, imagine what it means to make your harvest last longer.  I mean really, did you think you were going to be able to give away all of the tomatoes you couldn't use?  No really, it's a valid question.  Or how about that tree full of peaches, apples, pears, or plums?  Imagine being able to utilize more the 90% or your harvest, rather than letting it rot, or having to give it all away.  I mean aside from selling it, which is getting a little easier, minus the time needed for such an adventure, what are the other possibilities?


Now, what if you can't grow your own produce, or at the very least you need to supplement what you can grow.  Rather than buying enough to last a few days, or maybe a week, now you can take advantage of those great sales, and buy in bulk.  Imagine being able to set bottles of peas, beans, carrots, and many other vegetables up for those "rainy days".  


That brings me to my next thought...

2)  These last few years have been particularly rough.  The economy has tanked, job losses are high, and then add to that the ever increasing gas prices. Your left scratching your head.  

Have you or a loved one been through a job loss?  Has that loss been over an extended period of time?  Would having something set aside have made life a bit easier?  Would it be nice to go to your storage and pick out a few items, make a full meal, and know that you spent only a few scents for that meal, rather than dollars?  Would you have a little less stress if you knew you wouldn't have to buy groceries for awhile?  

3)  How about an illness in your family.  Are you or a family member currently fighting a serious illness?  Is this making it more difficult just to get to the store?  Has it become a financial burden?  Wouldn't it be nice to have bottled or canned goods already on hand?  Imagine being able to walk several feet, grab a few cans or bottles, and prepare a full meal, for 1, 2 or several people.  How much less stress would that be in your life?





4)  How about special nutritional needs?  Are you finding that you need particular items?  maybe they're a bit hard to get?  How about a diet that needs to remove something, gluten or maybe sugar?  Or maybe your just concerned about the chemicals that are used to grow produce on farms.  Is organic something your interested in?  Would it be easier to utilize organic by buying in bulk?  Or maybe you know a great tasting... something, and have a great farm to buy them from.  Wouldn't be nice if you could bottle THAT item, and extend its season?  Maybe you like to spend your money locally.  This is also a great reason to bottle your own stuff.

5)  How's the weather been in your neck of the woods?


In 2011, there was strange weather every where.  Now I'm not subscribing to the idea that there are strange happenings causing bad weather.  It's more like we're in an extended weather pattern that happens to be cyclical.  There are many factors.  Certainly more than we can get into here.  Needless to say, "weather" is a major factor in the decision to put together a food storage.  


6)  Are you the kind of person that would be willing to help a neighbor, or another family member in their time of need?  Wouldn't food storage help with that?  Do you know a neighbor that IS struggling, or is maybe older, someone that IS trying but needs a boost?

7)  And lets not forget the major events that can happen.  As serious as these can be, they are a great reason to do more than just food storage.  However food storage is still necessary, especially if you survive a "first wave' event.


Canning is one way to help put together a food storage to help buffer any and all of these scenarios.  

If your old enough you may be lucky enough to have had grandparents that bottled, or canned their garden and groceries.  You may be lucky enough to have been able to learn how to bottle or can.  You might even be lucky enough to have some or maybe even all of your grandparents recipes.  The ones that they loved the most, and the ones that worked the best.

My grandparents lived through the depression.  They grew a garden every year, they had fruit trees, they even knew how to barter for things they needed with items they wouldn't need.  To have this knowledge, I consider myself lucky.

Now we are at a new crossroads.  There are many who are making the choice to start their own canning projects.  They have their reasons, and to them I applaud.  It is not an easy task when you first start, but certainly worth it.

These are two of my favorite go to web sites, whenever I have a canning or bottling question.

and

Every time I have had some kind of question, I can find the answer at one or the other or both places.  Their in depth answers, ideas, and links have been a great resource.  I highly recommend these to any new food prepper in the audience.

My purpose with this post is to gives reasons why.  In future posts we can go into recipes and tips.  For now, consider the reasons why this would be a good idea, and what you are willing to learn and do.




Sponsored by, artbystaci.com and artbystaci on Face Book.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Food Storage- Canning- and Wild Edibles


I have to give credit to New Survival Skills for asking me to do this article.  They have been a great foundation for me and my family.




Food Storage, Canning, and wild edibles.


Food Storage
In short, food storage is a necessary system that allows us to prepare for the unexpected.  Whether it is a job loss, an illness in the family, or even catastrophe, food storage gives us a way to survive.  It makes us self-sufficient.  With food storage we are able to stay away from stores and off the streets during crisis.  When everyone else is at the stores trying to buy a few essentials with the thousands of other people trying to do the same thing, you'll be comforted to know, you already have that taken care of.   You’ll also be comforted to know that you will not be one of the many waiting for someone to come to your rescue.  72 hours is the minimum before you might be rescued, not the time frame for someone to do something.  Even if you are found to need help within 72 hours of the emergency, you might not be rescued right away because you aren’t considered to be in serious danger, or in need of emergency help. 

What it is?  Food storage is safety, security, comfort.  And even life or death. 

How do you start food storage?  This is a question that is best answered by the amount of money you can put directly toward food storage.  Can you put several hundred dollars in all at once, thousands?  Or can you only afford to put aside a few dollars here and there?  Maybe it won’t be much of anything at all.

Because of its importance, food storage should be considered supplemental to your regular groceries.  What does that mean?  It means that not only should you be regularly adding to your food storage, you should be using it as well.  There are a couple of reasons to use it.  1) Using your storage allows you to successfully rotate your storage so that you are using oldest items first.  2) Using your food storage allows your body to get used to the food in your food storage.  You cannot expect to go from a white bread, fast-food diet to a wheat and beans diet without some serious complications.  Complications that can land you in a hospital.  (Ending up in a hospital is not what you want if you’re already in a catastrophic situation.  Hospitals will be full, or non-existent, or may not be able to treat you even if you can get in.)

In my opinion, you’re going to need not only a variety of foods, but also a variety of storage methods, and even a variety of producers.  For example, 5 and 6 gallon buckets that contain long term storage, i.e.; wheat, white rice, oats, various kinds of beans, flour, sugar, and several others.  # 10 cans of dehydrated and freeze dried goods. These take up space, but have that bang for the buck.  Because they need to be reconstituted, they hold more than the average canned good.  Even doing your own bottles will not be able to pack as much as # 10 cans.  #10 cans come with a plastic lid.  This allows you to use the contents and then cover or seal the can until the remaining contents can be used.  Regular commercially prepared items, i.e.; beans, asparagus, corn and many other vegetables, fruits, juices, and even chili’s, and soups are a great method of storage.  With just the addition of the name and the date purchased, listed on the can, you'll be able to see what it is and how old it is even if the label manages to fall off.  Finally, if you have the will to learn, there is home canning, or bottling, and dehydrating.  This entire last group, takes time, and some supplies, but quickly recoup the expense, once bottles and rings, and now even lids begin to be reused.  This last group also gives you a way to preserve your garden. 

All food storage should contain healthy items, plenty of vegetables, fruits, meats, and grains.  But don't forget comfort foods too.  For some families, comfort foods are Cheetos, and chips, for others it might be cookies, and cakes.  For a few it might be trail mix.  Comfort foods are important for their very definition.  They can calm children in overly dramatic and chaotic situations.  They can take out the "boring" from the fifteenth night of chili or soup.  They have the ability to change the pace, and bring smiles.  In bad situations, they help "normalize" the atmosphere, making it a little easier to cope.  With children, this is especially important, but even adults occasionally need help bringing down emotional stresses. 

To properly prepare long term storage, there are a few questions you’re going to need to ask yourself.  

1) How many people do I need to start planning for?  Is this going to be just the people in my household, or do I know someone that will need the extra help, or whom I can expect to stay with us when things get bad?  Is it the little old lady down the street, or the brother who didn't really believe it could happen to them?  When discussing food storage, I always council people to start their food storage for the people in their immediate household.  Let’s face it, if your family can't make it, how WILL you help anyone else? 

2) Do you have pets?  Do you expect to keep your pets safe?  This is a question that will need a serious, non-flippant answer.  It is easy enough to say yes, they can eat what you eat, or they're dogs/ cats they can fend for themselves, but have you really considered what that's going to mean?  If they are going to be eating what you eat, you'll need to do your homework on what they can't have.  If they're going to be fending for themselves, how long do you think they will honestly survive?  Wouldn't it be easier to add them to your storage schemes by putting storage up for them too? 

3) Do you know how to cook with your food storage?  Can you make bread, are you willing to learn?  Do you know how to cook beans?  How about mixing different ingredients?  I know, I know, this is starting to sound daunting, but it can be done.  And it can be done with fairly minimal effort.  The knowledge you have already about cooking will help immensely.


This is something that I and many like me grew up with.  We may not necessarily know how, for various reasons, but probably remember the jars and bottles at grandma’s house full of vegetables, fruits and various other goodies.  Canning is a way to preserve our own food stuffs.  Whether it’s produce from our garden, or the local farmer, canning allows us the opportunity to make that growing season last as long as absolutely possible. 

There is an initial expense with canning.  Bottles, lids, rings, processing equipment and then certain ingredients can add up.  But don’t panic, slow and steady is often the best pace.  A case here and there may be all that you can do.  But it is still well worth it.  Great canning starts with excellent recipes.  Usually it starts with the produce, but let’s face it, in a world where we may not be able to be picky about what we get, we’re going to need great recipes to compensate.  From relishes, tomatoes, potatoes, and various other vegetables, to fruits, jams and jellies, and even meats, canning is, overall, the most cost effective way to preserve food.  When done correctly the stocks of food can last for several years.  In fact studies have been done on decades old bottled foods which proved the food lost only slightly, a few key nutrients.  This speaks volumes to the tried and true tradition of home canning. 

If you are like I was, and could only afford a little bit at a time, I recommend the simplest canning to start.  Jams, jellies, and tomatoes are my top three choices.  Tomatoes only need a little bit of salt and lemon juice, and then processing.  Jams and jellies make use of sugar, fruit, occasionally a few extra ingredients, and processing time.  Tomatoes are fairly versatile and can be used in a myriad of recipes.  Tomato sauces, spaghetti sauce, salads, and other recipes.  Jams and jellies of course can be used with peanut butter, but also can be used instead of syrup, or other store bought fruit dips. 
It is easy to make enough of each to quickly fill your storage.  But the advantage to that is you can switch to other foods more quickly while maintaining a good starter food storage.   It also gives you the opportunity to have something for barter. 

Tools

These are the tools I use for canning.  They are well worth the cost when you look at the amount of produce you can buy, without any of it going to waste. 

Water bath canner.  Generally these run in the neighborhood of $25.00.

Steam canner.  This takes the place of the water bath canner, except for the advantage of using the water bath canner as a stock pot.  These generally run about $40.00.

Pressure canner.  Pressure canners are necessary if you would like to store meats of any kind, and don’t want every vegetable pickled.  Because of the nature of the processing of the pressure canner, you can bottle items at a higher temperature than your stove top is capable of.  This higher temperature is what prevents bacteria from spoiling foods.  Being able to heat foods at higher temperatures removes the need to raise the acid levels in foods to kill bacteria, rendering the need for pickling, unless you like that sort of thing, un-necessary.  Pressure canners run anywhere from $85.00 clear up to $250.00.  This does depend on the size and brand of the canner.   This is the largest expense out of all the tools.  However, that being said, the ability to preserve meats, and vegetables without pickling, quickly recoups its own cost. 

Then there are the smaller tools.  Magnet sticks, bottle grippers, funnels, scissor tongs.  These all make the task of canning easier.  You can buy all of these tools separately or in one set.  I generally advise two sets if you can do it, because if you have helpers, 2 sets just make the job easier.  As a set these run on average $19.00.  Sometimes you can find them on sale.  But once again, their cost is quickly recouped. 

Now for the last of the items. 

Jars.  These come in several different sizes, 4 oz, clear up to quart. You CAN find jars that are ½ gallon, however, it is not recommended to use these for canning because of their size.  These jars also come in regular mouth and wide mouth styles.  This refers to the size of the opening of the jars.  Prices on all of the jars will range by size, case size, and even brand.  We have been able to find quart sized jars for as little as $5.00 a case, up to $9.50 a case.  A case equaling 12 jars. 

Lids and rings.  Generally when needing new rings, you will have to buy them in combination with the lids.  However, when you need new lids, you can buy these separately.  Traditional lids are metal and are single use.  (unless you make jams and seal them with wax)  They come in regular and wide mouth sizes.  Their cost ranges anywhere from $1.00 on sale up to $4.99.  Rings and lids, of course cost more than just lids.  There is a company that makes reusable lids.  These tattler lids work wonderfully.  They are made to be used with all methods of canning.  They are more expensive for initial cost; however, by their second or maybe third use, they have recouped the expense in both the short and long term.  In a world where we may not be able to acquire necessary equipment, including lids, being able to reuse whatever we can is essential.  Tattler lids, where I by them locally, are about $9.99 per 12 regular lids, and $11.99 per wide mouth lids.  The only part you need to have besides the Tattler lids is the rings.

Now that you’re getting prepared and you’ve added bottles and canning equipment to your list of to-do’s. You might want to also think about what else you will be able to add to your food possibilities.  We’re talking about wild edibles. 

Wild Edibles. 

Imagine being able to utilize what grows naturally, without any effort on your part.  From purslane to common mallow, even dandelions, you have a valuable source of food should you choose to access it.  Every state has a unique cornucopia of edibles.  Many of those edibles grow in several states.  Some can be eaten raw, others need to be cooked.  All of them are nutritious. 

With a little bit of effort, you will soon see all of the different plants that grow naturally in your area.  You’ll be able to locate the edibles, and anything toxic.  You’ll learn when to harvest certain plants, and if they need to be processed in a particular way. 

I recommend contacting your local “native plant society”.  Some of them will have membership fees.  But for the plethora of knowledge you will be able to receive, the cost will be well worth it.  You will also want to find someone locally that can take the time to go out with you either one on one, or in a group.  This will give you the hands on experience necessary to transition into being able to recognize useful plants and forage on your own. 

Foraging at one time was taught to each following generation.  It was a way of life. A litany of reasons changed that way of thinking.  Now however, knowing your native plants, especially wild edibles, is coming back into style.  It is a skill that takes time, but is worth it, if you use it wisely. 

Imagine being short on a berry crop, but being able to turn to dandelion flowers as an alternative.  Its sweet honey like flavor is perfect when added to a host of dishes.  How about on a peanut butter sandwich, or even pancakes rather than syrup?  Or there is the purslane stem that is supposed to taste amazing pickled.  Need a boost of vitamin C or just a shot of tart to flavor your drinking water?  How about rose hips.  The choices are almost endless. 

Being able to tell the difference between stinging nettle, and the mint that grows right next to it?  Helpful, since the mint is soothing to nettle stings.  Maybe you need to know what kind of cactus can be eaten and used as a source of water. 

There is a lot of learning that needs to be done.   But the advantages are numerous.