So, I decided to do something in my kitchen since I've neglected it for far too long. And I decided I'd learn to can. I'll admit, I'd previously considered this after suffering without fruit last winter save mandarins, and had already purchased a can sealer and lids, but hadn't began to be serious until I suddenly found myself with 10 days off. So, I decided it was time. I, along with the two sitemates who have recently moved to Բերդ, went and purchased 20 kilos of tomatoes and 2 dozen jars. And so the inaugural week of canning began.
So, Day 1: Tomato Sauce
20 Kilos Tomatoes, Garlic -> 6 Liters of Tomato Sauce
PickYourOwn.Org - Canning Tomato Sauce
Here you see the initial ingredients for Tomato Sauce and Apple Butter (Day 2)
New sitemate Caroline was in charge of peeling the tomatoes. An easy way to do it is to bring a bowl of water to boil, and drop the tomato (with a small x cut in the peel) in for 30 seconds or so. Then immediately drop it in a bowl of cool (colder the better) water for about 10 seconds. The peel should all but fall off.
Here is Ashley (the other new sitemate) and I cutting open the tomatoes to remove seeds and fluids.
Know your proportions! 20 kilos is way too much for your first time. After about 8 hours cooking down the mixture, I was ready to can. Sterilize jars and lids. When ready, dip jar in boiling water to heat it up. Immediately fill with hot food after shaking out water. Top off with about a Tbsp of lemon juice for every liter. Finally, remove lid from boiling water, shake off water and cover jar.
Last, place in giant pot of boiling water, so that it comes up to 3/4 the jar's height (in America, you can submerge if you have a waterproof seal in place before final sealing. For tomatoes, let sit about an hour in the boiling water, while fruit products take only about 10 minutes. Remove from water bath, and immediately seal. Flip upside down on the floor; in the morning jar should be cooled and if your seal is bad, leakage will have occurred. If everything is done right, the lid should be sucked in and the jar cool (not broken, obviously) and ready for storage.
Day 2: Apple Butter
Approximately 6 kilos of Apples -> 3.5 Liters Apple Butter
So, follow the recipe. We left the peel on and then food processed it. After letting it cook down, we pressed the mash into a sieve and removed the apple sauce. If you have access to a food mill or ricer, use it. This was a major pain in the but for such a large order (I mentioned I have a problem with proportions, right?). Add cinnamon, nutmeg, ground clove, ginger and nutmeg.
I have to admit, this was very satisfying. Unlike the jams that Armenians make, it has far less sugar and the apples (like everything but the peaches and the tomatoes) came from my garden.
Approximately 1.5 kilos plums -> 1 Liter Plum Jam
Savory Sweet Life - Plum Jam w/o Pectin
These are Damson plums as best as I can figure. They are small, and a bit unripe, which I wanted to make up for the uber-sweetness of the jam after adding a seeming excessive amount of sugar.
I marveled at the colors as I pitted the plums.; the brilliant green of the flesh, the indigo peel.
But after being run through the food processor, I had my doubts. I decided to leave the peels since I had been told by many commenters that the peel added a lot of nutrients and gave the jam a beautiful red-purple hue. At this point, with what looked to be fruit vomit (yeah, that's what I thought), I had the sincerest of doubts.
But, as it began to cook, a light pink started to break through the ugliness.
Which became a pristine magenta by the time the sugar was added.
And after reduction, I had the most amazing looking purple jam I'd ever seen. Really, scroll up; remind yourself of the fruit vomit and then look at the final product.
Day 4: Pear Butter
4 Kilos Pears -> I don't want to talk about it.
Trying to reign in my propensity to start with too much fruit, I handpicked pears from my yard. A bit unripe, but I wanted to try pear butter.
Gorgeous right? I, however, made a rookie mistake. Pears need to ripen indoors for 7 to 10 days, in a paper bag in a dark, cool place. First batch took 4 hours and I managed to get 2 cups of pear sauce. The second batch failed even worse; I scrapped it all at 2 am and went to bed. Angry. Very Angry. But I have another 7 kilos of pears from the tree sitting in my desk waiting for this weekend.
Moving on...
4.5 kilos Plums -> 3 Liters Plum Jam
So, after the failure of the previous day, and being a little dejected by only having one liter of plum jam, the ladies returned and helped me make more. We did 3 jars, which goes by far faster with 2 extra folks helping pit, cut, stir, etc. Remember the portion control? This overfilled my largest sauce pan, and ran over. Good news, I know now that my largest pan can handle 3 Liters at the max. Best to stick with 2.
4 Kilos Peaces -> 3 Liters Peach Butter
Smitten Kitchen - Peach Butter
Peaches! Reduced to sauce, with cinnamon and sugar. I love the Smitten Kitchen blog, as you should, too. This recipe appeared on Day 5 of the week and I took it as a sign. I, however, couldn't not add cinnamon. I added .5 Tbsp per Liter, and it smelled delicious.
Remember, the lemon juice for preservation! Also, a word of advice: if you're using the old fashioned kind of jars and lids (Americans, this isn't you), having a small grip mat helps a lot when dealing with exceptionally hot jars.
And not a drop to spare with the 3 jars filled.
Well, I could buy blackberries or I could pick them. What do you think I did?
My host family invited Caroline and I to go picking with them. We didn't realize this would be a 7-hour event and when I returned later, 5 kilos of blackberries richer with bonus wild hazelnuts, I just gave up on trying to can that night, especially since another local volunteer brought down a kilo and half of blackberries for me.
Day 7b: Blackberry Jam, this time with cooking
6.5 Kilos of Blackberries - > 5.5 Liters of blackberry jam
SavorySweetLife Blog - Blackberry Jam w/o Pectin
Simple: Wash, add sugar, reduce. At least this time, I remembered my proportion problem and did it in two batches.
And the extra half liter has been tasty.
Final Results:
6 Liters of Tomato Sauce
5 Liters of Blackberry Jam
4 Liters of Plum Jam
3 Liters of Apple Butter
3 Liters of Peach Butter
Bonus! After being bored after such a busy week of canning, I decided to pick Հոն (pronounced like the word "hone"; it's a cornelian cherry) from my trees. They are quite tart, and if you have never tried one, know that the cherry moniker is very misleading. Rough peel, extremely tart until over ripe, and even then, it's still sour. But I have 7 trees of them and it kind of makes me feel bad to see the fruit go to waste, so I looked up a recipe.
Day 8: Հոն Marmalade
1.5 Kilo Հոն -> 1 Liter Հոն Marmalade
Pitting the small Հոն took forever, but you can see, they have a really rich color.
I added too much water, and it was obvious after pressing through the sieve. The marmalade is more a syrup right now. I have plans of reducing it more when I open it this winter. The taste is hard to describe. Considering this recipe required the greatest part sugar, there is a sweet taste. The tartness isn't as strong as I suspected; I'd recommend this for the adventurous or those who already have a taste for cornelian cherries. The color alone is striking, however.
And that concludes canning until I get these pears ripe and pumpkins come in season.
Also it is possible to dry fruits, but i think there is need of drying trays to spread fruits on them then after that vacuum packing them in plastic bags which you need air-sucking vacuum-packer tool. In winter those dried fruits and vegetables (tomatoes) can be eaten raw or consumed after diluting and softening in hot water. The tomatoes can be sun-dried and used in winter for adding to dishes.
ReplyDeleteAnother question when you sterilize the glass jars in hot water, will it not cause the glass to break up from the heat?
Also I saw that you have left some empty space below the lid of some of your finished jars filled with preserve. Was it not better to fill the preserve till touching the lid since any air catch below the lid could born a bacteria that may damage your preserve (except of course the tomato which is too acidic for germs). Anyway let us see how it turned out the eating in winter since as in the commercial manufactured ones there is not added any chemical to prolong the life and keep them safer.
Also in Armenia they do preserves of "rose petals," you need lot of rose petals to dry them first under the sun then make preserve of them like you did with the fruits.
Unfortunately, I don't have vacuum pacs or even a vacuum cleaner in my Peace Corps house (I don't think they even sell them here). We do have some volunteers who sun-dry tomatoes and some fruits, but it wasn't high on my priority list this year (maybe next year).
ReplyDeleteAnd yes, I did leave some space because from what I read and have learned from the Armenians (remember, do your own research!) was that you need to leave a little space, approximately 1/4 to 1/2 inch to deal with providing at least some oxygen to prevent anaerobic bacteria such as the kind that cause botulism from growing. I also wonder if it's to deal with the expanding/compression at different temperatures. Also, the jar, lid and food were all at boiling hot temperatures for at least an hour in the water bath; anything in the air should be dead. And adding the layer of lemon juice on top will lower the acidity to help protect the sauce.
And finally, jar breakage. I have been...wait, let me run to the kitchen and check my 3 liters of sauce from last night. Okay, all 3 jars survived the cool down process, intact and with no leakage. I've been lucky not to have any breakage. Glass, like all materials, can shatter if it experiences a change of temperature too quickly; basically this happens when part of the jar is hot and has expanded, while an adjoining part is cold and contracted. So, to avoid breakage, heating the empty glass jar in boiling water evenly, then filling it with equally hot food, and placing an equally hot lid, and then submerging it in equally hot water bath will lower the chances of this from happening. So, it's a balance of being quick enough to do these steps without letting anything be too cool. If I make marmalade or anything in the winter, when the air temperature can be quite cold in my kitchen, I'm going to have to be very careful when I remove the water bath, and will probably place them under a blanket to slow the cooling time of the jar. Makes sense?