I don’t know about you, but I am feeling a little behind in my canning planning. If you are too, worry not! If we follow these ten simple steps, we’ll both step into preservation season calm and prepared to tackle those bushels of tomatoes and pickles and corn.
I was just chatting with my friend and mentor Margaret Roach of A Way To Garden about all this. (Listen in at her most recent podcast.) Margaret’s a vegetarian and a one-person household, so in some ways she and I put up the harvest very differently, but in other ways there are huge similarities.
We’re joining forces today with dual-giveaways (more about that later in the post) and our best suggestions for how any food preserver can face the canning season with organization and confidence.
Let’s do this.
Get Your Plan Together
1. Consider Your Goals
Some people can purely as an exercise in frugality. Some like the craft of it. Some people like the convenience of shelf-stable foods, others want to avoid BPA in cans. Some people are trying to support their local foodshed, or make sure nothing from the garden goes to waste. Some people are getting ready for zombies, other just want to control what goes into their food.
Most of us have some combination of goals that motivate our home food preservation. Consider yours. Why do you this and what do you want to get out of it?
I can, primarily, for quality, convenience and the joy of it. I like having really convenient pantry staples at the ready without having to turn to commercial convenience food. This means that I focus on versatile basics, like tomatoes and garbanzo beans.
Read more: Zombies vs. The Joy of Canning.
2. Take An Inventory
Before you start canning up dozens of jars of peach mulberry curry sauce or whatever, go spend a few minutes staring into your cupboards, pantry, garage – wherever your food storage happens. You might want to print out a larder assessment sheet for this.
Make a note of what canned items your family really eats through the year – store-bought or home-canned. For us, the big winners are always canned tomatoes, beans, pickles, stock, simple jams with zings of flavor, and pork.
Now it’s time for some hard truths. What preserved goods are languishing in your pantry, several years old and forgotten? Give yourself permission to compost those creations that you know, deep down, you will never eat.
Read More: What Foods Should I Preserve?
3. Seek Out Inspiration
Now’s the fun part! Sit down with a cup of coffee or tea and a few of your favorite canning books and the notes from your inventory. As you flip through your books, just let your food preserver’s heart run wild.
Consider your dream fantasy canning creations, holiday gifts, canning swaps and other situations in which you might give away or trade your jars. When something looks incredible, write it down or flag the page so you can easily find that recipe again.
My favorite canning resources:
- The National Center For Home Food Preservation
- [easyazon_link identifier=”B005SK6Y1Q” locale=”US” tag=”nortediblife-20″]The Ball Blue Book[/easyazon_link] (part of the giveaway below!)
- [easyazon_link identifier=”0762441437″ locale=”US” tag=”nortediblife-20″]Food in Jars[/easyazon_link]
- [easyazon_link identifier=”1584798645″ locale=”US” tag=”nortediblife-20″]Canning For A New Generation[/easyazon_link]
- And you can always [easyazon_link identifier=”1570619913″ locale=”US” tag=”nortediblife-20″]pre-order my book[/easyazon_link], which is not exclusively about canning, but which does contain many of my favorite food preservation recipes, including an awesome one for British style canned baked beans.
4. Fine-Tune Your List
Just like gardeners want to grow all the vegetables, canners typically want to can all the things. But look, we can’t. There aren’t enough hours in day or jars in the house. This is as much about editing your list as it is about scribbling things on it.
Remember your goals and inventory. Let those guide you as you make your final selections. If you like, go print out my Canning Planning and Pressure Canning Planning sheets – these will help you think about your food preservation by category so you’re less likely to decide you absolutely need 64 types of peach jam (52 is plenty).
Make sure you are selecting recipes from reputable sources that follow safe canning procedures.
5. Check Produce Ripeness Dates
Preserved food is never better than the ingredients it’s made from. We want everything to be at the peak of ripeness when we put it up. That’s when it tastes best and that’s when it’s cheapest if you’re buying.
Some produce – like cabbage – will be available locally for months and months. Some delicate fruit is only available for a few weeks. If you are harvesting your own garden you just have to be psychologically ready for the glut. If you are ordering from a farmer, pre-ordering is always smart.
If you want a specific variety of strawberry or peach from a local farmer, you may have to get even more detailed.
As an example, here’s the 2012 Eastern Washington ripening schedule of different peach varieties, from my friends at Valicoff Farms. You can see that if you are targeting, for example, the Elberta variety for your canning jar you’d better have a pretty good idea of when those peaches will be available or you’ll miss out.
Look back over your list and sanity check that you aren’t over-committed to canning projects based on produce ripening and other stuff in your life. While it’s true that late summer will always be the busiest times to put food up, there’s no reason you should attempt to squeeze applesauce into late August if you’re already planning pickles, tomatoes and peaches. As you can, stretch the process out.
Get Your Gear Together
Ok, now that you’ve got your mental game-plan together, it’s time to make sure your gear is up to snuff, too!
6. Get Your Dial Gauge Pressure Canner Tested
Get your dial gauge pressure canner tested. This is totally non-negotiable. You have to test the dial yearly. Why? Because botulism. Unfortunately, it’s become hard to find places to have the dials tested, so typically you have to ship the dial to the manufacture (Presto). This is a big pain, so if you do have a dial-only gauge pressure canner, look into converting yours to a weighted gauge canner.
If you don’t pressure can fresh vegetables (I don’t) and your canner is used more for meat and dry beans, you can probably put this off until early fall. But if you want canned corn, canned green beans or summer vegetable soup in your pantry, get on this dial-testing asap.
Additional Information: Presto Pressure Canner Service page.
If you have a weighted gauge canner, the weight itself acts to maintain the proper pressure and the dial is just a backup and indicator of when pressure has dropped to 0, so we know that it’s safe to open the canner. If you notice a difference in the pressure reading on the dial and the actual pressure as determined by the weight, you may need to get the dial tuned up but the actual pressure inside the canner should still be safe and accurate.
7. Assess your equipment
You do not need one of those lightweight speckled enamel canning pots. In fact, I personally really dislike those. Any pot tall enough to accommodate your jars with a couple inches of boiling water and a couple inches of head room above that is fine for boiling water bath canning. Make sure your canning pot has a rack that works, or make one yourself.
Track down your basic canning utensils and give them a dedicated home so you don’t hunt around when the canning passion is upon you. In addition to normal kitchen utensils like spoons, spatulas and ladles, you will need:
- [easyazon_link identifier=”B007QT4GMQ” locale=”US” tag=”nortediblife-20″]a canning funnel[/easyazon_link] – my favorite one is part of the giveaway.
- [easyazon_link identifier=”B000HJBFGC” locale=”US” tag=”nortediblife-20″]a jar lifter[/easyazon_link], essential for getting hot jars out of hot water safely, also part of the giveaway.
- [easyazon_link identifier=”B003UVK0S8″ locale=”US” tag=”nortediblife-20″]a magnetic lid lifter/bubbler tool[/easyazon_link] for picking up and placing just one lid at a time and removing air bubbles from jars after filling.
8. Inventory your jars and lids
Get a rough idea of how many empty jars you have and, if at all possible, sort them by size so it will be easy for you to grab what you need later.
If you are a canner, you probably always want extra jars. Sadly, now is not the time to buy a whole heap of them. The best deals on new jars happen towards the end of summer, as big box stores try to clear out their inventory. Keep your eyes peeled in several months.
Used jars are always an option, but be warned that many thrift stores charge nearly as much for used jars without lids as it costs to buy jars new with lids! Craigslist, your local Freecycle and Buy Nothing group, garage sales and that nice old lady up the street who’s tired of canning can are better bets.
If you use reusable lids, like Tattler, or glass lidded jars like Weck, inspect your lids and gaskets carefully for signs of wear and tear. U.S. food safety recommendations are to treat rubber gaskets used for canning as single-use items, but according to Marisa at Food In Jars, in Europe gaskets are typically used until they begin to stretch. I follow U.S. food safety regulations.
If you use two piece lids, check to see how many boxes of flats you have. If you are a large-scale canner, it might make sense to [easyazon_link identifier=”B00I17LC92″ locale=”US” tag=”nortediblife-20″]buy lids in bulk[/easyazon_link]. In any event, do keep your eye out for good deals on lids in grocery and hardware stores.
While we’re doing this, let’s go through our rings. If you are like me, you probably have 17 times more rings than will ever need. Remember, after the jars cool and set their seals, it’s best to take off the rings and store the jars with just the sealed flat.
Go through your rings and pull out any that are rusty or no longer perfectly round. Upcycle, recycle or donate extra rings.
9. Stock up on basics.
There are some items that I know I will use a ton of throughout canning season. Vinegar, kosher salt, pickling salt, organic sugar and citric acid are my must-haves for jamming, pickling and processing my way through hundreds of pounds of seasonal produce. Your basics might also include pectin and bottled lemon juice.
Stock up on the basics you know will be used in your preserving. Vinegar, salt and sugar don’t go bad, and it’s such a pain to have to run out to the store if you find yourself suddenly out of apple cider vinegar. If you can a lot, all these things are available for far less in bulk at stores like Costco.
Check through your spices, too, and make sure you’re good for dill seed, black peppercorns, cinnamon, pickling spice, or whatever spices you know will be used. I highly recommend buying your spices in bulk. Fresh spices mean tastier preserves!
10. Don’t Go It Alone
While they aren’t technically “gear,” one of the most useful tools in your canning kitchen is a productive friend by your side! It’s just more fun to do this kind of work with another person, so text your friends, call your mom, email your neighbor and see who might be up for an afternoon of pickling or jamming.
Alternatively, if your kitchen can’t handle the chaos of multiple canners at once or you just prefer to can in meditative contemplation, throw a canned food swap after the jars cool and the seals set. A canning swap is like the late summer equivalent of a holiday cookie swap, and is a fantastic way to get more variety in your preserves.
Just, do me a favor, make sure anyone you are swapping jars with follows the same high modern safety standards that I know you do, and can confidently and proudly explain how their product was made.
The Giveaway!
Margaret and I are each giving away a kit of canning gear that will help you get started. So, enter here and then make sure you go visit A Way To Garden to enter on her site. Twice the possibility of winning! See, I told you canning was better with friends.
Here’s what you’re entering to win:
- The recently updated [easyazon_link identifier=”B005SK6Y1Q” locale=”US” tag=”nortediblife-20″]Ball Blue Book[/easyazon_link]
- 1 Case (6 jars) of the new [easyazon_link identifier=”B00ODC255Y” locale=”US” tag=”nortediblife-20″]Ball brand Heritage Purple Canning Jars[/easyazon_link] in Pints
- 1 Case (6 jars) of the new Ball brand Heritage Purple Canning Jars in Quarts
- 1 [easyazon_link identifier=”B000HJBFGC” locale=”US” tag=”nortediblife-20″]Norpro Jar Lifter[/easyazon_link]
- [easyazon_link identifier=”B007QT4GMQ” locale=”US” tag=”nortediblife-20″]My favorite canning funnel[/easyazon_link]
- A [easyazon_link identifier=”B007QT4GNU” locale=”US” tag=”nortediblife-20″]specially designed canning scoop[/easyazon_link], to get that jam into the jar.
To Be Entered
Just answer this simple question in the comments section below: “What one food preservation topic do you wish you knew more about?”
The Fine Print
Open to US residents of the United States only.
Contest closes 8 pm Pacific time, Sunday, June 21th 2015.
Winner will be notified by email and shall have 48 hours to respond to claim their prize.
Ball Blue Book and Ball brand Heritage Jars provided by Jarden Home Brands. All other items provided by NWEdible (me!).
And don’t forget to go enter over on Margaret’s site, too!
Good luck!
2
Jane Emery says
I would like to learn more about home canning soups with and w/o meats..
Kathy says
Pressure canning meats and soups.
Roberta says
i would love to learn more about how to make jams without pectin and without sugar.
Heidi says
I am nervous about pressure canning too. I was burned really bad one time.
I still enjoy canning, I just use the water bath method for foods that don’t require pressure cooking/canning.
I hope to give pressure canning another try.
Trisha Anderson-Brown says
My husband and kids hunt for our winter supply of meat every fall. I would love to learn how to can venison and elk to extend our supply through the winter!
Avril says
Wish I knew more about pressure canning, not something that really happens in the uk.
Shelly Nielsen says
I would like to know more about how cold and hot pack come out differently when it comes to veggies.
Pamela Glover says
I want to learn more about using the pressure cooker to can..
Michelle says
I’d like to know more about canning green chile/slasa.
Amy Barker says
I am really interested in learning more about pressure canning. I’m saving up for a pressure canner as we speak.
Mary B Barrett says
Pressure canning still scares me! I’ve been canning for 20 yrs and I know I am missing out on alot by being so scared to attempt pressure canning!
Frannie Payne says
I would like to know more about using a pressure cooker for canning. I don’t know much and they scare me.
Julie Wever says
Pressure cooker – I just don’t know enough about it and scared to try it.
CAROL SCHILLING says
I would like to know more about high-altitude adjustments for canning.
Evelyn Gober says
I would love to know more about pressure canning, I grew up watching my mom can everything out of our garden, Which ones are the best to use and how long things are to be in the canner for.
Shauna Berg says
We’ve been canning dilly beans and Roma/cooking tomatoes for a few years now. So much work, but worth it (I think). Our kitchen is like a sweatshop for a couple days of the year. Never done pressure canning though and would love to learn more!
bonnie says
Shelve life for canned items and proper storage for self canned goods?
Becca says
pickling!
im a pickle addict. have pickling cucumbers happily growing in the garden & it’s making me anxious because i have yet to learn how to preserve them. gotta start somewhere though, am i right!?
Brenda says
Pressure Canning.
Lauri says
Would definitely like more info on pressure canning. I started water-bath canning last year and feel like I have a fairly good grasp on it. Time to branch out!
Joanne says
I would love to learn how to pressure can! I canned using the wax method like a million years ago and have been leary about canning….but with all my newly planted fruit trees and garden, I want to start canning! Would love to win!
Elizabeth H says
I would have to say pressure canning I was never taught to use one and am a little leary of using one.
Thalia Miller says
I’d like to learn more about acidity levels and pressure canning.
Marcie Dockett says
Citric acid and canning. Also, how to make crunchy pickles
Cammie says
i WOULD LIKE TO KNOW MORE ABOUT CANNING SPECIALTY SAUCES
Betty says
I would like to learn more about canning meat. Mom always froze her meat, so it’s the only thing I have no experience with. I’m going to try some this year and make up some ready made meals to have on the self.
Jeanna Walton says
Fermenting. Is that the same thing as pickling? Everyone is always talking about fermenting and healing your gut these days………………… 🙂
Jennifer says
Some years my pickles turn out with no flavor and some years its like i dropped a salt bomb. I follow the directions to the letter and i’m baffled. Where am I going wrong
Sue Kusch says
I am working on eliminating refined sugar from the diet and pantry so I would like to see jams/chutneys and anything sweet canned using stevia or honey.
And how about mead? Fruity, herby, whatever works.
helen says
pressure canning meats and beans.
Matt Van Acker says
would like to know more about beef jerkey making but my wife loves to can all she can and I help her when she turns the kitchen into canning central station
Matt Van Acker says
would like to know more about beef jerky making but my wife loves to can all she can and I help her when she turns the kitchen into canning central station
Tabitha says
Would like to learn more about canning different types of soup.
Diana Seay says
I wish I knew more about “fermenting.” I don’t know if that qualifies as canning, but I don’t know anyone in person that does it and I’ve been seeing it a lot on fb.
Dona williams says
Pressure canning green beans
Bethany says
I would love to learn more about fermentation. With two small children it makes me really nervous, so I’ve never tackled it…
Katie Newcomb says
Why don’t my pickles every turn out? How can I keep them crispy?
Elizabeth says
I would like to know more about pressure canning. That will be my next frontier!
Karin says
Fermenting. I would also be interested in recipes that use sweet jam in savory dishes (meat glazes, etc.)
jojomatt says
Dehydrating. Have a dehydrator but it just sits on the fridge and looks nice. Gotta get going.
Barbara F. says
Seafood
Deborah Wiggs says
would like to can mackerel when they start running. need more info on how to
Deborah Wiggs says
would like info on canning mackerel.
Julie says
Pressure canning for sure. What pressure canner do you use? The thought of purple jars makes me a bit giddy.
Kimberly L says
I’d love to see an article like “What I Wish I’d Known When I First Started Canning”. We all know you can read and read all the go-to materials on a subject, but once you’re up to your elbows there’s all kinds of little quirks you only learn by experience and mistakes.
Erin Tower says
we can a lot of our garden produce, mostly tomato stuff since we can grow tomatoes like they’re going out of style. I would like know more about canning different types of Tomato products, like spaghetti sauces.
Beth H says
I’ve never canned anything, so I have everything to learn. Excited to get started. Thanks for the hints above and the giveaway.
brandy Addison says
I would like to learn more on canning meats. I know you can but I would love family secrets and safety regulations on when and how to can them safely.
sara ramos says
Id love more infomation on Canning meats and soup safely!
Joanne Littau says
I wish I knew more about food borne illnesses ansd how toprevent them.