When shopping for olive oil, the word light refers to the colour and flavour of the oil, not the calorie content.

Welcome to our kitchen that truly is the heart of our home! One of life's greatest pleasures is enjoying good food with family and friends. Here you will find recipes, tips for frugal cooking, how-tos for food preservation especially canning and anything else food related. Tea is brewing and warm cookies are fresh from the oven. Please sit a spell and enjoy your stay.
Frugal homemakers have relied on home canning for decades to preserve the bounty from their gardens as well as take advantage of local in season produce. For many, it is a viable way to preserve their catch from hunting and fishing. Home canning saw a decline in the 1950's and 1960's with the availability of commercially canned foods, the introduction of home freezers and women going into the work-force. Canning has always been a way of life for certain religious groups and has tended to be a more popular activity in rural areas. As a newlywed, I canned as a way to stretch our food budget. Those skills served us well while raising by today's standards a larger family. Back then I would read through Mother Earth News and borrow cookbooks from the library but other than that, there really wasn't a lot of home canning literature available. In 1994, the USDA revised their home canning guidelines effectively telling folks the only lids they recommended were the new two piece metal snap lids even though thousands of housewives had used the glass lids and glass inserts for ages. Two reasons caused this to happen with the first being the companies producing the metal lids paying to have them tested and because there is a visible indentation when the lid seals, they were viewed safer regardless of the fact metal lids can give false seals. Home canning grew in popularity amongst the back-to-the-land group then saw a sudden increase during the y2K scare. Now, home canning continues to increase in popularity because there is a growing disillusionment with the food industry. Folks are taking matters into their own hands by snubbing their nose at the food industry, choosing instead to put up their own healthy, preservative and additive free foods. Into that mix comes another segment of the population interested in home canning, the ones who want or have to save money on food costs.
Home canning is one of the most frugal activities you can do. You can save a substantial amount of money. Like many home canners, I can year round but the busy canning time when local produce is in season here is from mid-May through mid-October. During that time as each kind of produce comes into season, I try to can the amount we will need to get to the next season for that produce. For example, when local asparagus is in season, I will put up enough to last until it is in season again the following year. This takes a bit of planning. My first goal is to can enough so we don't run out of that food item and second is to not can so much of one food item that the stock cannot be used within an eighteen month to two year time frame.
What this really means is I have to have a plan. With a plan in place there is less chance of problems during the busy canning season when there is a tendency to be running the canner multiple times in one day. It is easier to keep the focus on processing local, in season produce leaving those foods like meats, poultry and dried beans that can be canned year round to the quieter canning months. That doesn't mean those foods that can be canned outside the busy canning season won't be canned then if the opportunity presents itself, just that I know they can wait while I get those foods canned that won't wait. Here's how I create a plan for the busy canning season:
As a home canner who processes well over 1,400 jars of food each year, I am always very appreciative of any free jars that come my way. Sometimes the jars come filled with food that I have to discard then clean the jars and other times the jars come empty with only cleaning needed. At any rate when my husband recently brought me home three cases (36 jars) of 500 ml jars, I was elated. After doing a bit of power canning, I am getting low on jars which is fine because that means the jars I have are filled but you know a home canner doesn't just can during the peak season of May to October. Oh no, a home canner tends to can year round filling jars as quickly as they are emptied.
We do a lot of entertaining both at home and our vacation home. One huge hit has always been chili dogs which basically are all beef wieners topped with chili, onions and grated cheese. For years, I made chili with beans (chili con carne) from scratch then froze part for chili dogs. Then a few years ago I decided to home can chili with beans as a homemade convenience product for the pantry.
I am not a huge fan of home canning plain, basics as in tomato products. The reason is two fold. First home canned basic tomato products while versatile take up a fair amount of space in the pantry that could be better used for a home canned convenience product. I would rather can the tomatoes in the form of ready to use sauce or quick meal than just plain tomatoes. Second, there is little savings in canning a basic tomato product like whole, diced or crushed tomatoes. This is not the case for me as my tomatoes are free to begin with but it is a factor for others who have to pay for their produce.
One of my goals with home canning is creating a few convenience products for the pantry. I have to tell you I don't can a lot of whole, diced or crushed tomatoes because I can take the tomatoes to the next level before canning. This means I prefer canning tomato sauces and ready to use tomato products over plain tomatoes if I have to make a choice. I canned 7 - 750 ml and 6 - L jars of tomato purée. Tomato purée is thinner than tomato paste but thicker than tomato sauce. It unseasoned so can be used as a base for tomato based sauces, ketchup, soups and tomato powder.
As mentioned yesterday, home canned spaghetti sauce with meat is a must have tomato based product in our pantry. It puts any store bought pasta sauce to shame at a fraction of the cost. I use my own developed after years and years of tweaking to where I finally have the perfect blend our family so much enjoys. The original recipe, if you can even call it that, was taught to me by my mother-in-law as a newlywed. It was a toss this in, cook, taste and adjust with nothing written down very much the same way I learned to cook from my Mom. It is now been developed into an actual recipe for home canning purposes but I also continue to tweak for fresh use and freezing.
Yesterday, I started writing about my husband's hospital stay just as I was starting my fourth hamper. While I had all of the ingredients prepped and waiting to be cooked for the old fashioned chili sauce, the tomatoes for the salsas were still draining. The morning after he was admitted to hospital, I strained off the tomato liquid reserving it for tomato stock and froze those tomatoes then rushed up to the hospital to be there for the ultrasound. After spending the entire day at the hospital, I headed home at 9:30 PM. It was late and I was exhausted but knew the chili sauce had to be made and canned that night. The reality is life doesn't stop because of canning and visa versa. I had two choices, either make and can the chili sauce or let the produce spoil.