Corn Woman
Almost Self-Reliant
Personally I would buy a new pressure canner but that is what makes me comfortable. What makes me un-comfortable is the stress I would have wondering if there was one jar that had botulisum. For me its a risk that I'm not willing to take but to each his own. I use a steamer canner for all of my fruits,tomatos, salsa, tomato soup ect. and don't buy into the hype from my local extension office re: the only safe tomato products must be pressure canned. I have been canning this way for over 30 years after I tossed the water bath canner and have had no problems. But again I am comfortable using this "un-approved" method.animalfarm said:Actually, it is all about
1) safe food
2) safe food handling practices
3)cleanliness and personal hygiene
Even in my instruction book for the All American canner, it states that botulism spores are on the food and good washing practices will eliminate most of them. If you have grown your own produce, every one's GREAT grandmas did; sorry grandma is just not old enough any more to be taking credit anymore, then with good food handling techniques and clean hands along with a clean work space, water bath canning of meats is and low acid veggies is a minimal risk.
I have eaten and would eat in the future water bathed meats and veggies provided I knew the person who did the canning, where the produce came from, and the personal habits of the people in the household. Its all about risk assessment; most people still get out of bed in the morning and the odds are much greater of coming to harm from just getting in the car and going to work.
There is no right or wrong in the canning argument its just that some of us have lived a more rugged and practical life. There really is a lot of fear mongering in the food industry. I have a pressure canner but if it were to suddenly "blow up" I would let the water bath method take over.