WHAT ARE YOU CANNING TODAY?

MetalSmitten

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Farmfresh said:
Also the noodles in the soup will not turn out very well after canning. I would just freeze that. When I can soups I always make everything like normal, but no noodles or rice. I just add them and some extra water when I am ready to heat the soup. ;)
ahh good idea, thank you! :) learning...
 

moolie

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Sterilization is not necessary for pressure canning, or water bath canning where the processing time is over 20 minutes long. All you need to do is wash well :)

Oh, and ditto on the noodles--they'll go to mush in the pressure canner.
 

colowyo0809

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I boil my jars and bands and soak the lids just cause my momma did it and so did my gran and I figure it's an extra layer of protection :) This way, they get the boiling and they get the boiling :D
 

MetalSmitten

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Thank you everyone, you guys are so amazingly helpful :) It looks like 2 of my 3 soup jars have sealed (boo on the last one) but I might just end up giving them to the chickens if the noodles turned as bad as you make me fear. I tend not to be a foodie anyway though, so maybe the taste won't bother me too much, hah.

Can I ask one more newbie question? (Sorry, I tried to Google this but I keep getting non-answers) I ended up canning 5 qts of potatoes too (yay!) and these jars look nice n sealed so far, but the potatoes continued boiling/bubbling for a looooong time. It's been at least two hours now and they're still sending up an occasional bubble. I did try to get the air-bubbles out of the jars pre-canning. Is this normal or am I making a mistake somewhere? I did them for 40 mins at 10lbs, as per recipe, loosely packed. Thanks in advance :)
 

Farmfresh

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It is normal. Those jars are super hot inside and it takes them a while to settle down. :)

The noodles won't taste bad, BTW, they will just be mush. ;)
 

k15n1

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MetalSmitten said:
Why do you need to boil the jars and simmer the lids before you pressure can things? I keep reading how important it is for sterilization purposes, but I wonder why you need to bother when the whole point of canning is to basically sterilize the food... you'd think the jar/lid would be sterilized at the same time.
You don't need to sterilize the jars before pressure canning. But you don't want to put hot food into cold jars because the jars are expensive and might crack. I've heard that you shouldn't jeat the jars in the oven, but there was no reasoning given. It makes sense to me, but I am usually in the backyard, slaving over a huge propane burner, so the oven would be of no use to me.

I've often heard that you should soften up the seals on the lids with hot (not boiling) water. I think it makes a difference in seal quality and how tight you screw the rings on. In my opinion, if you get less than 1 seal failure per 36 jars, your method is probably fine.
 

k15n1

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MetalSmitten said:
Thank you everyone, you guys are so amazingly helpful :) It looks like 2 of my 3 soup jars have sealed (boo on the last one) but I might just end up giving them to the chickens if the noodles turned as bad as you make me fear. I tend not to be a foodie anyway though, so maybe the taste won't bother me too much, hah.
Noodles are not just a matter of taste. They break down and have the same effect as adding so much flour and thereby thicken the soup. If the liquid is thick, the heat transfers more slowly from the edges of the jar into the center. Heat transfer by conduction alone (like if you have a jar packed solid with meat or something) is really slow, so most canning recipes call for a thin liquid to boil through the food. That's the reason they don't recommend thick soups or packing food into jars. So take it easy on the noodles. Obviously, a few noodles aren't going to kill you. Just don't plan on canning spaghetti.
 

AnnaRaven

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MetalSmitten said:
I'm canning for the very first time! :) 3 pints of leftover turkey noodle soup if all goes according to plan.

(I'm eyeing our little potato harvest too, we'll see what happens after this first attempt is done.)

Can I ask a dumb question real quick? Why do you need to boil the jars and simmer the lids before you pressure can things? I keep reading how important it is for sterilization purposes, but I wonder why you need to bother when the whole point of canning is to basically sterilize the food... you'd think the jar/lid would be sterilized at the same time. Does anybody skip that step, or am I just trying to be lazy?
Not a stupid question. When pressure canning, you don't need to sterilize first, just have it clean (you don't want leftover stuff on your food, right?). I believe, according to my canning group, you really don't need to sterilize if you're pressure canning or if you're boiling water bath canning for at least 10 minutes.
 
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