Tag: canning

  • Easy Cranberry Recipe, Cranberry Jam – GF Video

    Easy Cranberry Recipe, Cranberry Jam – GF Video

    Bought too many cranberries? Here’s an easy cranberry recipe to use up those extras you bought. This jam is a simple cranberry recipe to make and you can store the jam for up to a year in mason jars by canning them.

    Easy Cranberry Recipe The GardenFork Way

    These berries are one of those superfoods that I think we should be eating year round. And by making jam and canning it, you can make a big batch of this, and have it for the rest of the year. Watch our easy canning instructions video here. How cool is it to show up at a friends dinner party with a jar of homemade jam?

    We often run across cranberries on sale at the grocery store, so buy 4 bags or so, some oranges and ginger, and you are good to go.

    These berries have a long  history with the Americas, they grow in the U.S. and Canada. Wikipedia has a long entry on cranberries, and I liked this early dinner reference to turkey and cranberries:

    In the 1672 book “New England Rarities Discovered” author John Josselyn described cranberries, writing:

    “Sauce for the Pilgrims, cranberry or bearberry, is a small trayling plant that grows in salt marshes that are overgrown with moss. The berries are of a pale yellow color, afterwards red, as big as a cherry, some perfectly round, others oval, all of them hollow with sower (sic) astringent taste; they are ripe in August and September. They are excellent against the Scurvy. They are also good to allay the fervor of hoof diseases. The Indians and English use them mush, boyling (sic) them with sugar for sauce to eat with their meat; and it is a delicate sauce, especially with roasted mutton. Some make tarts with them as with gooseberries.”

    easy-cranberry-recipe-cranberry-jam-1

    I find many sauces made with cranberries to be too sweet, so for this jam, I use only 1/2 cup of sugar, but you might want to increase that a bit. Taste the jam and add sugar if you want. Be careful, as the jam is pretty hot in the pan, let it cool on a spoon. Our Easy Cranberry Recipe is below:

    Easy Cranberry Jam
    Ingredients
    •    1 lb Fresh Cranberries
    •    1/2 cup sugar
    •    1 cup water
    •    1 navel orange
    •    2 inch piece ginger
    Cooking Directions
    1. Wash the orange well and cut into quarters. Then slice slivers of the orange, including the rind. How thick to make the slivers is up to you.
    2. Peel the ginger and cut into rounds, sticks, or diced. This depends on how you like your ginger…
    3. Rinse the cranberries and put into a medium saucepan with a thick bottom, or use a heat diffuser under the pan
    4. Add to the pan the water, orange slices, ginger, sugar.
    5. Bring to a simmer, you will start to hear the cranberries pop, kinda like quiet popcorn.
    6. Cover the lid, turn down the heat to low, and cook for 10-20 minutes, stirring every few minutes.
    7. When most of the berries have burst and started to break down, turn off the heat and let cool.
    8. Taste for sweetness, and add sugar if you want.
    9. Keep in the fridge in a covered container or jars for about 2 weeks, or use hot water bath canning to preserve. I processed the jam for 10 minutes with 1/4\\\” headspace.

    Have an easy cranberry recipe? Let us know below, be great to hear from you:

  • How to Can – Canning Tomatoes, Fruit, Vegetables : GF Video

    How to Can – Canning Tomatoes, Fruit, Vegetables : GF Video

    How to can video! Learn how to can food: apples, peaches, can tomatoes, vegetables. Canning food is easy using the waterbath method. Use a big pot you already have as a canning pot and buy a funnel and a  grabber tool and you are good to go.

    Home Canning How To

    This waterbath method is for high-acid food like fruits, tomatoes, pickles. You should use pressure cooker canning for low acid foods like meat and fish. You can buy a canning pot to boil the jars, but we use a big metal stockpot, the same one we use for brewing beer and cooking pasta. When using a stockpot for canning, place a towel in the bottom of the stockpot to keep the jars from touching the metal bottom of the pot. A GF viewer suggested tying together some jar bands with twist ties to form a base for the jars to rest on in the pot.

    Some things to keep in mind when canning food:

    • Be sure to wash the jars, lids, and bands with hot soapy water
    • Do not allow any food to get on the rim of the jar or on the rubber area of the sealing ring. Wipe off any mistakes
    • Allow the jars to cool for 12 hours and test the lids for seal. Some jars lids may still make the pop sound when they are taken out of the waterbath.
    • Buy a canning funnel and tongs, they are worth it. Less spilled food and no burned hands!
    how-to-can-canning-tomatoes-fruit-vegetables-4
    Canning Funnel keeps the rim of the jar clean and sits nicely on top of the jar. Canning Tongs save your hands!

    We based our information on one of the experts at Ball Jar Company, they have a great PDF on canning.

    pickle-rhubarb-play

    Watch our other canning videos here!

    What are your canning tips? Let us know below:

  • The best spice rub for pork shoulder BBQ GardenFork Radio

    The best spice rub for pork shoulder BBQ GardenFork Radio

    We are on the road today in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY visiting with Daniel Delaney. Daniel and I talk about if someone can turn on the webcam on your laptop, and relates a story about an artist who did something similar at a computer store, and was then visited by law enforcement

    Eric likes Daniel’s great Bolognese sauce that he did for his What’s This Food show, and we talk about how to can tomato sauces with a pressure cooker, and canning foods from the farmers market. The Karen Solomon book we talk about is Can It, Bottle It, Smoke It And Other Cooking Projects.

    Daniel relates about cooking crawfish and his trip to New Orleans, and how water chestnut flour in a cake is not a great thing.

    Eric tells how to propagate rhubarb, how to grow it, how to transplant it, and whether you can grow it from seed. Then we get into how lobster rolls are regional dishes , how they should be made. Mayonnaise or butter? or a mix?

    Eric was inspired to start salt water fishing by Ben Sargent founder of Brooklyn Urban Anglers Association.

    Daniel talks about the best spice rub to use on a pork shoulder that you are going to smoke. And how to smoke BBQ the quickest way possible using aluminum foil.

    Daniel talks about 110 stories, a kickstarter campaign he has helped promote

    and viewer mail about Moose, the black labrador!

     

     

     

     

  • How to Make Applesauce Recipe : GardenFork.TV

    How to Make Applesauce Recipe : GardenFork.TV

    Learn How to Make Applesauce as fall starts and apples ripen. We get apples from our local pick your own orchard or from our neighbors who have a very nice apple orchard. After you’ve made applesauce, you can can it, watch our hot water bath canning video.

    How to make applesauce the GardenFork way

    Making applesauce is not rocket science. It does take some attention, making sure you don’t burn the bottom of the pan, but is easy to do. This is something you can do with your children, get them involved in cooking.

    How to make applesauce

    Your first choice is are you a skin on or off kind of person. I leave the skins on when cooking down apples to make applesauce. The skins add the red-pink color to the sauce and also thickens it a bit more. I think there’s also a nutritional benefit to the fruit skins.

    Next up is do you want to remove the seeds and core before or after cooking down the apples. You can core the apples before adding them into the pot, or just put whole apples in to the pot and deal with the cores later. You can also just quarter the apples and remove the seeds later.

    If you are leaving the skins on, you’ll need a food mill. These are great tools to have around anyway for other projects. You can use it to make tomato sauce and de-seed other fruit pulp.

    Also important when making applesauce is a pot with a thick bottom so the sauce does not scorch, or you can use a heat diffuser. The key here is to cook down the apples, but not burn them, low and slow works well.

    So there you go, some pointers on how to make applesauce, below is the recipe.

     

     

    How to Make Applesauce Recipe : GardenFork.TV
    Recipe Type: Dessert
    Cuisine: American
    Author: Eric Rochow
    Prep time:
    Cook time:
    Total time:
    Serves: 32 ounces
    This recipe makes it easy to make your own applesauce.
    Ingredients
    • 3 lbs ripe apples
    • 1/2 cup water
    • 1 tablespon Cinnamon
    Instructions
    1. Core and cut the apples into quarters.
    2. Add cored – cut apples and water to the pot, put pot on high heat.
    3. When the water and apples start to sizzle, turn down the heat to low, cover, and let the apples cook down.
    4. Add the cinnamon.
    5. Mash the apples down occasionally, until the apples become sauce.
    6. If you like a smoother sauce, cook the apples down longer, taking care not to burn the apples.
  • If you hear a chainsaw, that’s my neighbor : GardenFork Radio

    If you hear a chainsaw, that’s my neighbor : GardenFork Radio

    Painting apartments and cars start off this week’s GardenFork Radio show with Eric Rochow and Mike. Then we digress into the 11 Best Foods to Eat, according to the NY Times. Eric makes a sardine sandwich on a boat, Ocean Friendly fish list by the Blue Ocean Institute, then we move to Supper Clubs, Pick Your Own orchards, Marissa McClellan’s canning blog FoodInJars.com . And of course, Viewer Mail.

    the links:

    Eric’s Sardine Recipe while canoeing

    Marissa’s food blog www.foodinjars.com Marissa uses an old style slow cooker to make fruit butters
    http://www.foodinjars.com/2010/06/25/june-can-jam-slow-cooker-blueberry-butter/

    11 Best Foods You Aren’t Eating from the NY Times

    Blue Ocean Institute Guide to Ocean Friendly Seafood

    U Pick Orchards and Farms listing PickYourOwn.org

    Trevor and Sally’s catering company in the UK is Tresal Catering

    ———-

    Tyler, our severe weather reporter and GF sponsor, writes about his U Pick adventures on his personal blog, My Chicago Garden . [ added after Tyler’s comment below ]

  • How to pickle beets and a pickeled beet recipe

    I am big into pickling and canning these days, and beets are a natural for pickling and canning. Watch the show here and let us know what your thoughts and ideas are. I’ll post the recipe in full after we get this new site set up.

  • Bread and Butter Pickles Recipe – GF Video

    Bread and Butter Pickles Recipe – GF Video

    My Bread and butter pickles recipe that’s easy to make and i love them. These are great to can and store for the winter. I love it when i open a jar in the snowy winter and crunch on summer. neat. Check out this bread and butter pickle recipe and video on canning pickles.

    Eric’s Bread and Butter Pickle Recipe

    This recipe will fill 4-5 8 oz canning jars, it depends on how packed the jars are.

    About 6-8 medium cucumbers, sliced thinly

    1 large sweet onion, cut in half, sliced thinly

    4 cups cider vinegar

    1 1/2 cup sugar

    Pickling spice

    Put a big pot of water on the stove to boil, the water should be high enough to cover the jars.

    salt cukes and onions in a colander with kosher salt

    place the colander in the sink or in a bowl

    let sit for an hour, then rinse off salt, shake the cukes and onions to dry.

    put the vinegar and sugar in a saucepan and heat to dissolve the sugar.

    when pot of water reaches a boil, place jars in water to sterilize, and simmer the canning lids in a small saucepan, do not boil the lids.

    put a tablespoon of pickling spice in each canning jar.

    pack the jars with cukes and onions so they reach 1/2″ below the top of the jars

    then pour the vinegar – sugar mix into each jar up to 1/2″ below the top of the jars. the liquid should cover the cukes and onions.

    place lids on each jar, making sure the tops of the jars are clean. secure with the screw-on bands. the bands does not need to be super tight, just barely tight.

    place the jars in the boiling water, the water should completely cover the jars.

    boil the jars for 10 minutes,

    set them to cool on a wire rack.

    the next day, check the lids to make sure they sealed. push each lid down, if the lid pops up and down, the jar is not properly sealed. You can either refrigerate this jar and eat the pickles within a week or put on a new jar lid and boil again for 10 minutes.

    ©2008 Eric Rochow  photo from MorgueFile

  • Eric’s Rhubarb Jam Recipe with Canning How-to GF Video

    Eric’s Rhubarb Jam Recipe with Canning How-to GF Video

    Here’s is my rhubarb jam recipe:

    Part 2:

     

    Wow. what fun it was to make and can our own rhubarb jam.Rhubarb Jam Recipe

    5 cups of chopped rhubarb

    2 cups of sugar

    1 cup of water

    2 to 4 packets of unflavored gelatin

    optional:

    1 carton of strawberries, chopped

    1 20 oz can of crushed pineapple

    zest of one orange, or whole orange slices

    Place all ingredients except gelatin in a large pot, and cook for 15-20 minutes, until rhubarb has broken down to your liking . Turn off heat, and add gelatin. How much gelatin depends on how thich you like your jam. More gelatin means a thicker jam.

    Can jam according to canning instructions that come with your canning jars.

    recipe ©2007 eric rochow

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