Don Alaska
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2025
- Messages
- 643
I know @Marie Mallory has posted about her canning and freezing of some things. Does anyone else preserve food? I think @Yvonne Smith does some fermenting as well. We have been drying herbs, making jelly, jam and syrup, pickling all kinds of stuff, and pressure canning beans and salmon. We still have a lot to harvest and a lot to process. I pickled 6 half-pints of jalapenos today and my wife did 17 pints of cherry jelly. I hope to do cowboy candy relish either tomorrow or Monday. We picked 4 gallons of cherries yesterday at a friend's place, and wife collected 4 1/2 gallons of tomatillos this afternoon, and there are still many to pick. We have oodles of tomatoes to process, although there are many that are not yet ripe. My wife is processing a big pot of V-8 juice, but it has not been canned yet. We froze 15 galloons of raspberries, most of which will go into my wife's morning smoothies, but we also made 2 batches of jam.
We had the grandkids over today to help pick early apples. The first apple pressing will be on September 8th I think, but we may miss it due to scheduling conflicts, but the orchard folks said they would have a pressing just for us if we miss the community gathering.
I harvested two buckets of potatoes as part of my "research" into intensive potato culture in containers. The regular container yielded 4 pounds of potatoes and the intensive one yielded 7 1/2 pounds--almost double the yield, but the intensive method used 4 times the resources. I may tweak it a little next year and try another trial. We still have two more comparison containers, and 3 rows of spuds in the ground to dig. We might have the grandkids back over to help harvest potatoes, carrots, beets, and rutabagas. Potatoes especially are a treat for them as it is a bit like a treasure hunt
We had the grandkids over today to help pick early apples. The first apple pressing will be on September 8th I think, but we may miss it due to scheduling conflicts, but the orchard folks said they would have a pressing just for us if we miss the community gathering.
I harvested two buckets of potatoes as part of my "research" into intensive potato culture in containers. The regular container yielded 4 pounds of potatoes and the intensive one yielded 7 1/2 pounds--almost double the yield, but the intensive method used 4 times the resources. I may tweak it a little next year and try another trial. We still have two more comparison containers, and 3 rows of spuds in the ground to dig. We might have the grandkids back over to help harvest potatoes, carrots, beets, and rutabagas. Potatoes especially are a treat for them as it is a bit like a treasure hunt
