Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Preservation Review

It seems the garden grows a foot every time I turn around. Sprouts are bursting through the soil, blooms are budding on every stem, and pollinators are busy finding their way around the garden's bounty. In this flurry of work and wonder my mind looks toward harvest. There are many wonderful methods to preserving the harvest, and I have tried most of them, but three have remained tried and true and top of the list. I know I have shared some of this before, yet, with the season in full swing it seems fitting to review.

1. Freezing
    In the heat and humidity of our southern home freezing is my top method of choice. Produce is picked at its peak, mildly processed (if at all) and frozen quickly. Safe in the freezer, mold and pests don't stand a chance. The down side of freezing is space; with broilers and turkeys also stored in the freezer, space is precious and must be used wisely. My food freezing musts are: cole crops, greens (chard, spinach), okra, corn and squash/gourds.

2. Canning
    Second in line and next on the list is canning; water bath and pressure methods. High acid foods, jams, jellies and relishes and pickles hold well with a gentle water bath set up where as sauces, veggies, and pie fillings require the intensity of a pressure canning. Space is not quite as competitive with canned goods since they store easily in the top of a pantry, under a bed, or in any cool dark place.  Tomatoes, cucumbers, beans and carrots along with berries of all kinds are excellent canning candidates.

3. Dehydrating
    Last, but not least I love dehydrating. Dried goods are space friendly and easy to incorporate into everyday cooking. Some items lend well to a simple open air drying method: hot peppers, garlic, onions and herbs are a few...while some require a bit more intensity. My electric dehydrator is perfect for putting up apples, bananas, bell peppers. We love the tasty tang of kale chips and the chewy zing of a dry pineapple. Dried foods need airtight conditions to keep well; canning jars or sealed bags work very well and store right alongside other canned goods. 

   As I walk through my growing garden, my thoughts look to the future: the pop and sizzle of the canning vent, colorful peppers hanging in rows along the kitchen walls, the steady hum and comforting fragrance of the dehydrator working its magic. Gardening holds toils and troubles, but oh I can hardly wait until harvest comes and preservation begins.

   Shre your preservation experience..do you can or dehydrate? Recipes? Yes, please!

2 comments:

Michelle said...

I am so looking forward to be in my garden every day. My favorite of the three is canning.

Mrs. Farmer said...

I'm a freezer girl. I can freeze just about anything, and it is so fast and easy! (I'm not LAZY, I'm EFFECIENT!)