Sunday, August 16, 2015

Canning meat loaf

Yes folks, it can be done, but why? Well... if you live with a serious meat loaf lover and you happen to can other meats anyway, it makes for a 'quick fix' when somebody really wants meat loaf but you don't have time to prepare and bake one or don't have the ingredients on hand.

Or, just because you CAN do it. I first saw it in a video by Bexar Prepper here, and she canned it in wide mouth quart jars. Then I watched her try to remove the meat loaf from those jars and, because of the shoulder on the jar, it had to come out in chunks. I suppose that's alright, but I wanted mine to come out cleanly so I could slice it and heat it for the dinner plate or sandwiches. So I do mine in wide mouth pints or the straight sided 3 cup jars designed for asparagus.

Anyway, if you are interested in giving it a try, here's how to do it. Mix up your meat loaf as you would normally (but don't use milk). Using about 15 ozs of mixture for a pint jar, shape it into a long loaf smaller around than the diameter of your jar. The tricky part about doing meat loaf is trying to get it uniformly into the jar in one piece, without big air pockets in the bottom of the jar. The reason for the one-piece method is, the first time I canned meatloaf, I packed it in the jar by spoonfuls, pressing it down well. When it was done and I removed it from the jar, it came apart in the same spoonfuls. It wasn't one unit. I suppose this doesn't matter if you're just going to heat it up and throw it over mashed potatoes, but I wanted it to slide out in one piece so I could slice it. So, if you're going to keep it in one piece, it takes a bit of effort to pack it carefully without air pockets.

Keep the top of the mixture no higher than where the threads start on the jar, about 3/4 of an inch. Clean the rim of the jar with white vinegar to remove any residue from packing the jar. The rim has to be clean.


Use the pressure and time guides for beef (75 min. for pints, 90 min for qts at 10 lbs) and let the canner cool on its own (takes 20 min) before removing the jars, which will still be bubbling. A couple of hints when you are processing raw ground beef: use the leanest ground beef you can get to minimize the grease, which will still be present but to a minimum AND when the jars cool and seal and you remove the rings to wash the jars, they are going to be slimy because some of the fat has cooked out. Take care and use plenty of very warm sudsy water to wash the thread area and jar.

In these photos, I did not use lean ground beef but will scrape the grease away when I slide the meat loaf out of the jar. Yes, it looks a little like Alpo when you take it out, but tastes a WHOLE lot better! Just heat and serve. People will call you crazy until they try some.

It's always ideal to store canned foods in a cool, reasonably dry place.

Thursday, March 19, 2015

Canning: Breakfast sausages

Why would anyone 'can' breakfast sausages? I just did it to see if it would work, because if you live without refrigeration, it's another food item you can preserve and have on hand. It did work, but before you run out to buy half a dozen packages to put into jars, keep the following in mind...

They were okay after canning, but not at all like cooking them up fresh. Canning any meat changes the taste and texture... there's just no way it's going to taste like fresh after being cooked under that kind of pressure. Some meats are tastier, some are not. These are not, in my opinion. My sausage loving husband actually liked them, and said he would eat them this way! The change in taste and especially in texture did not bother him like it bothered me. As sausage links, I was not crazy about them, even after browning, However, when I sliced them and used them in breakfast burritos and omelets, they worked out very well, indeed. So, if I can more of these, that's how I will plan to use them.

Should you decide to give it a try...

I tried it two ways: browning the sausages first, and not pre-cooking. The pre-browned sausages were a bit darker after pressure canning than the uncooked, but tasted the same, in the end. So, when I was canning some ground beef, I put uncooked sausage links in a half pint jar with parchment paper in the bottom and processed them.

The result was a lovely, light brown cooked sausage. If you taste the sausage right out of the jar, at room temperature, it tastes more like ham than sausage. It better after it's heated up (we prefer in a skillet). The texture is what changes the most in these sausages - they almost don't need chewing (though they weren't actually mushy). I guess that bugged me and why I won't be canning them as frequently as I do other meats, but I will keep some on hand for omelets, pizzas, breakfast burritos, or casseroles.

As I said before, if you are living off grid, camping or living on a boat part of the year, this is a good way to have sausage links on hand, same as canned bacon strips, bacon bits and other meats. Otherwise, most of our breakfast sausages will be frozen or refrigerated.

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Canning Ground Beef or Ground Sausage

Thirty years ago, as I thawed and browned ground beef or sausage every time I needed it for a meal, I wished there was a way you could buy it precooked and ready to go, so there wouldn't be the dirty skillet and grease to deal with, not to mention the time it took before you could even start on the rest of the meal. "They can other meats," I thought. "Why can't they do ground beef?"

I don't know if anyone sells precooked ground beef in a metal can these days, but I process plenty of it by pressure canning just like other meats. My goodness - it's wonderful to be able to take a jar of ground beef or sausage off the shelf for spaghetti, lasagne, sausage gravy, chili, burritos, tacos, etc!! I would rather process 2 or 3 canner loads in a day and get the mess over with than to do it one pound at a time. I have watched a lot of YouTube videos on how other folks were doing it, and I believe I have it down to about as easy as it gets.

How to pressure can ground beef or ground sausage

Today I processed 10 pounds of ground beef. I canned it in pints, so that made ten jars. A pound of most meats fits into a pint jar - very convenient for recipes. A quart jars holds two pounds and is a good size to use for a family of four or five.

- Cook your ground meat just until the pink mostly disappears.
- Then drain the ground meat and cut the bigger chunks into smaller pieces. I really like using a pastry blender (with blades instead of wires) for this, but a spoon will work, too.
- Then the meat can be packed straight into clean canning jars. I do this as the next couple of pounds of meat is browning, but you can always cook all the meat first, then pack it into jars. I just like to keep the process moving so there's no wasted time waiting around.
- You will need a smaller jar, juice glass, or spoon to push/compact the meat down. Stop filling the (any size) jar when the meat reaches the first ring (about an inch from the top). You have to leave head space.
- I wipe the rims right after I fill a jar with any meat, because meat residue is harder to clean off if it dries on the glass. I wipe them again before I apply the lids.
- Process pint and half pint jars for 75 minutes; quarts for 90 minutes.

TIPS: 
- Remember, you do not have to sterilize jars before pressure canning. They WILL need to be clean, tho, and check the rims for chipping. Do not use jars with chipped rims.
- You do not have to BOIL lids... bring them to a simmer. You do not have to simmer rings - they just need to be clean. (These tips are per the Ball Canning Book.)
- You do not have to rinse the cooked meat before you pack it, just drain it well. Some remaining fat will settle around the top of the meat when it cools. It's ok. Just drain it off after you warm the meat in the pan.
- Use straight-sided jars for meats. It only took a couple of canner loads of meat in regular mouth jars with 'shoulders' to realize what a mess it made trying to dig the meat out past those curves. However, if all you have is regular mouth jars, the ground meats come out easier than the solid chunks of chicken, beef, ham, pork or fish. Mostly because it doesn't matter if the ground meats gets mangled, since you're using them in something anyway.
- If you don't have time to cook a lot of meat AND run the canner in the same day or evening, it's ok. Just cook up the meat, drain it, and either put it in a bowl in the refrigerator or pack them in the jars, cap and ring them and put the jars in the refrigerator. Within a few days, get the meat out and pack it into the jars and can it OR get your jars of meat out of the refrigerator, let them sit at least 30 minutes to get the chill off them, simmer clean lids, get the jars in a canner with cool water and fire it up.
- Never put cool or cold jars in hot water and never put hot jars into cool water. Start the food-packed jars and the water in the canner at similar temperatures.

A plus to pressure canning ground meats
One great benefit of pressure canning meats is how gristle breaks down and is no longer a problem! What a pleasant surprise it was when we discovered 'no gristle' even with cheaper brands of meats. Pressure canning even dissolves small bones in fish.

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Story: The Amish boy and the cat

Several summers ago, we hired an Amish builder and his sons to remove two old porches and replace them with a new room and outer entry porch. Every morning my husband drove 22 miles to pick them up in his van and bring them to our house, then repeat the drive after 5 pm every evening when they finished. They promised to have the work done in a week, and they did.

At noon, they would break for lunch and sit on the grass and eat, then nap or read a book. 

We have barn cats (that are pets as well). They would stroll around as the work was progressing.

One day, our black cat, Onyx, was sleeping under a winding stand of flowers by the garage. She is a soft, long haired cat and loves attention. One of the young men spotted her and asked if the black cat was friendly. Yes, my husband said (from around the side of the garage). So the young man walked over to pet her, calling out to her. But Onyx did not move.

The young man called out again, moving closer. He moved very close, detected no movement, so he walked back and said, "I think your cat is dead."

"No," my husband said, "she is probably just asleep."

So the young man walked back to Onyx, moved in closely clapping his hands and speaking, but she didn't move. So he touched her.

"AAARRRR!" Onyx flew up and off like a rocket! Across the yard and around the barn. The young man jumped up and and stumbled backward.

The others turned around to see what was happening. My husband asked the startled boy, "What happened?"

"I was checking to see if your cat was dead and I touched her, but I guess she wasn't," he said. "She jumped up and ran away!"

"Ohhhh, I forgot to tell you, the two older cats can't hear anymore," my husband said. "You have to stamp on the ground to alert them before you pet them."

The poor kid's brothers had a good laugh over that.

(As a side note, my husband did the same thing just yesterday. Bent down near the barn door to pet Onyx, because he thought she was awake and knew he was there. "AAARRRR!" and up away she went.)

Another story from that same week: I was getting ready for work upstairs one morning and the men were all outside working. The windows were open and it was already warming up. As I was brushing my hair, WHOOSH... something flew past my head! What the...? I thought. WHOOSH  there it was again, and I knew...

A BAT! Ooooo I hate those things! We live in a very old house and they get in the crawlspace above the second story. How they get into the house, who knows? Anyway, everywhere I went, that bat seemed to go. So I crawled to the hallway window and call out to a boy standing below, "Where is my husband?"

"Around back somewhere," he replied. 

"Tell him to come here! There's a bat in the house!" I hollered. I crawled back to the bathroom and shut the door.

But no one comes to my rescue. So I opened the door, looked for the bat and, not spotting it, crawled back to the window. I saw my husband below.

"Why didn't you come in? There's a bat loose in the house!" I shouted. 

"I'm busy," he called back. "It won't bother you anyway. We have the doors open. It will fly out."

What? He's not coming in to save me? Boy, was I mad. I could hear the fellows outside chuckling. There was nothing to do but finish getting ready and keep my head low going downstairs. I grabbed my keys and bags and headed for the garage. I was fuming.

"Did you find it?" my husband asked. 

"No! It's still in there!"

"Aw, it'll probably be gone by the time you get home anyway," he replied.

The older man, who had been somewhere else, asked, "What happened?"

"Oh, his woman is afraid of a bat," answered one of the sons, and they all laughed.

How I got my revenge:  When they were working on the outer porch, the man and his sons agreed to pour a new patio (at an additional cost, of course). My husband had taken up the old concrete patio stones and prepared the area so one day, they all poured a 12 x 24 foot patio. I came home just as they were packing everything up after 5 pm. It was just beautiful, that smooth, clean surface... so nicely done. I looked it over carefully, then got an idea.

My husband was talking to the father at the van, and the others were already inside. I called to them, "Wait! This isn't right!"

"What's not right?" asked my husband. The father was now on super-alert.

"The patio is crooked, and isn't over here far enough!" I said. "You need to move it. It has to come up!"

The father looked at my husband and said, "What did she say?" My husband repeated it to him, and the man's face just fell.

Oooops.  "Just kidding!" I called out. "I was just kidding, it's fine."

The young men in the van were laughing, and the poor father was trying to. Now that I think back on it, that little joke could have caused him heart failure! He gave me a watermelon when we visited his farm later in the month, so I guess there were no hard feelings.

Food hacks: Pie dough; Easier cooked filling

In search of a workable Pie Dough 

I don't know where my brain has been all these years to miss this great product: Jiffy Pie Crust mix.

I like to be able to say my pie is from scratch, so I still cut my own pie dough, roll it out, and battle to get it into the pie pan in one piece. About a month ago, I wrote down 11 pie crust recipes, hoping to find one easy to handle and lay into a pie pan. That's how desperate I was for a good crust.

Going through the pantry yesterday, I found 3 boxes of Jiffy Pie Crust I bought on sale and never used. Why not try it, I thought? If I don't like it, I'm only out 60 cents a box. So, today I thought I'd make some mini lemon pies using cupcake and mini tarts pans. I mixed up the Jiffy crust per the instructions (but ended up having to add a bit more water) and made a ball of dough.

Imagine my shock when I realized I had pliable dough in my hands that wasn't splitting at the edges! I divided it and rolled the first piece out on floured wax paper and thought I was living in a dream! The dough cooperated! I could mend tiny splits! I could even pick it up with my hands and it didn't fall apart! I cut my little discs and shaped them over my pans... success! How could this be? All I did was add water! So, I checked the ingredients. The mix uses lard, like cooks did in my mother's and grandmother's day. Maybe that's the secret, and that's okay. Jiffy Pie crust mix is my new best friend!
---------------------------------
 Lemon or cooked Pie Filling tip

For those pie fillings or puddings that are cooked in a saucepan on a stovetop, I have a little shortcut I use. 

I dreaded making these fillings because it seemed to take forever to stand there and stir, stir, stir while I waited for the mixture to thicken. Plus I never felt like my whisk was coming into contact with the bottom of my pan well enough ( I didn't want the mixture to clump up or develop 'cornstarch balls').

So I started using my stainless steel skillet instead of a saucepan and a potato masher in place of a whisk. I felt more of the skillet would come into contact with the heat from the burner and the mixture would not be so deep in the saucepan, possibly heating quicker. The potato masher is flat and I move it across the bottom of the skillet in circles, and it keeps the mixture on the bottom from sticking. We all know you can't rush a cooked filling; turning the heat up too high risks burning it. I feel it gets thick quicker this way... my filling today was done in less than 15 minutes, start to finish.


Friday, February 27, 2015

Canning pepperoni slices

Why would anyone 'can' pepperoni slices when they can be stored conveniently in the refrigerator? Well, if you are serious about food preservation and are already canning most meats, this is the simplest 'meat' of all to can. Unlike the bacon bits in the previous post, you don't have to precook anything, and the end product is rather interesting.

A couple of years ago, I wondered about canning pepperoni so I could stock up and not worry about it 'going bad.' So I went to one of my frequent canning sources, Canning Granny's blog canninggranny.blogspot.com . She tries just about EVERYTHING and you should visit her blogspot and just look around sometime. She's fearless! (I just checked her site, and I'm not seeing it now, but) I'm almost sure I read how to can pepperoni on her blog.

If I explain to you how the pepperoni slices turn out after canning, you might want to try it. As tasty as it it, pepperoni has a lot of fat. Personally, I like it! But my husband is always dabbing the extra grease up with paper towels. He says when it's too heavy it upsets his stomach. Well, canning pepperoni cooks out much of the grease during processing. If you put parchment paper in the bottom of the jar (as in the previous blog about bacon bits), all that grease drains to the bottom of the jar and away from the slices. The result? The pepperoni comes out drier and and lighter. The diameter is a bit less due to shrinkage. Still tastes like pepperoni and you use it the same way. It's also tempting to just eat it like a snack right out of the jar.

So, if you'd like to try it, I use 8 ounce jars. Put parchment paper in the bottom of the jar and press it down. I put 32 slices of pepperoni in each jar (only because I counted how many it took to cover one round homemade pizza, and that was it). I fan the slices out a bit so they are not stuck together like a stack. They have to be carefully peeled apart when ready to use, and it works best if you fan them a bit. Overstuffing the jar may also cause the slices to stick together after processing.

After you wipe the rims, of course, top each jar with a simmering lid and apply bands finger-tight. Process at 10 lbs pressure for 75 minutes. Wipe jars when cool and label with date.

The jar I opened on Feb. 27, 2015 for this blog (slices shown at right) was canned April 30, 2013 and tasted just fine... oh yeah!

 

Canning bacon bits

Everybody loves bacon, and having bacon bits on hand for salads, omelets, pizzas and more is great. But those real bacon bits you buy at the grocery can be a bit pricey. If you are already pressure canning foods, canning bacon bits is easy work.


I use 8 oz. jelly jars or 4 oz. jars for bacon bits, because most folks don't use more than a few ounces of bacon bits at a time. I suppose I shouldn't even bother with the tiny jars, since we usually refrigerate and use up the rest of the bacon bits fairly quickly, if they don't become a snack, that is. Darn tasty bacon!

The bacon must be cooked. I prefer thick sliced bacon because it holds up better to pressure canning. I usually do at least a pound and sometimes more to make it worth my while to run the canner for 75 minutes. The fastest way to cook up a lot of bacon is on a tray in the oven. If you have never done it this way, here's how it's done http://foxeslovelemons.com/culinary-school-lesson-bakin-bacon/   (I use foil to line my pan instead of parchment paper.)

Take care not to cook the bacon til it's crisp! Remember, it's getting 'cooked' again when you can it, so you need only cook it until it's 'cooked' but still flexible. Drain the cooked bacon on paper towels.

When it cools, get a pair of clean scissors and cut the meat on the bacon away from the fat. This really isn't as much trouble as it sounds; I kind of enjoy it. (While you are doing this, try not to eat more of the bacon than what you have set aside to can.) When you have finished doing this, discard the fat and use your scissors to cut those strips into bits about 1/4" long or so. When you get all that done and have a nice bowl of bacon bits, get your jars ready.

No matter how well you trim meat, it is always going to produce a bit of fat when you can it. The bacon bits stay out of the fat and separate better later if you keep them up off the bottom of the jar. To accomplish that, take strips of parchment paper, wad them up a bit and stuff one in the bottom of each jar. (The paper usually winds up about a third of the way up your jar.) I mush it down into the jar with a small juice glass, or you can use anything with a flat bottom.

Anyway, fill your jars with bacon bits, leaving about 1/2 inch head space. Top each with a simmering lid, apply the ring finger-tight, and process at 10 lbs pressure for 75 minutes. Yes, the jars are half the size of pint jars, but I don't know if you can cut the time by 15 minutes for half-pint jars (something to research, for sure). 

As you can see, the finished product is darker than it started out. That's ok - so is the stuff from the store. It's not soggy but it's not 'crispy'... I like the way it turns out... it sort of crumbles when you chew it. Now wipe your jars, date them and put them in your pantry. They need no refrigeration until you open a jar and use part of the product. The jar in my hand is one I opened for this demonstration on Feb. 27, 2015 and it was canned in Dec. 2013. We ate some and I thought it had a bit of 'smoky' flavor, but given most bacon is smoked and canning seems to amplify flavors, that's to be expected. For you serious canners, I hope this post inspires you to try this for yourselves.

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Story: Debbie the Chicken

I want to tell you a story about a chicken named Debbie and a funny thing she did.

Last April, we got chickens. We thought it would be great to have farm-fresh eggs each day, and I thought it would be great fun to have chickens to pet and cuddle.

The Henhouse Hilton
A friend sold us her chicken house and chicken yard, and the deal came with two Americana chickens named Nosey and Rosie. As if the move from a shady, quiet wooded backyard to a sunny, hot location behind our barn wasn't stressful enough, we added to their dismay by getting six pullets from another friend and putting them all together. We knew it would be awhile before the new chickens started laying eggs, so we made every attempt to feed them well and keep them comfortable in the meantime.

I soon learned that chickens do not like to be petted, and they REALLY do not like to be cuddled. They are fickle animals, and Rosie and Nosey were so
traumatized by their new environment, they would not lay eggs. They ran from us and sulked in
Rosie
the corner when penned up with the 'new kids.' But as time went on, they got used to each other and somewhat to us.

By August they were all laying eggs and two of the new chickens, which were Golden Comets, were friendlier than the others. One was especially beautiful, with a white collar of feathers around her neck and fluffy white tail feathers. When I would speak gently to her and approach her slowly, she would 'squat' and let me pet her.
Golden Comets
Soon I was picking her up and, though she wasn't comfortable with it, she would tolerate it. When people would come to visit, I would pick her up and let them pet her. My friend Debbie, from around the corner, thought the chickens were great and especially liked the 'friendly' chicken. So when I decided to name the bird, I called her 'Debbie,' after my sweet, lovely friend.


We would let the chickens free range and they were very good about staying in the yard, though they wandered into the bordering cornfields sometimes. But when dusk came, they always came in to the pen and then the hen house, and we would close things up for the night. An electric fence along the fence kept predators away.

After awhile, Debbie the Chicken got to know her name. When I would call her, she would stop and look around, and sometimes she would come to me. A treat in my hand usually helped coax her, and she would let me pick her up. I really liked that chicken.

The funny thing she did was, one afternoon the chickens were strolling on the far side of the pond. Now, our pond has a 'leak' (I'm not kidding) and there was a strip across the middle that was dry. Just for fun, I called out, "Debbie! Hi Debbie! Come let me pet you!" She stopped dead in her tracks and looked across the pond at me. Oh! I had her attention! So I squatted down and patted my hands together and said, "Come on Debbie! Come on!"

Low and behold, no one was more surprised than me when she came trotting down the bank, across the pond and up and over to me! She squatted obediently and let me pet and stroke her, and I told her what an incredible chicken she was. My husband was stunned. Then she went on her way.

Then, in the fall, other wild animals figured out we had chickens and came to 'visit.' One Saturday, while my husband was gone (naturally), I heard a big noisy fuss from the backyard and looked out the kitchen window. A coyote was chasing the chickens!!! "Hey!" I yelled out the window, "get away from those chickens!"

The stunned coyote looked and me in the window and froze. I went running out the door and into the backyard hollering like a mad woman. No varmint was going to harm my chickens! The
coyote panicked and ran back into the cornfield. Unfortunately, some of the frightened chickens did, too, and it took awhile to find them all. I called my husband and he came home, and we searched. We found them all but Nosey and Rosie who, hours later, clucked and called from the cornfield to the west. We followed their calls and guided them home.

My beautiful Debbie was safe, and all was well, though we watched for the coyote.

Then chickens started disappearing one by one. We would find feathers but no chickens or predator tracks. Was it the coyote? One night all the chickens did not put themselves in - one was missing. We were down to 7 chickens now. We could not find the missing chicken in the dark, so we would have to search in the morning.

At daylight, my husband came in and said a chicken was missing, it was Debbie, and there were feathers on the east side of the barn. "Are you sure it was Debbie?" I asked. Yes, he was sure. The other chickens did not have the white collar.

I was sad. My Debbie was gone and an unknown varmint had snatched her up. I broke the news to my friend, and she felt bad, too. The remaining six chickens did not want to leave the pen. So we kept them in for a long time.

Then, in December, my friend Debbie stopped by with 'presents' for the chickens: feed and straw and treats. While we stood outside and talked, there was a big noisy ruckus behind the barn. We ran to the back and what did we see? A young red-tailed hawk, killing a chicken! We started yelling to scare him off but he would not leave. I dragged the dead chicken under a vehicle sitting by the pen, and ran back to the house to put on a coat. When I came back, the hawk was dive-bombing my friend Debbie! He wanted his prey he'd worked so hard to earn. 

I called my husband (again, away at the time) and he came home. Now we knew why we found no tracks around the chicken feathers that remained after a kill. I was amazed a bird half the size of the chickens was killing them. The chickens have been penned up ever since.

We are down to five chickens now, and only three are laying. Rosie and Nosey have decided they put in their time at their previous home, so they are 'retired.' They eat and complain and sleep. When warmer weather comes, we will get more chickens from a hatchery and watch for the hawk, who was back the other day killing sparrows at the big feeder.

I told hubby to please ask the hatchery for 'friendly chickens who like to be cuddled."

He told me not to hold my breath on that one. I guess there was only one Debbie.

Food Hacks: Dinner in 25 minutes!

That title doesn't sound too remarkable if you're talking about frozen corn dogs and applesauce for supper. But we're talking about a real meal at home of roast beef, real mashed potatoes, gravy and corn. 

Many of us have to come home and make dinner after a full day at work, and we're tired. But we're hungry, too, and so is everyone else. Half the key to having a tasty dinner in minimum time is planning ahead, even if it's only one day ahead.

This morning, as I was preparing to head out the door for work, I said to my retired, care-free* husband, "Oh! I didn't plan dinner for tonight!" So I took out a 16 oz. carton of mashed potatoes from the freezer and set it on the stove top to thaw, then said, "Choose a meat you would like to go with it. Chicken, pork, beef or ham." He went to the pantry and chose a pint jar of last year's canned roast beef.

When I got home, the potatoes were thawed and I:
 - put them (uncovered) in a small baking dish, mashed them down a bit with a fork, set the convection oven to 375 degrees and put them in. 
- opened the jar of roast beef and emptied it into a 2 quart saucepan and set it at a low-med heat and covered the pan.
- opened a can of kernel corn and put it in a small pan on the stove to heat and
- and I made 2 cups of gravy in a small saucepan

Let me take this opportunity to tell you about how I make gravy. Our mother made gravy from pan drippings with flour in a skillet and it was tasty. No matter how I try, I can't make decent gravy that way. Mine is tasteless. 

So... I make it using a Beef Base from GFS (pictured at left). It's a thick paste that I use as roux in canning (an idea I got from my canning buddy and hairdresser Betty) and it makes a heavenly tasty gravy! It's available in chicken as well, which I also use.

Anyway, I use 2 1/2 tsp of Beef Base to 2 cups of water and 5 tablespoons of flour. Even though this amount of beef and potatoes makes a two-person meal, I make plenty of gravy because I just love the stuff and use any leftover gravy to take to work for lunch. I dip bread in it, or shred bread and pour the gravy over it.

You don't have to use an oven to heat up the mashed potatoes, you could use your microwave. Even though the potatoes look mushy when they are cold, the hotter the get, the firmer they get and I take them out often and whip them with a single beater wand from an old hand mixer (or you could use a whisk) and it really works well. When the potatoes are as hot and thick as I want them to be, they are done.

Everything was ready in 25 minutes and I had a very happy husband. You don't have to have home-canned meat and make-ahead frozen mashed potatoes
(as noted in the previous blog) to accomplish this. You can slow cook the beef all day in a crock
pot or roast it the night before to heat up for the following evening. You can cheat and buy those high-sodium but oh-so-delicious Bob Evans mashed potatoes, then open up a jar of gravy and a can of corn. It all comes out the same, but the key is to plan ahead. That takes some time and a bit of effort the day before, and is a subject for a future blog on meal planning.

Story: For all you 'preppers' out there wondering if canned goods are still edible past their 'best by' dates, the can of corn we used tonight was dated September of 2010, and no one has died yet. (I walked over to the sofa and gave the husband a poke... he's still breathing.) He has told me a story (more than once) of a time in 1965 during his Navy days when they were out at sea for 39 days and took on a crew of 250 men whose ship ran aground. The extra men caused a fresh food shortage and the mess hall resorted to serving hamburgers canned in Chicago in 1939! My old sailor says they were were like squashed meatballs and 'edible' and nobody got sick, in spite of the 'funky' taste and appearance. Canning methods are better today, so if they could eat 26-year-old canned 'hamburgers and not become ill, our 4-yr-old can of corn is more than fine.**

* Hubby really is retired but far from carefree, since everyone knows he's retired and can fix just about anything.
** Always check any can for bulging, punctures and seepage and discard these. Also discard if contents don't smell as they should.

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Food hacks: Overripe bananas

Ooops I did it again... didn't use the bananas fast enough and now look... not real pretty, but I 
sure hate to throw them out - seems like such a waste. I didn't have time to bake banana bread
today, and I suspected the fruit inside was still intact, since the bananas didn't feel mushy. So I peeled them and voila! they were still okay.

When this happens to you and you have too many to use up quickly, remember that you can freeze bananas. I prefer to peel them first because I don't like the way they peel once they start to thaw.


So, I peeled the bananas. I could have left them whole, but I decided to halve them and use some of them for the grandkids to dip into Magic Shell, and the rest to use for baking or pudding when I need them. Peel them carefully: the fruit is softer, remember, and too much pressure makes them break. 
I inserted popsicle sticks into some, put them all into the freezer for about two hours, then removed them out for 'repackaging.'

They weren't frozen solid but handled better than when they were room temperature. I put a couple in each baggie, removed as much air as I could with a
straw, then put all the baggies of bananas in a gallon size ziploc bag. You could also vacuum seal them in a larger bag if you like. They are in the freezer and I will remove them as I need them, and they won't go to waste now. 


Bananas don't keep forever in the freezer, so be sure to use them inside of 4 months or so. The next time I freeze some, I think I will try dipping them in 7up, apple juice or lemon juice and water, to slow down any discoloration.

One advantage of freezing bananas you plan to use for baking is when they thaw, they soften a LOT and are easy to stir into batter. The bananas halves are also handy for having a bit of fruit with your breakfast or slicing (while still firm) into cereal.


Sunday, February 22, 2015

Food hacks: Make ahead mashed potatoes

For those who have to work a full time job and come home to make dinner too, any tips and tricks that make the task easier and quicker are welcome! I have several favorites, and one is so simple I just have to share it.

I love mashed potatoes, but the work involved with preparing them used to deter me from making them on a week night. If I did, I used instant potato flakes and 'doctored' them up well enough to nearly pass for fresh. Now I don't have to do that anymore...

I didn't like the idea of making them up ahead of time and freezing them because they have a high water content and I didn't like how they looked after they thawed. Mushy. Separated, Unappealing. Then one day at work, I was heating a frozen dinner and looking at 'those' potatoes. After following the directions on the package, they were no longer mushy or unappealing. They tasted fine! What was the trick?

The trick was, the more they were heated, the more moisture evaporated and the firmer the potatoes became. So I got an idea... why not take a 5 or 10 lb bag of potatoes, peel and cook them all, whip them up the way we like them, then freeze them in meal-size quantities?

So I did. I drained the cooked potatoes well, added salt, butter and sour cream (optional, of course), and put them to the mixer. When they tasted they way we like them, I separated the now (lukewarm) mashed potatoes into plastic containers I saved from sour cream, cottage cheese and whipped toppings. I packed them nearly to the top (to avoid freezer crystals), laid a bit of wax paper over the potatoes, and put the lids on. I labeled the tops with the date I made the potatoes and put them in the freezer.

Here's the trick: frozen mashed potatoes take a long time to thaw. If I know I am having them for dinner the next evening, I will set them out in the morning before I leave for work. They will not thaw in the refrigerator: they are like a block of ice. I have not tried thawing them in the microwave, but that would probably work.

Anyway, once they are thawed, I heat them in an oven safe bowl in the oven (a microwave would work, too). I pull them out to stir them every 5 minutes or so and, sure enough, the hotter they get, the thicker they get. (I have found using a single beater or meat fork to stir them works well.) Taste them, because if they need more butter or salt or a bit of milk, this is the time to add it. When they are the consistency you want, they are ready to eat!

It's wonderful to have real mashed potatoes without the hassle of peeling and boiling on a weeknight. For two of us, we find a 16 oz. tub is enough. I suppose you could use all small tubs and just get multiples out when you need a larger quantity for a meal.

When you are preparing an entire 5 or 10 pound bag of potatoes, you will need to do them in more than one batch. This is really a task better suited for a Saturday or Sunday afternoon. I have made the mistake of filling the bowl too full (trying to get it done faster) and ended up with a bigger mess than it was worth. Now I just process the potatoes in manageable amounts and take them time do it right.

My advantage: I have a husband who actually almost enjoys peeling potatoes! No, he isn't from Pluto. He told me he didn't mind it in KP with the Navy years ago, and finds it kind of relaxing. He's also a much faster 'peeler' than I am, and it's great to have the help. No, he cannot come peel potatoes for you and no, he does not have a brother.

Another mashed potato idea: It seems we have a tendency to boil and mash the potatoes last when we are serving a big meal. My mother always did it that way and everyone I know does it that way. BUT... we can prepare those mashed potatoes as much as an hour ahead and keep them warm in a buttered crock pot OR a warm oven! It's SO much less hassle than leaving them until last - plus, using a crock pot, you can transport them to a pot luck dinner.

Hope this helps and feel free to offer any tips you have on mashed potatoes.

Saturday, February 21, 2015

Winter is the perfect season for bottling meats

Canning season is never over for dedicated preservers!

Winter is here: the fruit trees are dormant, and tomatoes, jams and squash sit in quart jars on the shelf. Canning season is over until June when the strawberries are ripe, and unused jars are packed away in boxes until the next harvest.

That is, unless you’re like myself and many other preservers who use the winter season to catch up on canning we couldn’t get done during the summer! The colder months are a perfect time to pressure can foods, because the heat produced by the canner warms up the house as well as helps empty the freezer. I use the time from autumn to April to can meats, since there isn’t much outdoor work to do until Spring.

The half steer, hog or chickens you bought at butchering time in the fall can be processed at your leisure during the cold months. Maybe you took advantage of a great sale on ham or turkey
 at Thanksgiving or Christmas (the PERFECT time to buy those meats in bulk!). From freezer to cutting board to canner, you can bottle your meats at your convenience and gradually free up freezer space for the warmer months ahead.

I can just about everything, not only because we desire to be less dependent on electricity for food preservation, but it also makes for quicker prep for evening meals for the working woman. Meat comes out of the jars fork-tender and fully cooked. Just heat and serve, or use in casseroles, burritos, chili, and many other dishes. One of the great advantages to preserving your own meats at home is having control over what goes into that canning jar along with the meat you have trimmed to your liking. Salt, flavorings, or spices can be added - or not. You know where your meat came from if you bought it from a local producer or butcher. You can preserve it in quantities you use (half, whole pints or quarts). The options are many and the results are rewarding.

For those of us with limited freezer space, it’s a great way to make room for other foods not suitable for canning such as bread, popsicles, pizzas, etc. If unexpected guests show up at the door, meals go together quickly. It’s easy to keep inventory of what you have (and what you need).

My coworker cans chili and soups during the colder months. Winter is also a great time to make jams and jellies with fruit hastily canned or frozen in summer months ‘just to get it done.’ Canning isn’t much fun when the kitchen is already 85 degrees and bushels of peaches or apples are ready NOW. Whatever I can put off canning for a cooler day, I do.

A good sale on potatoes or white mushrooms can make for a nice afternoon of winter canning. The same goes for bacon or pepperoni… yes, you CAN pressure can these items. It’s great to have bacon bits or pepperoni slices on hand for salads or pizzas or omelets. Did the hunter in your family bag a deer this winter? Venison cans well and can be used in place of beef. Actually, it tastes a lot like beef after it’s been processed this way, and it’s very lean.

I buy used canning jars during the warm months from yard, 
moving and garage sales. Some of them are in a fairly grungy condition when I get them but, for me, the bargain is worth the work to clean them up. I must have a dozen boxes waiting for me to get to, and winter is a good time to get it done. If taken in small quantities once a week, they will eventually all get washed and be ready when you need them for your next project. Be sure to check each jar for chips or cracks around the rim. Damaged jars can be used for storing non-edible items.

If you can fruits and vegetables but have not canned meat, consider this: the canned meat sold at the grocery story is processed the same way, but with a lot more salt, coloring and other additives. Bottling your own meat allows you to store it in the quantities you need for your family and gives you control over what goes into it. It’s ready when you are and keeps for years.
If you are interested in learning to pressure can meats, there are canning classes held by food canneries and some county extension offices. The internet is also a great source of canning information, techniques, and method.

Warm up that canner and you’ll warm up the kitchen and stock your shelves!

This article also appeared in the February issue of Rural Life, in Ohio.

Why have food storage?

It used to be a lot easier to live week to week, paycheck to paycheck, when employment was more of a sure thing for most folks. Money was still usually tight, but we always knew payday was coming, and it was so easy to run to the store for whatever would tide us over. The economy would slump but it always rallied again.

Times, they are a changin'. The unemployment rate is higher than what's being reported by the mainstream media, jobs lost in the mini-crash of 2008 are not coming back, and the U.S. has acquired incredible (and growing) debt that can never be repaid. As the price of food continues to rise due to crop losses (droughts, floods) and inflation, it just makes sense to buy in bulk and be prepared for leaner times.

This is the video that got me started on canning meat, vacuum sealing food, and addresses cooking under less than favorable conditions:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gOLuIApyNPc

It's worth the time to watch this seminar filmed in 2005. Wendy Dewitt has been teaching food preservation for more than 20 years and knows her stuff.

A lot of folks want to build an 'expanded pantry' but don't know where to start - or think they don't have enough money to do it. How you build your food supply depends on what you use and eat on a regular basis.

It starts with a few extra cans of vegetables or pasta or meat each payday. Start with the basics. Bath tissue, dish soap, shampoo, rice, spaghetti, canned fruits, sauces, and so on. Items and foods that are part of your daily life. Wherever you store food should be free of pests, dampness and temperatures above 70 degrees. No place to store extras? When my mother lived in a small 'senior' apartment, she stored groceries and non-perishables in all sorts of places... under furniture, behind furniture, over cabinets, in closets... it was amazing what we found when we had to move her out!

Don't be intimidated by posts with pantries that look like this...


The person who built this beautifully stocked pantry didn't do it in one week, or month, and probably not even a year. They started just like everyone else... with a few extra items purchased one payday. They added to it a bit at a time. 

An important factor in building up a pantry with food storage is to rotate your items - buy what you will use. Otherwise, you'll end up tossing items when they get too old to even give away to others. That's a waste of your hard earned money.

You can get some great ideas by perusing You Tube to see what others are doing and and how they are storing what they amass. Remember, keeping a pantry used to be standard procedure with our grandparents and those before them. They were prepared for disasters, hard economic times and lapses in employment. Because they grew and canned a lot of their food to save money, they had to work a lot harder to keep that pantry stocked.

Food prices are going up, and chances are they won't go back down. Take advantage of sales and bulk food purchases to build up your pantry. Get started now while food is still available and affordable. Things can change very quickly, even in the U.S.