Schooling at Home

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

The Natural Canning Resources Book



I just learned about this book, Natural Canning Resources Book, through the Cultures for Health website and I just had to take a look! I'm fascinated with food preservation and enjoy eating the fruits of my canning labors (though the process itself is not as fun, especially doing it all by yourself!).

Just one look inside and I could tell that this book is special. It's hard to tell, but I believe there are recipes. What struck me about this book though, was that it has information not usually found in the standard Ball Blue Book like how to replace conventional sugar and corn syrup with healthier alternatives in canning like honey or maple syrup, the nutrient changes in canned food, an explanation of the PH scale, and the science of what lies behind the USDA's regulations for canning. It also has information on unsafe canning methods and things that do not have safe home canning guidelines.

Here is what it says about the book on Cultures for Health:


Details

Lisa Rayner, 2010, softcover

The local foods movement has made home canning popular once again! Farmer’s markets, Community Supported Agriculture projects, urban foraging collectives, permaculture guilds and community gardens are popping up like mushrooms. People who never learned how to preserve food growing up are teaching themselves and learning from old-timers how to can in boiling water baths and pressure canners.

The Natural Canning Resource Book fills a major gap in the canning literature.  Most published canning recipes require the use of non-organic, refined ingredients like distilled while vinegar, white sugar, corn syrup or commercial pectin containing chemical preservatives.  This book explains the science behind USDA canning guidelines and explores how to can foods using healthy, natural ingredients you'll find at your local farmer's mart, CSA, natural foods grocery, buying club or cooperative.

Learn how to:
  • Can fruit & pickles without sugar or sweetened with raw honey, agave syrup, maple syrup, brown rice syrup, barley malt, evaporated cane juice or other unrefined cane sugars.
  • Pickle vegetables with organic, unpasteurized apple cider vinegar or homemade vinegar.
  • Can wild and tropical fruits like Oregon grape, Juneberries, elderberries, paw paw & guava.
  • Gel jams and jellies with homemade pectin extracted from locally grown fruit.
  • Create your own jam, jelly, fruit butter, pickle, relish, chutney & salsa recipes.
  • Can foods using a solar cooker.
  • Create a community canning project or start a community kitchen.
  • Save money & energy with home canning.
  • Use European-style canning jars with glass lids & rubber gaskets.
  • Sell your canned goods at your local farmer’s market or CSA.


This looks like an exciting book, especially if you enjoy or depend on canning to fill your cupboards!

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