Monthly Archives: July 2015

How to Prevent Nasty Rusted Canning Lids

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It is quite disconcerting to open a jar of your homemade preserves, only to find nastified rust and junk under the lid.

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Acidic foods have a way of destroying lids and make you wonder about the contents of your jar.

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Recently, I was opening a jar of homemade something or other from the fridge and saw the nastiness.

Then I noticed some Classico pasta sauce lids that I had been saving. They have a nice waterproof coating in the interior and they fit my regular mouth canning jars!

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No more gross stuff at the top of the jars!

I shared this (new to me information) with a friend of mine, who then informed me that mayo jar lids fit too. Now I’m going to be saving those too. These reused lids don’t look as nice as the canning lids, but the results are certainly much better.

Please note: I do not use these lids for the actual canning process, I only use these after canned goods are opened for use.

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Do you know of any other lids that fit regular mouth canning jars? What about lids for wide mouth canning jars? I’d love to hear what you do to prevent nasty canning lids !

How To Can Sliced Peaches

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When I knew I would be getting 75 pounds of peaches, I had a list of ideas for what to do with them.

1. Eat fresh. I love eating fresh fruit in season.

2. Make PEACH JAM!!

3. Can peach pie filling.

4. Can peach slices.

5. Make peach butter.

6. Can peach blueberry jam.

7. Try making peach syrup for peach sweet tea??

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Let’s talk about canning peaches, shall we?

Start with peeled peach slices.

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Simmer them in a medium syrup until hot. I used the recommended 3 cups sugar to 5 cups water from the Ball book.

I used the hot pack method because I felt that the brief heating/cooking time would allow me to fit more in the jars and lessen the amount that would float to the top.

Pack them into pint jars, and fill with syrup, leaving about 1/2″ head space.

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Process in boiling water canner for 20 minutes.

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These will be nice to have later, once the boxes of peaches on my kitchen table are a distant memory.

How do you like your peach slices? Chilled? Over cottage cheese? Fruit salad?

Don’t throw away the syrup either, as you can use it to make peach sweet tea. I also made some peach syrup specifically for tea using the leftover syrup from canning. Recipe soon!

Oven-Roasted Roma Tomato Sauce

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Swimming in tomatoes? Here’s a great way to use up a glut of tomatoes and have a flavorful addition to many meals.

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Start with a bowl full of fresh tomatoes.

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Wash, slice them in half, and place them on a cookie sheet, skin side down.

Add onions, peppers, and garlic if desired. All three vegetables are versatile and can be used in a tomato base for either Italian or Mexican dishes.

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Roast at 400 degrees for 30 minutes, or until cooked through.

If you want to remove the skins, now it is easy to remove the larger pieces, but I don’t bother.

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Process in food processor until smooth. If you like a chunky sauce, process in short bursts.

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I put mine in quart freezer bags and froze it.

What an easy addition to Crock-Pot chili or spaghetti sauce!

Spiced Peach Pie Filling

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Truly good peaches must be eaten over the sink, juice dripping off your hands, down your arms, and plinking gently into the sink. Wouldn’t it be nice if peaches were in season all year long?

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I have been steadily working my way through 75 pounds of peaches; the peach jam has been great, the blueberry peach jam has been great, but I have really been enjoying my spiced peach pie filling. Since really good peaches won’t be available in the blustery cold evenings of January, I made some pie filling out of them. Actually, I see many easy cobblers in my future. Yum!

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Here is what you need: 14 cups of peeled sliced peaches, juice of 2 lemons, 1/2 teaspoon nutmeg, 1/2 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice or cinnamon, 1/4 cup white vinegar, 2   2/3 cup sugar. This will yield about 5 pints.

Combine all ingredients in heavy stock pot and cook over medium-high heat until the juice has slightly thickened. For me, this took about 25 minutes.

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At this point, you can either freeze it, or can it in pint jars in boiling water bath for 15 minutes. This recipe yields wonderfully soft, sweet , spiced peaches. If you prefer only mildly spiced peaches, use only the nutmeg.

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My yield was slightly over 5 pints. So, what to do with the little bit of extra?

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I poured some over vanilla ice cream and sprinkled pecans over it. Delicious! I did try making some peach syrup for sweetening iced tea, and it turned out really good! I’ll share that recipe/process in a later post, as well as how to can sliced peaches. If you hate peaches I’m sorry, but they have been my life recently.

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I’m not sick of them yet, and I have enough in my fridge to either eat fresh for a while, or to make some spiced peach butter and eat fresh for just a little while.

Decisions decisions. What should I do?

75 Pounds of Peaches

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I’m finally staring at the bottom of my last box of peaches.

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So far I have made peach jam, blueberry peach jam, and peach pie filling. On the to-do list for today is plain canned peaches, more delicious peach jam, and freezing those peaches in need of emergency attention. If I still have some left, I hope to make some syrup for sweetening iced tea, and maybe a batch of spiced peach butter. I’ve already posted recipes for the peach jam and the blueberry peach jam, but I plan on posting a recipe for the peach pie filling soon; it’s really tasty! Also, I’ll let you know how the peach syrup turns out. If it turns out as good as it sounds in my head, it should be a really really good summer beverage.

What would you do with 75 pounds of peaches? Did I miss one of your favorite recipes? Let me know!

Oh, and I have my first ever video in the works! Stay tuned!

Are these muscadine grapes? Or am I about to poison my family?

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UPDATE: These are indeed muscadine grapes. I have been harvesting and eating them. Yummy!

I noticed these grape-like vines growing above my garden. I guess I have never tasted a purple one before, maybe in years past I have just sampled them at the green stage?

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The fruit grows in clusters of just a few at a time.

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Picture of the vines and leaves.

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Everything I’ve read seems to support the muscadine grape theory. I took a little taste of one, and it seemed sweet.

Can anyone confirm? I picked almost a pint the other day, and I’d like to know if they are surely edible or if I will surely die.

A $0.75 Cover Crop

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Right now I have a few summer crops growing: okra, basil, yard long beans, eggplant, pink-eyed purple- hulled peas, and cherry tomatoes. However, my soil is in desperate need of replenishing, so I decided to plant the bare spots with nitrogen-fixing legumes.

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I found this bag of pinto beans at the grocery store and decided to plant them as a cover crop.

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I’ve already got some popping up! Hopefully they will fix nitrogen in the soil, shade out summer weeds, and provide good organic matter for the soil. The plan is for them to be tilled under around the beginning of September, then to let them set and compost in place for a few weeks, then to plant my fall garden. Growing beans from the grocery store – what an inexpensive way to plant a cover crop!

North Florida Gardening: July To-Do List

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It’s time to make a decision. Take the summer off or keep on gardening?

There are many crops that can still be grown during the hot, humid days of our summer. However, if you want to take the summer off, be sure to plant some cover crops to improve the soil and keep the weeds from taking over your garden.

I plan to do a little of both. Southern peas such as black-eyed peas, pink eye purple-hulled peas, and cow peas, make great cover crops. As they grow, they put nitrogen back into the soil as well as providing a tasty crop. This summer, I’m growing many different varieties of southern peas, okra, eggplant, jalapenos, peppers, and basil.

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In the shed bed, the cherry tomatoes are actually thriving over here in the partial shade, the green beans have produced a decent crop, and as you can see the flowers are doing very well.

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In the large garden, the beans are producing well the tomatoes are just about done, the cucumbers are dwindling, the Southern peas are thriving, hopefully we will be able to harvest them soon.

See that large row of weeds? Yep, sometimes that’s reality, folks. I must do a better job with my mulching, as it really makes a difference in discouraging weeds. There’s this short but pointed post on Why I Mulch; I really should follow its advice. 😉

I am planting as much of the surface with Southern peas in an effort to improve the soil.

I figure I can plant peas, let them grow until mid-August, till them in, let them rot for a few weeks, then plant the fall garden in September. Even though I lose a few weeks of productivity, I hope that a great fall garden will make up for it.

The soil is really poor over here; it’s a wonder I actually harvest anything.

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Despite the sandbox conditions, the Roma tomato plants have been the best producers this year.

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Some yard long beans are should hopefully be climbing the trellis soon. I saved a few precious seeds last year, and so planted some in flats to ensure a good stand. Ordinarily I don’t start beans in flats, but I’m not taking any chances.

I did not get to taste very many of those beans last year, because I was more concerned with saving the seeds for this year, but this year I’m hoping for many meals from them.

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This eggplant will be ready for harvest soon.

Here’s my to-do list for July.

1. Get rid of weeds, then plant more southern peas in the bare spot.

2. Tear down the cucumbers when they’re done producing and replace with yard long beans.

3. It’s peach season, so I need to make more peach jam, peach pie filling, and maybe even some spiced peach butter. I still have some blueberries so it is a good time to mix up a batch of peach – blueberry jam-so yummy!

4. When the tomatoes are done producing(they’re almost done now), replace with Jackson Wonder lima beans.

5. Figs are also in season, and I plan to experiment with fig preserves, roasted figs, gingered fig jam, and strawberry fig jam. I’ll let you know how it goes. 🙂

Do you have any favorite fig recipes?