Pressure Canning
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MedicHerbalist
Pressure Canning
Does anyone have any experience with pressure canning? I have bought a 15 litre pressure cooker and am canning meat. (Cheap cuts like brawn, liver and heart. I am also canning concentrated pea&ham soup). I would like a proper pressure canner with pressure guage but they only seem to be on sale in the USA - even on eBay. The cost of postage from there would make your teeth bleed. Does anyone know of a UK supplier who is not exploiting the difference (like £ for $ and a chunk of the postage for the price)?
Re: Pressure Canning
Ready for Anything
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Area 8
http://autonopedia.org/ if still out try facebook https://www.facebook.com/Autonopedia
Area 8
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mole hill
Re: Pressure Canning
I'd love to be able to can things, but with the cost of the jars i couldn't justify doing it when you can buy the same thing in the supermarket for a fraction of the price
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preppingsu
Re: Pressure Canning
However, sometimes it's not about the cost but about practising and having the skill, should those things in the supermarket not be available. In a shtf scenario your food stocks will not last forever so you will need to know how to produce/grow and preserve your own food.mole hill wrote:I'd love to be able to can things, but with the cost of the jars i couldn't justify doing it when you can buy the same thing in the supermarket for a fraction of the price
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mole hill
Re: Pressure Canning
I know what your saying, but how easy is it going to be to grow your own produce in a shtf scenario when there's millions of people wondering around the country looking for food.preppingsu wrote:However, sometimes it's not about the cost but about practising and having the skill, should those things in the supermarket not be available. In a shtf scenario your food stocks will not last forever so you will need to know how to produce/grow and preserve your own food.mole hill wrote:I'd love to be able to can things, but with the cost of the jars i couldn't justify doing it when you can buy the same thing in the supermarket for a fraction of the price
Re: Pressure Canning
I have done a lot of canning and I am just getting into pressure canning. I was surprised how easy it is. One of the best descriptions on how to pressure can along with some good pointers can be found at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-fFAlldDKM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-fFAlldDKM
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The-Great-Nothing
Pressure Canning
Himole hill wrote:I know what your saying, but how easy is it going to be to grow your own produce in a shtf scenario when there's millions of people wondering around the country looking for food.preppingsu wrote:However, sometimes it's not about the cost but about practising and having the skill, should those things in the supermarket not be available. In a shtf scenario your food stocks will not last forever so you will need to know how to produce/grow and preserve your own food.mole hill wrote:I'd love to be able to can things, but with the cost of the jars i couldn't justify doing it when you can buy the same thing in the supermarket for a fraction of the price
Not sure you will have any other sustainable options once the dust has settled.....
Cheers
Matt
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MedicHerbalist
Re: Pressure Canning
The name of the game is preserving from times of the year when there is shed-loads of food (Summer/Autumn) to when there is not (Winter/Spring). In the old days people used to have to slaughter their animals to provide over-winter food until the next harvest came in. I know how to forage for food and know what wild plants I can (and cannot) eat. Preservation from the fat times to eat in the lean times seems good to me. If the SHTF we will all be living off-grid. The purpose of our food stocks must be to give us time to learn to live off-grid otherwise our stocks will mean starvation is just in slow-motion. We need skills as well as food. I am learning every means of food preservation (Pressure canning, hot-water canning, smoking, salting, pickling, fermenting - as in sourkraut -, drying, vacuum packing, jamming). When opportunity arises i will take and preserve as much food as I can get.
Re: Pressure Canning
An excellent balanced approach MH. 