Canning Leftovers For Emergency Food
Chickpea Soup
Once a week I take everything that is edible out of our refrigerator and make a soup or stew. Usually I get about six or seven quarts. I save all my meat drippings, water left over from boiling chicken, water from boiling vegetables and roots like carrots and potatoes and throw them in the mix for a nice savory taste. I sautè some carrots, onions, celery that are old and going limp hanging around our refrigerator. I also can beans, be sure to soak them overnight before you can them or your jars will blow up from the beans swelling up during the cooking process. I've never had that happen to me but I've read about it will researching how to can beans.
Any bones left over I crack them open with a hammer and throw them in the stock and boil the bones and stock down to almost nothing, remove the bones and add more veggie water or soup stock. Bone broth makes the best soup stock!
All American Pressure Cooker Is The Best
I've canned over 300 quarts of meat, beans, fruit, and meals every year since 2010 with this pressure cooker, it looks well used and I need to give it a deep cleaning and buy a new steam gauge soon. But it still works like a champ!
This is a regulator weight and it helps gauge pressure, it will start jumping around when you hit your designated pressure.
I bought the seven quart pressure cooker, it is very heavy and during canning season I build up my arm and back muscles lifting this thing off the stove processing cans.
Canned Food To Add To The Mix
If you aren't near a garden you can go to a grocery store near you and ask for left over produce they are throwing out. Just say the produce is for your chickens and compost pile. The grocery stores are not allowed to sell humans their old produce. Lots of it is still usable. Last year I canned over 30 quarts of tomatoes from our grocery store old produce. The unusable produce that's organic I feed to our chickens or throw it in our compost pile. Be sure and use organic produce in your compost pile or you kill the micro-ecosystem. Regular produce is covered in pesticides and herbicides. Just imagine what it is doing to your gut eco-system.
My husband and I buy meat when it goes on sale. Usually we spend around $500.00 on chicken, pork, and beef and this will last the two of us through the winter. We save a so much of money buying bulk this way. Many stores will have fall sales where they run sales on bulk meat. The stores usually will cut and wrap it to your specs as well. Buying in bulk on sale is the way to go with beans and rice as well. I also buy sugar and salt in bulk. If the world goes to hell in a hand-basket you can trade salt and sugar for supplies you might need. They will be worth their weight in gold.
If you ask your store manager nicely, they usually will sell you 10lb bags of what ever they sell in bulk at a 10% discount.
One year while we were living on our little hill farm near Eugene we had an ice storm that knocked our electricity out for two weeks. I canned all our freezer meat that was thawing out! I can all the old meat we don't eat during the winter in the spring. No freezer burn and no waste!
My best garden's tomatoes I de-seed before eating and save the seeds for next year. No need to buy tomato seeds! You can also do this with store bought produce that has seeds. I regularly save my store bought pepper and melon seeds.
If you have a fine meshed strainer, just squeeze out the seeds and wash off with water, lay out the seeds on waxed paper and let the seeds air dry. Store in plastic bags with some rice grains to keep them dry.
I just ripped up all our tomato plants for the winter and pulled off all my green tomatoes. You can leave them in a nice airy place and let them ripen. I don't like green tomato salsa. But I think I will try to make some pickled green tomatoes.
I love the idea of making sure that the fridge is empty every week and canning all the leftovers. It makes sure that you are always eating as fresh produce as possible.
I am guilty myself of having to trow stuff out especially fresh herbs that I get for one recipe but then forget about untill it is too late.
One quarter of my genetics come from the hunter gather society of the Blackfoot nation. Through the winter my ancestors lived on meat, fat, and what ever else we could scrub up from the plains, which isn't a lot up north near Canada. I eat a lot more fresh greens than my ancestors did, so nice to have a refrigerator. If my Grandmothers people survived childhood diseases and childbirth they lived to a ripe old age.
I like green smoothies the best, the savory kind. I guess because of my genetics I cannot eat lots of fruit, sugar, or grain. I get sick and fat!
My favorite greens are collards!
I've dried lots of herbs but you can throw them in the stockpot too! hmmm that would make a great article. How to dry and preserve herbs ;-)
I have a pressure cooker..but to scared to use it. My Grandmother had one blow up in her face...
Can't wait for my veges to grow though, from the seeds we keep too :-)
Hi @dardi, I was scared too, my Grandma gardened and canned but never had an accident like your Grandma. They just look and sound scary to me, but after canning 300 quarts during the harvest season I overcame my fear. I love building seed banks... <3
Lol..there's hope for me yet! :-)
We don't have a huge yard and are busting to buy some acres..Hubby keeps making another vege patch, then another lol..the kiddies still need somewhere to play hehe..
I also bulk buy when I can..and blanch and freeze vege, but I reckon they last longer in jars..must brave that pressure cooker!! Lol.. Great post by the way, thanks :-)
You are welcome @dardi, and nice to meet you. I am going to follow you...not stalker like though, don't worry...hahaha If electrical goes out you will not have to worry about your food going bad when you can your food!
Nice to meet you too @reddust , following you too lol..
Too true, I hate waste. When it can be turned into something else...It also comes in handy when finances get low :-) If power goes out, thankfully I have a solar setup in our caravan, and free power running the fridge :-)
I want some backup solar panels, I have a gas generator but solar is next on my list of big spending items!
Same..we just moved back into our house (6 months ago) after living in our self sufficient caravan for 2 years travelling around Australia free camping..I want to get rid of the power bills and have our house on solar/batteries. We even have a little wind turbine :-) compliments the solar as the sun doesn't shine 24/7 :)
Excellent tactics, I also have my garden with peppers and tomatoes, today I made tomato juice. Excellent post @reddust
Tomatoes from my garden
We have so much in common! Thank you for befriending me @dobartim!
It is my honor and pleasure to meet you, which is your real name if I can know it @reddust ?
My common name is Lisa, it is my honor to know you!
My Name is Goran,
I'm really happy to have you among my friends Lisa
That's one piece of canning equipment I wish I had... a pressure cooker.
Good way to use up leftovers and have ready meals for quick dinners.
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The investment will pay for itself in two years if you can a lot of food! Especially if you grow your own and buy in bulk. Thank you @goldendawne!
Yes thats what I figure too.
Probably for next season I'll
Get an electric canning pressure cooker.
Like this one: http://www.thesurvivalpodcast.com/todays-tsp-amazon-item-of-the-day
Thank you for the recommendation.
I always love seeing your projects like this! Being a big fan of making broth and using every part of the beautiful quality food I grow or buy, it's really fun to see someone go much further than I do :-). Looks delicious!
I'll be posting more soup and canning recipe through the winter. I really enjoy writing up these kinds of articles, since I know what I am doing lolol, thank you @natureofbeing.
I come from a time where wasting food was a sin, I am not a sinner!
@reddust I have never canned left overs , but before I moved from Okla for my current employment I canned everything I could raise in the garden or find on sale at the store that I could make fit in a jar.
I miss being able to garden and can food but considering that my current location is strictly temporary and that I will be moving back to Oklahoma as soon as the employment situation improves, I can wait. The question I have is how do left over can compared to canning food that you prepared specifically for canning ?
We need to start a Steemit and cryptocurrency group in Oklahoma. I live near Brookside here in Tulsa. Left over food cans just about the same as fresh food. There is a lot of nutrition lost if canning veggies no matter fresh or leftovers. However, beans and meat, the nutrition levels are about the same.
That would be awesome. I lived in Tulsa back in the 90’s.
Tulsa a nice town I like the people.
Wow, that's impressive! My grandma used to do a lot of canning. She never let anything go to waste. I'd love to get into that one of these days.
I honor my Grandma Dorothy, on my Mom's side of the family. She taught me through doing and I miss her, she died at 92 years old. I think the flu vaccines gave her cancer, I think she could of lived to at least a 100 she was so healthy up to the time she started getting vaccinated.
Keep your health with your good food...
Success is always for you @reddust....
Thank you @boyelleq.
Keep it up brilliant!
Thank you @mdo!
you habe done your best to make canning your food, pressure cooker is amazing, and frozeen with meat and vegetable for emergency situation. nice tips for tomatoes preservation and seeding.