Above: Reinventing convenience food with homemade jars of condiments I recently finished reading Barbara Kingsolver’s Animal, Vegetable, Miracle and I’m still chewing on the thoughts sparked by her chronicle of eating very locally for an entire year. The book is part treatise on the benefits of eating local foods and part garden diary, with some recipes thrown in. Her tone is not scolding but rather inspiring, and days after finishing the book I asked my friend if she would be up for trying one of Kingsolver's canning recipes with me. We visited 3 grocery stores before finding one that carried glass jars and lids (for San Jose readers, it was Luckys in the El Paseo shopping center) and then picked up fresh produce from the Ferry Building farmer’s market. We spent the next couple of hours prepping the ingredients, sterilizing the jars in the dishwasher and “processing” the filled jars in a large pot of boiling water. Each time a cooling jar lid “pinged,” indicating that it had successfully sealed, we danced in the kitchen, giddy with the volume (22 jars!) of homemade condiments we created. The results so far have been super delicious- my family loves the chutney spread on wholegrain crackers with some cheddar cheese, and my friend and I recently used the sweet-and-sour sauce for a fresh take on a broccoli and tofu stir-fry. I encourage you to try the recipe and support the locavore movement!
Recipe: RELISH, SAUCE AND CHUTNEY – ALL IN ONE DAY
Thanks to Janet Chadwick,
The busy person’s guide to Preserving Food
If you don’t have a garden, you can stock up on tomatoes, peaches, apples and
onions at the end of summer, when your farmers’ market will have these at the
year’s best quality and price. Then, schedule a whole afternoon and a friend for
this interesting project that gives you three different, delicious products to eat all
winter.
Canning jars and lids: 14 pint jars, 7 half-pint jars
Start with a very large, heavy kettle. You will be adding different ingredients and
canning different sauces as you go.
4 quarts tomato puree
24 large apples
7 cups chopped onions
2 quarts cider vinegar
6 cups sugar
2/3 cup salt
3 tsp. ground cloves
3 tsp. cinnamon
2 tsp. red pepper
2 tsp. mustard
Puree tomatoes; core and coarsely chop apples; coarsely chop onions. Combine
in large pot along with the vinegar, sugar and seasonings. Bring to a boil and
simmer for about 2 hours or until thick. Meanwhile, preheat water in a canner
bath and sterilize jars and lids (in boiling water or dishwasher) and keep them hot
until use. Fill 7 pint jars with some of the thickened Barbecue Relish, leaving 1⁄2
inch headspace in each jar. Put filled jars in canner with lids screwed on tightly
and boil for ten minutes. Remove and cool.
2 quarts sliced peaches
6 cups sugar
1⁄2 cup water
2 tsp. garlic powder
1 tsp. Tabasco sauce
In a separate pan, cook peaches and water for 10 minutes, until soft. Add sugar
and bring slowly to boil, stirring until sugar dissolves. Boil until thick (15 min.),
stirring to prevent scorching.
Add peach mixture to the remaining tomato mixture in the kettle and bring back
up to a boil to make Sweet and Sour Sauce. Fill 7 pint jars leaving 1⁄2 inch
headspace, boil in canner for ten minutes. Remove and cool.
1 cup raisins
1 cup walnuts
Add these to the kettle, mix well and bring it back to a boil to make Chutney. Fill
7 1⁄2-pint jars leaving 1⁄2 inch headspace. Boil in canner for ten minutes.
Remove.
As all the jars cool, make sure the jar lids pop their seals by creating a vacuum
as contents cool. You’ll hear them go “ping.” To double check, after they’re
entirely cooled, push down on each lid’s center – it should feel firmly sucked
down, not loose. (If a jar didn’t seal, refrigerate and use the contents soon.) The
ring portion of the lid can be removed before storing; when processed properly,
the dome lids will stay securely sealed until you open the jar with a can opener.
Label each product before you forget what’s what, and share with the friend who
helped. The Barbeque Relish is great on broiled or grilled fish or chicken. The
Sweet and Sour Sauce gives an Asian flavor to rice dishes. Chutney can perk up
anything.
*From animalvegetablemiracle.com/Relish.pdf
yum yum yum! I was just contemplating dinner options, and thinking how nice it would be to have one of our sweet and sour sauces on hand...sigh. I say we give tomato sauce a try next break? whatdoya think?
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