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Andrea

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Posts posted by Andrea

  1. They turned out pretty good! I did cheat and boiled a few extra garlic cloves in the vinegar. We love garlic! I have a lot of red onions from the garden and since they don't keep well, I tried this recipe. We love red onions on our green salads and with the vinegar on the onions, you just need to add a splash of olive oil and you've got a ready made dressing! I won't fill the cabinet wih these but I'll probably make at least one more batch. They'll come in handy when I'm out of fresh reds.

  2. From the Ball Book:

     

    Vinegared Red Onions (yield: 6 half-pints)

     

    3 pounds red onions

    4 cups red wine vinegar

    1 clove garlic

     

     

    Peal onions. slice onions 1/4-inch thick; separate slices into rings. Bring vinegar and garlic to a boil; reduce heat and simmer 5 minutes. Add onion rings to vinegar. Simmer, covered 5 minutes. Discard garlic (I ate mine!) Pack hot onions into hot jars, leaving 1/4-inch headspace. Remove air bubbles. Adjust two-piece caps. Process 10 minutes in a boiling water canner.

  3. Violet, do you have the recipe for the honeyed red onions? I tried finding it in both of my Ball books and couldn't locate it! The vinegared red onions came out fine. I think I should have diluted the red wine vinegar with something less potent because these are really strong! A little goes a long ways. I'm going to sneak them into dh's salad tonight and see if he notices a difference. If he likes them, I'll make 6 more 1/2 pints, otherwise, I think I'm done with these for the year!

  4. If you open the lemon juice, you'll probably find that it has turned a funky color. Lemon juice doesn't seem to last for me.

     

    As for the vinegar, I would probably use it to clean with and buy fresh to can with. When I can, I like to have fresh ingredients since I'll probably be storing the canned foods for up to 2 years. I don't know if it loses it's acidity or not, but why risk your families safety?

     

     

  5. Violet, when making a recipe with vinegar, is it okay to swap out some of the expensive vinegar with regular vinegar? I'm going to try the vinegar red onion slices in the Ball Book but it calls for 4 cups of red wine vinegar, which is pretty pricey. I was wondering if I could swap out half of the red wine vinegar with regular or apple cider vinegar? It should be safe as long as it's 5% acidity, correct?

  6. I'm glad you posted this! I had no idea this could happen. I'm ashamed to admit, that there have been more than a few times when I've finished the last batch of whatever and then went off to bed . . . Luckily, no harm has come to us but I'll make sure and take care in the future. Thanks for opening up this can of worms. This is how we learn.

  7. Thank you for the responses...

     

     

    I did a google search and found a method for using metal coffee cans in a camp fire - placing a smaller one in a larger one and surrounding it with coals. Now I just have to get the hang of making bread. : ) Anything having to be rolled out (like biscuits) are not my forte - you could use my homemade rolled biscuits for shoe heels... LOL

    Ooooh, this sounds interesting! We're going camping in a few weeks. Do you have a link?

  8. Wow, you guys garden? I'm impressed!

     

    Me? No, I don't garden. What?!? Are you telling me that bushy plant over there is an herb? Get outta here, really?!? I had no idea! Well, I'm still not eating it. Did you know it has spiders, praying mantis, and other bugs crawling in it? Eeewwwwww. No, I buy all of my food from the clean grocery store, thank you very much.

  9. Just took out a batch of kale and now have another batch of seasoned tomatoes drying. The verdict is still out on the "kale chips". I did them plain with no salt or olive oil and I think they'll be fine as a seasoning but not as a snack. I may reconstitute them in the morning when I soak mushrooms for scrambled eggs and see how they turn out in that. In any event, they'll work great as an added layer of flavor in soups and broths. I have a bit more kale to dehydrate, so I'll try that seasoned and see what the family thinks when the tomatoes come out.

     

     

  10. AH - I also dehydrate my own mushrooms. They reconstitute easily and while they're a bit chewy if I haven't allowed enough time to let them soak, my family still eats them just fine. I use them in scrambled eggs, soups, and stir-frys.

     

    I don't steam them first, I just put them straight onto the dehydrator trays and let them go. It doesn't take long - usually only 6-8 hours on my Wal-Mart Nesco dehydrator.

  11. Okay, just finished up the salsa for the year. WOOOHOOOO! 60 pints sitting on my counter ready to be sharpied and put away in the cupboard!

     

    Sewandsew - stewed squash? How does that can up? I grew up on canned zucchini and coudn't stand the mush that would come out of the jars. *shudder* Do you have a recipe that keeps it firm? I've tried pickling it too, but again, it just mushes on me. I would love to find a decent way to preserve zucchini.

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