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Thread: Home Canning

  1. #61
    Home canning beats buying cans at the store, but I prefer Lacto-Fermentation.

    Lacto-Fermentation

    Posted on January 1, 2000 by Sally Fallon and Mary G. Enig, PhD2 Comments

    It may seem strange to us that, in earlier times, people knew how to preserve vegetables for long periods without the use of freezers or canning machines. This was done through the process of lacto-fermentation. Lactic acid is a natural preservative that inhibits putrefying bacteria. Starches and sugars in vegetables and fruits are converted into lactic acid by the many species of lactic-acid-producing bacteria. These lactobacilli are ubiquitous, present on the surface of all living things and especially numerous on leaves and roots of plants growing in or near the ground. Man needs only to learn the techniques for controlling and encouraging their proliferation to put them to his own use, just as he has learned to put certain yeasts to use in converting the sugars in grape juice to alcohol in wine.
    The ancient Greeks understood that important chemical changes took place during this type of fermentation. Their name for this change was “alchemy.” Like the fermentation of dairy products, preservation of vegetables and fruits by the process of lacto-fermentation has numerous advantages beyond those of simple preservation. The proliferation of lactobacilli in fermented vegetables enhances their digestibility and increases vitamin levels. These beneficial organisms produce numerous helpful enzymes as well as antibiotic and anticarcinogenic substances. Their main by-product, lactic acid, not only keeps vegetables and fruits in a state of perfect preservation but also promotes the growth of healthy flora throughout the intestine. Other alchemical by-products include hydrogen peroxide and small amounts of benzoic acid.
    A partial list of lacto-fermented vegetables from around the world is sufficient to prove the universality of this practice. In Europe the principle lacto-fermented food is sauerkraut. Described in Roman texts, it was prized for both for its delicious taste as well as its medicinal properties. Cucumbers, beets and turnips are also traditional foods for lacto-fermentation. Less well known are ancient recipes for pickled herbs, sorrel leaves and grape leaves. In Russia and Poland one finds pickled green tomatoes, peppers and lettuces. Lacto-fermented foods form part of Asian cuisines as well. The peoples of Japan, China and Korea make pickled preparations of cabbage, turnip, eggplant, cucumber, onion, squash and carrot. Korean kimchi, for example, is a lacto-fermented condiment of cabbage with other vegetables and seasonings that is eaten on a daily basis and no Japanese meal is complete without a portion of pickled vegetable. American tradition includes many types of relishes–corn relish, cucumber relish, watermelon rind–all of which were no doubt originally lacto-fermented products. The pickling of fruit is less well known but, nevertheless, found in many traditional cultures. The Japanese prize pickled umeboshi plums, and the peoples of India traditionally fermented fruit with spices to make chutneys.
    Lacto-fermented condiments are easy to make. Fruits and vegetables are first washed and cut up, mixed with salt and herbs or spices and then pounded briefly to release juices. They are then pressed into an air tight container. Salt inhibits putrefying bacteria for several days until enough lactic acid is produced to preserve the vegetables for many months. The amount of salt can be reduced or even eliminated if whey is added to the pickling solution. Rich in lactic acid and lactic-acid-producing bacteria, whey acts as an inoculant, reducing the time needed for sufficient lactic acid to be produced to ensure preservation. Use of whey will result in consistently successful pickling; it is essential for pickling fruits. During the first few days of fermentation, the vegetables are kept at room temperature; afterwards, they must be placed in a cool, dark place for long-term preservation.
    It is important to use the best quality organic vegetables, sea salt and filtered or pure water for lacto-fermentation. Lactobacilli need plenty of nutrients to do their work; and, if the vegetables are deficient, the process of fermentation will not proceed. Likewise if your salt or water contains impurities, the quality of the final product will be jeopardized.
    Lacto-fermentation is an artisanal craft that does not lend itself to industrialization. Results are not always predictable. For this reason, when the pickling process became industrialized, many changes were made that rendered the final product more uniform and more saleable but not necessarily more nutritious. Chief among these was the use of vinegar for the brine, resulting in a product that is more acidic and not necessarily beneficial when eaten in large quantities; and of subjecting the final product to pasteurization, thereby effectively killing all the lactic-acid-producing bacteria and robbing consumers of their beneficial effect on the digestion.
    The lacto-fermented recipes presented in Nourishing Traditions are designed to be made in small quantities in your own kitchen. They require no special equipment apart from a collection of wide-mouth, quart-sized mason jars and a wooden pounder or a meat hammer. (For special sauerkraut crocks that enable you to make large quantities, see Sources in the back of Nourishing Traditions.)
    We recommend adding a small amount of homemade whey (recipe on page 87 of Nourishing Traditions) to each jar of vegetables or fruit to ensure consistently satisfactory results. Whey supplies lactobacilli and acts as an inoculant. Do not use commercial concentrated whey or dried whey. You may omit whey and use more salt in the vegetable recipes, but whey is essential in the recipes calling for fruit.
    About one inch of space should be left between the top of your vegetables with their liquid and the top of the jar, as the vegetables and their juices expand slightly during fermentation.
    Be sure to close the jars very tightly. Lacto-fermentation is an anaerobic process and the presence of oxygen, once fermentation has begun, will ruin the final product.
    We have tried to keep these recipes as simple as possible without undue stress on ideal temperatures or precise durations. In general, a room temperature of about 72 degrees will be sufficient to ensure a lactic-acid fermentation in about two to four days. More time will be needed if your kitchen is colder and less if it is very warm. After two to four days at room temperature, the jars should be placed in a dark, cool spot, ideally one with a temperature of about 40 degrees. In days gone by, crocks of lacto-fermented vegetables were stored in root cellars or caves. A wine cellar or small refrigerator kept on a “warm” setting is ideal; failing that, the top shelf of your refrigerator will do. Lacto-fermented fruit chutneys need about two days at room temperature and should always be stored in a refrigerator.
    Lacto-fermented vegetables increase in flavor with time–according to the experts, sauerkraut needs at least six months to fully mature. But they also can be eaten immediately after the initial fermentation at room temperature. Lacto-fermented vegetable condiments will keep for many months in cold storage but lacto-fermented fruits and preserves should be eaten within two months of preparation.
    Some lacto-fermented products may get bubbly, particularly the chutneys. This is natural and no cause for concern. And do not be dismayed if little spots of white foam appear at the top of the pickling liquid. They are completely harmless and can be lifted off with a spoon. The occasional batch that goes bad presents no danger–the smell will be so awful that nothing could persuade you to eat it. The sign of successful lacto-fermentation is that the vegetables and fruits remained preserved over several weeks or months of cold storage.
    Lactic-acid fermented vegetables and fruit chutneys are not meant to be eaten in large quantities but as condiments. They go beautifully with meats and fish of all sorts, as well as with pulses and grains. They are easy to prepare, and they confer health benefits that cannot be underestimated.
    Scientists and doctors today are mystified by the proliferation of new viruses–not only the deadly AIDS virus but the whole gamut of human viruses that seem to be associated with everything from chronic fatigue to cancer and arthritis. They are equally mystified by recent increases in the incidence of intestinal parasites and pathogenic yeasts, even among those whose sanitary practices are faultless. Could it be that in abandoning the ancient practice of lacto-fermentation and in our insistence on a diet in which everything has been pasteurized, we have compromised the health of our intestinal flora and made ourselves vulnerable to legions of pathogenic microorganisms? If so, the cure for these diseases will be found not in vaccinations, drugs or antibiotics but in a restored partnership with the many varieties of lactobacilli, our symbionts of the microscopic world.
    Copyright: From: Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats by Sally Fallon with Mary G. Enig, PhD. © 1999. All Rights Reserved. Available from New Trends Publishing and Amazon.com.
    http://www.westonaprice.org/health-t...-fermentation/
    Quote Originally Posted by dannno View Post
    It's a balance between appeasing his supporters, appeasing the deep state and reaching his own goals.
    ~Resident Badgiraffe






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  3. #62
    I was just thinking today, given the skillet-seared method posted some time ago on RPF's, I am willing to bet that using that method you could actually can steak, honest to goodness steak and it still be good.

    http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthr...ak-again/page5

    Basically you would get an extra thick cut steak and carve off 4 big chunks to fill the jar you are canning in.

    get an iron skillet as maxed out hot as it goes, and quickly sear the 4 exposed sides to char leaving the center basically raw.

    Stuff in jars and fill with unsalted beef stock to headspace.

    pressure can at 11psi for ~60 minutes.

    canned steak.

  4. #63
    Last year, I had a huge issue with bugs--they infested my dried mushrooms that were in a zip-top bag! Bastards. So this year, I ended up using my mason jars mostly for dry goods storage, but I need to start canning again.

    Kale is really good dried, so is zucchini for that time of year when you get about 1,000 of them. Mostly use the dried stuff in soups.
    Those who want liberty must organize as effectively as those who want tyranny. -- Iyad el Baghdadi

  5. #64
    Quote Originally Posted by amy31416 View Post
    Last year, I had a huge issue with bugs--they infested my dried mushrooms that were in a zip-top bag! Bastards. So this year, I ended up using my mason jars mostly for dry goods storage, but I need to start canning again.

    Kale is really good dried, so is zucchini for that time of year when you get about 1,000 of them. Mostly use the dried stuff in soups.
    We took ziplock bags, poked holes all in them with pins, filled them with rice and beans, put them into a vacuum sealer sleeve with a food grade oxygen desiccant, vacuum sealed them, and put the sealed units into ginormous ammo cans.




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  7. #65
    dried zucchini sounds interesting, never thought of drying zucchini.

  8. #66
    I cook some turkeys for holidays , etc and I stuff them with sliced apples and sweet onions. Then I save the broth, It is exceptional to use on things , like canned chicken .

  9. #67
    Quote Originally Posted by oyarde View Post
    I cook some turkeys for holidays , etc and I stuff them with sliced apples and sweet onions. Then I save the broth, It is exceptional to use on things , like canned chicken .
    That's what I've been thinking about for making the chicken rice kits. Instead maybe make it "chicken in turkey gravy" and it will taste better. I know you could can up turkey like that too, but yeah, turkey broth and gravy tastes way more savory than chicken, even if chicken is easier to get in bulk. And the flavors go well together. LOL I could call it a 'yardbird rice kit' and be inclusive of so many kinds of poultry.

  10. #68
    I still haven't decided whether it should be mixed 1:1 or 1:2 with the rice. I am waiting until the beef rice kit has set at room temperature for at least 2 weeks before I will open one and try it replicating a survival situation.

    Here is what I am thinking though. In a non-emergency mix it 1:1 with rice and get two median human meals (maybe only one 'Murikan meal) but in an emergency mix it 1:2 with rice and get three ration-size meals from a single pint jar. Won't taste quite as good mixed 1:2, but we are talking about a person or a group surviving for long periods of time on emergency food. The ability to ration the amount of high protein and nutrition by mixing it with more or less rice so that you or everyone stays "full" would seem like a great idea.

    If one case of 12 pint jars, packaged with the dry rice, is 24 regular meals or 36 emergency meals (same volume different rice mix), and I can get one case under $125 (that price-point requires the ability to buy 1000 quart jars in a single purchase), then I would love to see a large portion of our friends "go in" with us to build up these good solid long term food stores. Make it a community buy rather than a company selling something, video the whole thing from stem to stern and provide the product as educational materials amongst our political group of libertarians learning about self sufficiency. ie the only 'product' is the video, anything else is a community buy amongst friends.

    One month of emergency ration is 2 meals a day, and at the emergency ratio, there are 36 meals in a case. Two cases will feed one person two (thin) meals a day for a little over a month. emerging happy and healthy if a little tired of rice. ~$250 ? At the max rate, three meals a day (and you really wouldn't want to same thing every day 3 meals a day, this is a survival supplement) 24 meals in a case. The same two cases at the "luxury consumption rate" will last for 16 days. So $500 for a luxurious month (or a stingy 2 months) or $250 for a singy month (or a luxurious 16 days).

    At that cost, if it works out that we can order the 1000 lot of jars, I think we will have a pretty big buy-in among friends. My goal not being to profit so much as I want the liberty people to be the ones who still have food when nobody else does.

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