Print Story Who pickled a peck of picked peppers?
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By toxicfur (Sun Aug 17, 2008 at 09:32:28 PM EST) (all tags)
Why, I did. Except it wasn't a peck -- it was 8 very cute little half-pint jars.


So last spring, I started thinking about planting a vegetable garden. It wasn't clear I'd be able to get stuff to grow in our yard -- it's shady, and oriented toward the sun in such a way that even the southerly part of the yard gets shade from the neighbors' houses part of the day. Still, though, worth a shot.

I went with what I know, and what I've grown successfully before -- tomatoes, and chilis. "If we have too many," I told ana, "I"ll can them. Just think of it -- canned tomatoes, canned tomato sauce, pickled jalapenos. It'll be awesome."

I walked to the local hardware store a few weeks ago and purchased a pressure cooker/canner. I looked at the canning supplies. I downloaded the USDA home canning instructions. I looked at recipes.

Yesterday, we went back to the hardware store and got jars (pint and half-pint), tongs, and a funnel. There were a bunch of jalapenos that needed to be picked and dealt with, so that seemed like an excellent first project. I spent today reading recipes, deciding what I needed, and, finally, pulling the trigger.

I used a simple pickling recipe -- vinegar, salt, mustard seeds, and white peppercorns, with garlic, a pearl onion, a few slices of red cayenne peppers for color, and sliced jalapenos. In half of them, I added a bit of honey, just to see what would happen. The jars went pink after I pulled them from their hot water bath. Based on the instructions, I didn't use the pressure feature of my canner -- pickles are acidic enough that they don't need it.

I am way too pleased with myself. My tiny little jelly jars are lovely. I'm already thinking of doing something like this for Christmas presents for ana's family. There are still plenty of blossoms on the pepper plants. I feel competent, and self-sufficient, and ready to rototill my whole front yard for a vegetable garden next year.

Mostly, though, I'm feeling connected. Not just to the garden, or the season, or the cycle of growth and decay. I'm feeling connected to the two generations of my family who came before me. My grandfather always had a huge garden. It was something of a joke, how much food he grew. My brothers and I gathered five-gallon-bucket after five-gallon-bucket of yellow squash, and cucumbers, and green beans,  and okra. Inside, I helped my grandmother freeze and can.

In my earlier years, I watched my mother can green beans grown in our rented back yard. She coaxed the beans from the dense red clay, and we ate them all winter, when we couldn't afford to buy much food from the store. She never let us (very small) children into the kitchen when she canned. I remember, though, that a jar exploded as she removed it from the canner and scalded her chest. She was wearing a flowered sundress, and the skin blistered and ran. I was afraid, and she didn't cry. She wasn't even 30.

I'm thinking a lot about my mom and my grandparents recently. I've started a writing project, collecting the things I've written about my mom. I'll put those together with the diaries I wrote last winter about caring for her in her last weeks, and do $something with them. I'm not sure what, at this point, but I'm ready, I think, to read them again, and to revisit that agony.

I had to stop myself several times this afternoon from calling my mom, to find out how I'm supposed to make these pickled peppers. "Well, shug," she'd say. "I never did jalapenos. I don't like hot stuff. But if they're like regular pickles...." I wouldn't need the internet or the USDA if she was still here. I still imagine sometimes, that she is.

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Who pickled a peck of picked peppers? | 23 comments (23 topical, 0 hidden) | Trackback
My grandmother by Gedvondur (4.00 / 1) #1 Sun Aug 17, 2008 at 09:40:03 PM EST
Used to make mustard pickles.  They were awesome.  Sadly, the recipe passed with her.

My mother used to can everything in sight when I was a lad.  She even used to make home made catsup.  My mother is a wonderful cook but the home made catsup.....bletch.

Gedvondur
"I love my brain. It's the only organ I can afford to lose." --frijolito


In looking for recipes, by toxicfur (2.00 / 0) #4 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 07:23:10 AM EST
I found a recipe for homemade catsup. I decided I'd give that one a pass.... I'm going to be canning tomatoes by next weekend, I think. And next year, I hope to be spending all of August filling jars with vegetables.
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To Rollins lesbians are like cuddly pandas: cute, exotic, forest-dwelling, dangerous when riled and unable to produce offspring without assistance.-CRwM
[ Parent ]

You colonials are strange... by Breaker (2.00 / 0) #8 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 08:59:04 AM EST
Well, make all the catsup you want, just keep it away from your keyboards.


[ Parent ]

I really liked my grandma's recipe by garlic (4.00 / 1) #22 Tue Aug 19, 2008 at 06:38:29 PM EST
for fruitcake. It's actually good, and I've tweaked it myself to make it better (dried fruit instead of candied). When we asked her about the recipe, she said she got it from the jar of the mincemeat. I wouldn't be surpised to see that happen pretty often.

[ Parent ]

+1 VS2FP by R343L (2.00 / 0) #2 Sun Aug 17, 2008 at 10:29:30 PM EST
Or something like that.

Excellent.

/me considers visiting Boston to eat toxicfur's pickles.

"There will be time, there will be time / To prepare a face to meet the faces that you meet." -- Eliot


Thanks by toxicfur (2.00 / 0) #5 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 07:24:34 AM EST
I hope the pickles actually taste good. It'll be a couple of weeks before they're ready, so you've got some time to make travel arrangements! :)
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To Rollins lesbians are like cuddly pandas: cute, exotic, forest-dwelling, dangerous when riled and unable to produce offspring without assistance.-CRwM
[ Parent ]

Jamming by Vulch (2.00 / 0) #3 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 05:25:04 AM EST

A neighbour brought round a couple of pounds of plums on friday night, when I mentioned I was on my last jar of plum jam from last year he asked me if I waould like some more and turned up with another 7lbs on saturday. Nothing like seeing 9lbs of sugar waiting to be added to make you think "Hmmm, healthy diet?". Still, 14 jars of plum jam should keep me in toast covering substances for a while...



Mmmmm, plum jam. by toxicfur (2.00 / 0) #6 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 07:28:18 AM EST
Unfortunately (or maybe fortunately), we don't have any fruit trees, or room for fruit trees. I should start looking for good farmers' markets around here, maybe.
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To Rollins lesbians are like cuddly pandas: cute, exotic, forest-dwelling, dangerous when riled and unable to produce offspring without assistance.-CRwM
[ Parent ]

Yummie. by ObviousTroll (4.00 / 1) #7 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 08:44:51 AM EST
I love pickling peppers, but I'm the only one who eats them in my house, so I have to cheat - fill one jar with peppers and brine then let it sit in the fridge without actually boiling them.

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Has anybody seen my clue? I know I had it when I came in here.


various by sasquatchan (4.00 / 1) #9 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 09:12:52 AM EST
The USDA site the UGA.edu one ? http://www.uga.edu/nchfp/index.html

And did your ma ever make chow-chow ?



Both USDA and UGA by toxicfur (2.00 / 0) #10 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 09:55:53 AM EST
I downloaded a PDF of the official USDA Complete Guide to Home Canning (from Utah University Extension). I've also read a lot of the stuff on the UGA site, but the USDA doc made a nice reference.

My mom never made chow-chow, but my grandmother did. Mmmm, chow-chow with collard greens. I should figure out how to make it before next fall, when I'm planning to have some collard greens.
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To Rollins lesbians are like cuddly pandas: cute, exotic, forest-dwelling, dangerous when riled and unable to produce offspring without assistance.-CRwM
[ Parent ]

Canning by ad hoc (4.00 / 1) #11 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 10:31:22 AM EST
my gramma canned tomatoes, peaches and beans. I also remember being manacled to the kitchen table cutting corn from endless ears of boiled corn to be frozen. Man, I hated that. A hot farmhouse kitchen with two kettles of steaming boiling water, scalded and pruned fingers for what seemed like days. We also made grape juice and tomatoe juice. And while I don't really like sauerkraut, it's fun to make.
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The three things that make a diamond also make a waffle.


Been thinking about canning by MissTrish (4.00 / 1) #12 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 11:48:07 AM EST
during my recent spate of home cookin'. I have memories of my grandma's terrifying cold room where the ghosts in the basement lived and have been a little worried that I do not have such a room in my apartment. I have a dead hooker closet (a requirement in toronto residences), but it's in the bathroom and would get way too hot (also hell on decomp - the smell!)

I have done incredibly limited reading. Is one necessary? I would love to get some pickles going. It also would have been nice to start the process earlier - this city was full of mulberries.



Storage: by toxicfur (4.00 / 1) #13 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 12:14:35 PM EST
I'm planning to store my jars in my basement, where it stays cooler, especially in the summer. When I was a kid, though, I lived in North Carolina, and we rarely had air conditioning (well, my grandmother did, but we didn't for a lot of my childhood). My mom and grandmother just stored the canned food in the pantry or other suitable closet.

Here's what the food canning guide has to say:

If lids are tightly vacuum sealed on cooled jars, remove screw bands, wash the lid and jar to remove food residue; then rinse and dry jars. Label and date the jars and store them in a clean, cool, dark, dry place. Do not store jars above 95° F or near hot pipes, a range, a furnace, in an uninsulated attic, or in direct sunlight. Under these conditions, food will lose quality in a few weeks or months and may spoil. Dampness may corrode metal lids, break seals, and allow recontamination and spoilage.

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To Rollins lesbians are like cuddly pandas: cute, exotic, forest-dwelling, dangerous when riled and unable to produce offspring without assistance.-CRwM
[ Parent ]

hermmm, i say by MissTrish (4.00 / 1) #15 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 01:12:10 PM EST
I may have one appropriate closet that is currently full of jackets and shoes. I'm not sure canning requirements were considered when they built my little bachelor. I think I'll try getting a temperature reading in there before I move ahead though.

I would love to send 256 some spicy pickles (as I know he loves) to make mock of his acid reflux.

[ Parent ]

pickles by garlic (2.00 / 0) #23 Tue Aug 19, 2008 at 06:41:21 PM EST
refridgerator pickles aren't the same as other pickles, and only last a couple months, but you can make them a little easier than other pickles.

[ Parent ]

I made a pizza last night by Herring (4.00 / 1) #14 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 12:59:41 PM EST
with some of my home grown chillis (and a coulpe of fresh tomatoes also). Verdict: Yowsa! I thought I'd been watering them too much to give a real heat, so I sliced 3 small red ones onto a large pizza. Sweaty.

At least when the Tories got in, they didn't say their priorities were "Mining, Mining, Mining" - Mark Steel


we talk about canning by StackyMcRacky (4.00 / 1) #16 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 01:15:27 PM EST
my local Target had the Bell canning start kit (pot, rack, tongs, jars, lids, and the Big Blue Book of Canning) for $49.  We should have picked it up, but alas.

Soon, we'll be turning the side yard into a garden.  "Full sun" in most of the country means "mostly shady" in Houston.  My little tomato bed produced more tomatoes than ever this year, but the plants burnt out so quickly.



Oooh, that sounds like a great deal. by toxicfur (2.00 / 0) #17 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 01:18:37 PM EST
I think my pressure canner was $35 or so, and then I bought the other stuff separately. I've probably got about $70 or so invested in supplies. It'll be worth it, though -- I hope.

I understand that where you are, you basically have to not grow much in July and August because of the heat. Still, though, I think I'd like to have the extended growing season in the spring and fall. I'm still trying to wrap my mind around just how short our season is here.
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To Rollins lesbians are like cuddly pandas: cute, exotic, forest-dwelling, dangerous when riled and unable to produce offspring without assistance.-CRwM
[ Parent ]

My mom made pickled watermelon rind. by wiredog (4.00 / 1) #18 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 01:24:47 PM EST
Which was yummy.

Earth First!
(We can strip mine the rest later.)



I've had those, and they *are* yummy by toxicfur (2.00 / 0) #19 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 01:37:54 PM EST
Unfortunately, I think our growing season is too short for watermelons here. Otherwise, that would be excellent.
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To Rollins lesbians are like cuddly pandas: cute, exotic, forest-dwelling, dangerous when riled and unable to produce offspring without assistance.-CRwM
[ Parent ]

We didn't grow them. by wiredog (4.00 / 1) #20 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 04:56:34 PM EST
We just had a late-summer watermelon feast and the leftover rinds were pickled.

Earth First!
(We can strip mine the rest later.)

[ Parent ]

Ahhh, you cheated! ;) by toxicfur (2.00 / 0) #21 Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 05:33:09 PM EST
Regardless, they're tasty -- I might have to give that a shot.
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To Rollins lesbians are like cuddly pandas: cute, exotic, forest-dwelling, dangerous when riled and unable to produce offspring without assistance.-CRwM
[ Parent ]

Who pickled a peck of picked peppers? | 23 comments (23 topical, 0 hidden) | Trackback