After last years succesful garden we have started to plan this upcoming year of gardening.

This year we will have a lot more space, 3 6x12's (one of these is at the community garden) 1 25x12 (also at the community garden) and then a bed of herbs. We will also have our raspberry bushes and are hoping to start a rhubarb patch and I imagine will grow something in the bags too.

On our list.

Celery (possibly... Although everything i've read say's to start seeds with a glowlight so we shall see)
Radish
Brocolli
Sprouts
Turnip
Rhutabaga
A lettuce / Spinach blend
Carrots (although we didn't eat much of our harvest last year)
Dinosaur Kale
Possibly cucumbers but we still have a ton of pickles left
Potatoes
Parsnip
Tomatoes
Beets (although these did terribly last year)

I know I've left something out. Our herb garden will just be a little bit of everything. The main things we did last year that we will not be doing this year are Eggplant (What a waste!), Peppers (they didn't grow) and Kohlrabi (I was the only who ate it and I got sick of it real quick).
Well, I canned green beans for the first time tonight. It was easier than I ever imagined and I got a lot of yield that I can't wait to tuck into when we have three foot of snow outside.

Step 1.
Make your kids and husband break their backs picking green beans; We got just under 1/2 bushell but a little more than 1/3. It came to three dollars = Bargain.


Step 2 - Top and Tail, wash and cut your green beans. Canning them whole is fine too. I was using pint jars so had to chop them. If I was using quarts, I would have kept them whole. At this point its best to grab a beer, Canning under the influence!
Wash your Jars and lids, I raw packed so sterilized my jars, put in the cold green beans, half a teaspoon of salt (full teaspoon for quarts) and hot water, leaving 1' of headspace.

Clean the rims and then place the lids on
Put on the rims, make them tight but not too tight. Easy to get off. Place in your pressure canner and follow directions. Processing time is 20 minutes but its best to do some reasearch about your OWN pressure canner. I don't want to be held responsible for lost limbs.
Canned green beans, super easy.
We decided to go Peach picking to get a few for our own consumption. We got there and was told that we had to pick a half bushell and if we wanted less we didn't get to pick but could buy them from the shop. This orchard is a great place, very pretty and we will go back for the three tons of apples I need to make a years worth of unsweetened apple sauce (We eat alot of apple sauce..... so we are talking 48 quarts here and we still might end up with it not lasting a year).

We managed to get:
1/2 Bushell of Peaches
1/4 Bushell of Green Beans (ever picked your own green beans? don't bother, get them from the farmers market, I felt like I broke my back for an hour after. Nothing that a magarita can't fix though!)
Dozen Sweetcorn..

All for the wonderful price of $15.



We are processing the green beans and corn also but the peaches was what we really had to get going on because they spoil so quickly.





Dehydrated peaches are yum, natures candy. We put them in the dehydrator last night at about 10 and they were ready at 10 the next morning.

We also froze some, about a gallon in fact. I didn't want to can them all because peaches are great in smoothies also. At the same time, I don't want a freezer full of peaches. What happens if we lose electricity? I want my canned food! The people accross the road might starve but we'll be ok! (not really, i'd probably invite everyone round and have a redcross shelter in my basement)

Then we canned some spicy peaches in the pressure canner. Peaches can be safetly water bath canned but I bought a new pressure canner today so was playing. Pressure canners are a whole new animal, on numerous occasions I was hiding under the dining table waiting for the thing to blow up. So far so good though and the jars are sealed fine.

We used a light syrup (1 quart of water, 2 cups of sugar) which we poured over sliced peaches already in jars. Stuck in a cinnamon stick and some cloves and popped them in the pressure canner. 5 pounds of pressure for 10 minutes processing time. My pressure canner is my new love and i'm going to can some green beans tomorrow.


Recently my fridge has been constantly building up with cucumbers. We have two gardens right now, one at home and a plot at the community gardens. My husband always goes on and on about how much he loves pickles and cuc's. Being the loving wife I am... I planted ten cucumber plants. He doesn't love them as much anymore.

I've already canned a few batches of pickles that are sitting in the pantry until January (hopefully he will like them again by then) but its hot out, I don't want to play with the waterbath today and I have a fridge full of cucumbers. What to do? Freezer pickles!

The great thing about freezer pickles is that you don't have to be as precise, you can go with the flow a little  more and play with the recipe because it doesn't  need processing. You also don't have to use a mason jar, you can use Tupperware or anything else that you would usually freeze in.

I'm going to post the recipe I used however, changed it up, swap things out, make it your own. Google freezer pickle recipes and see what different things you come up with that suits your taste.

2lbs Pickling Cucumbers thinly sliced
2 onions thinly sliced
1 red pepper diced
3 tablespoons salt
1 1/2 cups of sugar
1 cup white vinegar
1 tablspoon of celery seed
1 tablespoon of dried dill weed

Put your cucumbers, onion, pepper and 2 tablespoons of the salt in a large bowl. Cover it with some crushed ice and mix it really well. Stick it in the fridge for 8 hours.

Rinse your cucumbers really well.

In a sauce pan combine the sugar, vinegar, celery seed, dill and 1 tablespoon of salt. Bring it to a boil and let it cool a little. Put your cucumber mixture in desired containers and poor liquid over the top.

Put pickles in the freezer! You can let them thaw at room temperature or in the fridge. I'm interested to see if they keep their crunch but I've  heard good things and I'm sick of my fridge being full of these little green monsters.
I'm all jammed out lately and peaches aren't even ready yet. I have a lot of plans for future produce but honestly, I've started preserving things that we will use with meats as marinades and sauces instead.

Raspberry Chipolte Sauce is a big hit in our family and its very similar to the recipe posted earlier for Cherry Chipolte, in fact.. its the same but I switched the fruit around.

6 Cups crushed raspberries
1 cup chopped Onion
3 tbsp chopped Garlic
1 1/4 cups Honey
3/4 Apple Cider Vinegar
1 tbsp Worcestershire Sauce
2 tsp Red Pepper Flakes
2 tsp Dry Mustard
1 tsp Salt
1/2 Cup Chipolte Chiles in Adobo, minces and seeded. (this is more than required, I like it hot. If you don't i'd suggest maybe 1/4 cup)

Combine everything in a large sauce pan, bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer, stirring frequently until mixture thickens to the consistency of a thin commercial barbecue sauce. This takes about 30 minutes.Ladle hot sauce into hot jars, leaving 1/2 inch head space. Remove air bubbles, wipe rim and process in a boiling water canner for 15 minutes. Adjusting appropriately for altitude. Remove jars.
  • 4 qts cubed or shredded zucchini
  • 46 oz canned unsweetened pineapple juice
  • 1½ cups bottled lemon juice
  • 3 cups sugar
  • I added a little bit of yellow food coloring just to make it more pineapple-looking. This step can obviously be missed or you can use a natural way of coloring it. I added a tiny bit for the whole recipe so I am not concerned. 

Procedure: Peel zucchini and either cut into ½-inch cubes or shred. Mix zucchini with other ingredients in a large saucepan and bring to a boil. Simmer 20 minutes. Fill jars with hot mixture and cooking liquid, leaving ½-inch headspace. Adjust lids and process. Process for 15 minutes in a Hot water bath. Tada! Zuchinni Pineapple, awesome with cottage cheese and you can't tell its a vegetable, score!
 
We are having so much success in our Garden this year. I'm excited when we can pick produce and eat it that night, things we have started from seed. As much as I'm sick of seeing Zucchini's I'm going to be excited in January when I can go in my freezer and get out some strips to put in a Stir Fry.

 We already have a little pumpkin growing!
 Carrots, Onions, beans, Cucumbers (trellised)
 Red Cabbage, I love this stuff, can honestly eat a jar of picked red cabbage per day. Which I very rarely attempt but mmmm YUM!
Our Giant Sunflowers, Doing so well! So tall and their stalks are very thick and healthy, I can't wait for them to bloom.

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CANNED 2011

Raspberry Chipolte BBQ

Cherry Chipolte BBQ

Peaches

Spiced Peaches

Pickles

Blueberry Preserves

Strawberry Jam

Strawberry Rhubarb Jam

Cherry Pie Filling

Boozy Cherries

Zucchini Pineapple

Green Beans

Tomatoes

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