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Preserving the harvest

Posted Oct 10 2007, 12:23 PM by Donna Freedman
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Seattle is loaded with blackberry vines. The sight of all that free fruit makes me want to forage each summer. My arms get so thorn-raked it looks like I’ve tried to exorcise a cat, but I fill the freezer, make jam, and eat blackberries almost every day for weeks.

On my way to pick berries one end-of-summer day, I saw a dark-purple blob in the dust. A plum had fallen from a tree in a nearby yard. I broke open the windfall and took a tentative nibble from its golden interior. Sweet as the memory of first love.

Peeking through the fence, I could see the tree was loaded. I asked the homeowners if I could trade them a jar of jam for the fruit I’d need to make some. They told me to help myself: “We’re glad someone wants it.”

Two batches of jam later, I posted a thread on the Smart Spending message board: Who else out there “puts food by” each year? Do you grow it? Buy it from a farm? Scrounge and scavenge like me?

Harvest home

A Georgia reader named “old Karen” gardens, hits u-pick farms and farmers markets, and forages for wild edibles. Some is for herself, some for gifts. Either way, “nothing smells better than fixing all this in your own kitchen,” she wrote.

“Jestjack” is drowning in produce, including a “bumper crop of hot-hot jalapeño peppers” from deeply discounted Kmart seedlings. “Nothing better than fresh squash and tomatoes out of the garden...and quite the savings.”

“Chrisfan1958” cans or freezes beets, beans, carrots, squash, spinach and other home-grown crops. The southern Oregon reader stores root vegetables, dries herbs, forages for mushrooms, and harvests steelhead, salmon and game meats.

“And isn’t it rewarding to share your harvest with folks?” Chrisfan wrote.

I’m with her on that one. I’ve already given jam to my sister and to two neighbors in the apartment building.

A windfall of knowledge

Intrigued by these preservationist viewpoints, other readers posted bushels of questions. How do you freeze fruit? What are the most reliable canners? What is blanching? How much does this cost?

Among the advice from the veterans:

  • The USDA Complete Guide to Home Canning is available free online.
  • Request canning and freezing supplies on freecyle or on Craigslist. Or look for them at yard sales and thrift shops. For freezer jam, any kind of jar or container (margarine tubs et al) will do.
  • Check out u-pick farms.
  • Ask for “seconds,” i.e. imperfect produce, at farms and roadside stands.
  • Scavenge! Barter with fruit-tree owners and gardeners in your neighborhood, or post such a request on freecycle or Craigslist.

A success story

The thread inspired reader “Pepperdoo,” who had never made jam, to visit a produce stand near her central California home. The next day, she fixed her husband a peanut-butter sandwich.

“(He) asked where I bought the gourmet jam,” Pepperdoo wrote, “and just why was I out spending money for stuff like that when we are SUPPOSED to be on a budget.

“He just about fell over when I told him I made it.”

Let her success be your inspiration. If you can still get your hands on fresh produce, freeze it or make some jam. Be warned, though: Preserving is an addictive practice.

You’ll keep trying new and different methods. You’ll start gardening, even if it’s only basil on the balcony. You’ll type “u-pick” into search engines. You’ll knock on doors and ask, “Would you like some help picking those apples?” You’ll seek out raspberries that jumped the fence, or blackberries that swarm roadside ditches.

But some raw, dark winter morning, the taste of homemade jam will bring back the warmth and sweetness of July. And you won’t care how scratched-up your arms got.

Comments

 

Donna - I live in Renton (not far from you) and I have been making jam and pies with the local blackberries for years.  I give the pies as presents to people around me, and keep some in the freezer for winter.  The jam I give away, too, but I have many jars of blackberry, blueberry. raspberry and apricot jam in my cupboards. Some people don't like my jam, because I don't make it very sweet - I make it the German way.

I buy all my fruit at Carpinitos in Kent - however, lately I've seen Winco beat their prices and the quality is pretty similar.

Also, this year is the first year where I used all the tomatoes and zucchini from our little garden - I made several Zucchini/Tomato casseroles and froze some of the Zucchini (grated) for Zucchini bread later in the winter.  The rest of the tomatos I'll chop up and stick in the freezer, too - to put in soups and sauces (this tip is from a fellow gardener whose back yard looks like a farm in the summer).

I was so excited about my first "Harvest" success that I've now made peach, rasberry and apple cinnamon jam to stock up for the winter, and I can now say proudly, "I made this for you", instead of "I bought this for you".

I make jelly from kudzu blossoms. It tastes like a cross between apple and grape, wonderful!! I get jars at yard sales and on clearance at the end of canning season so each jar of jelly costs pennies and tastes better than anything I can buy.

I'm a Georgia girl,  I love to can also and get gimmes from friends when their gardens are exploding.  We're blessed with a long growing season.  I always ask for the jars back when I gift someone with jam or jelly or syrup, most people throw them away otherwise.    You control what goes into your mix too, none of the high fructose corn syrup stuff in most store bought product.   Canning is a cheap and rewarding hobby, people always appreciate your efforts.  

Add a little lemon juice to that frozen Zucchini, you can use it as a pineapple substitute in your recipes.

I have had a garden since i was in  my teens,  but never had the guts to trry canning and freezing always seemed to make my veggies soggy.  So i always have given friends , relatives and neighbors the "fruits"  of my gardens.  Since  i got married i have been introduced to  fried green tomatoes and  i love them . my question is can i preserve green tomatoes to do this with in say january?  any ideas would be appreciated

just vac-u-seal and freze veggies and fruit.

I live in Southern Minnesota, and around the middle of May I go foraging for morel mushrooms. We eat as much as we please fresh, and dry the rest to put in beef or venison stews all winter. If I needed to, I could sell some on eBay for a good price, but I'm not ready to part with any yet. It's a smug satisfaction to know I'm getting for free what most people think of as "gourmet"

Do make sure you know one mushroom from another when you forage. Find a book with good pictures or look on the Internet.

I really enjoyed reading this blog! My grandmother who was born in 1905 raised me so she was from the frugal (by necessity of course) generation. She canned many fruits and vegetables every year and we also raised our own meat. Wasting anything was a serious no-no in my home. She is gone now and I dont can as much as she did but I remember my childhood with fond memories of the smells and tastes of our garden.

How true that in the dead of winter you can go back to July with the wonderful things you've preserved and canned.

Thanks to all who contributed comments and to the person who wrote the blog for a truly enjoyable trip down memory lane!

I practice the old art of pickling with wonderful results - have donated so many jars of both sweet pickles and bread-and-butter pickles to various charity bake sales and bazaars that I am known locally as the "pickle lady". My mother and I used to "pickle" once every five years but I donate and give away so many that I have to grow cucumbers and do it all over again every year. Have always had a garden and our own corn, green beans, tomatoes, cucumbers, onions, peas, lettuce, etc. If i ever have to give it up I will be in bad shape for sure.

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