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'Putting food by' -- worth the time or not?

Posted Sep 08 2008, 12:21 PM by Donna Freedman
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I spent Saturday afternoon in the kitchen turning free fruit into food for the winter. Sitting on my countertop are nine pints of home-canned pears, six jars of apple butter, and five jars of plum-pear jam.

I have enough apples left to make about four quarts of applesauce, but I'm going to wait until the last of the pears ripen. That way, I'll be able to process both fruits in the water-bath canner simultaneously. I got the apples and pears by putting a note on Freecycle, asking permission to pick fruit that wasn't being harvested by homeowners. A neighbor allowed me to pick plums -- I still have about 15 pounds of them to deal with -- and for the past few weeks I'd been picking blackberries around the corner from my apartment.

Saturday's experiment in urban gleaning cost me $13.20 for sugar, jar lids, one box of pectin and the gas to drive to pick the fruit. I'm not sure how much it cost to run the stove on high for 20 minutes and to run a slow cooker for seven hours. Not much, I expect, since my average electric use is 39 cents a day and I make most of my meals at home.

From a strictly cash standpoint, I'm coming out ahead. Buying nine cans of pears would cost $18.81 at a local supermarket, and my jars have lots more fruit in them than Del Monte's cans contain. In addition, there are those 11 jars of jam and apple butter to eat and give as gifts. (Some will go to the folks who gave me the fruit.)

I can hear people wailing, "But what about the cost of your time?" That's a complicated question. Short-form answer: I enjoyed every minute of the fruit-picking and the canning, so I consider it entertainment.

Plus I learned a new skill: how to make apple butter in a slow cooker, although I chose a different recipe than Stephanie at Stop the Ride! used.

Small effort, big savings
Jam-making isn't hard. From crushing the fruit to cooking to canning to cleanup, it takes me less than an hour. And boy, does it make my apartment smell delicious.

In the past couple of weeks I'd made blackberry and plum jams without commercial pectin, using sugar I bought on sale. (I had to buy one box of pectin for the pear-plum, since I couldn't find a recipe for that kind of jam made without it.) I put the jams up with canning lids I got for a song at a yard sale earlier this summer. I'm not counting the cost of jars, since I mostly reused ones I've had for years. If I were keeping track, the jars cost about a nickel apiece.

Thus a small batch (four half-pints) of that plum or blackberry jam cost me about 24 to 29 cents per jar. Half a pint may not sound like much, but homemade jam is intensely flavorful and a little goes a long way.

In other words, when I give two or three flavors of jam as a holiday gift, I'm spending under a dollar.

Unless, of course, I factor in the value of my time.

What's it worth to you?
I agree with personal-finance blogger Dorian Wales, who wrote that people tend to overvalue their free time. Besides, it's not as though I skipped work to do this. I enjoyed the late-summer weather as I picked the fruit, and I listened to great music while I preserved it. (Thanks, KING-FM!) As a bonus, I know exactly what's in those jars: fruit and sugar and, in the case of the apple butter, cinnamon and allspice. No preservatives, no artificial coloring.

Some people would rather buy jam than make it. Heck, most of us buy stuff rather than make it. We pay someone else to raise our produce and meat, bake our bread, make our clothes, build our houses.

This much I can do. Looking at those lovely jars arrayed on my countertop makes me happy. So does the idea of giving them as gifts. Anybody can unlimber a credit card and order gift baskets online. It takes a little more effort to give a jar of pear-plum jam and a jar of apple butter plus a bag of homemade biscuit mix.

But not that much more effort. Really.

Comments

 

Claire: I went to this site, www.cooks.com/.../0,1-11,crock_pot_apple_butter,FF.html, and wound up using recipe #34 because it was simplest.

For every cup of applesauce you add 3/4 cup of sugar, 1 teaspoon allspice and "a little" cinnamon. (I used more than a little because I like cinnamon.) Then you cook it for 3 to 4 hours covered and 3 to 4 hours uncovered. It will seem somewhat liquid but it firms up as it cools.

I'd suggest mixing it up in a bowl or pan and then pouring it into the slow cooker. I filled mine almost to the top and it would have been messy trying to stir it in. Put a spatter screen on the top of the crock pot while you're cooking it without the cover -- otherwise, you'll have quite a mess to clean up.

You could make this with unsweetened commercial applesauce if you don't feel like making your own apples. If you're giving it as a gift, you could skip the processing and put it in any kind of container with the stipulation that it MUST be refrigerated -- it's not shelf-stable unless you've processed it through inversion or a hot-water bath.

Finally, I suggest making up a batch of biscuits and be ready to throw them in the oven while you're filling the jars -- use them to sop up what's left on the inside of the slow cooker. :-)

Thanks for reading Smart Spending.

Best regards,

Donna Freedman

Last summer, I went on a trip to the Baltics and it seemed like everyone there picked their own wild fruits and vegetables. On train rides, I would see people coming out of the forest with buckets full of wild mushrooms and berries. Walking through residential neighborhoods it was not uncommon for me to see that people with overflowing apple trees in their yards had picked as many apples as they could and left them in a box on the street for people to take as many of as they wanted. At the time, I thought the Baltic people's resourcefulness was wonderful and it was a shame Americans didn't take better advantage of nature's bounty. I'm happy to learn that some Americans do.

I've been putting up our home grown tomatoes and will put up the peppers, too. I think it is fun and am glad to finally have the time to do it as the designated Stay At Home Parent. There is a lot of love in our tomatoes......

Gifts of homemade jelly's, preserves, wine and the like mean so much more to me than a store bought gift. My DFIL last year made jelly from yellow "bell tomatoes" last year and after observing that I really enjoyed it, gave me a couple of jars over the Xmas holidays. I was touched by the kindness and the thought that he took the time to give me something I would really enjoy. Rather than just buying a gift off the shelf. I'm guessing your family and friends feel the same way when they recieve your jellies and jams.

It's definitely worth it in my family, where handmade antipasto, jams, and even a nice crab apple wine are popular holiday gifts.  When I think about the gas money, time and dwindling sanity mall shopping costs me at Christmas,  I don't consider it a waste at all.

Several weeks ago, my husband and I took a ride to where we used to pick blackberries years ago. The bushes were laden with fruit and we picked for 2 hours. We went back several times over the next three weeks and picked for a couple of hours. I loved being out in the sun and chatting with my husband, though I hated the mosquitos! There are many farm stands around here and a friend with one allowed us to sell them. We made and froze 7 pies, my husband made 24 jars of jelly, I froze too many gallons to count and we made $150 in only 3 days in selling them. Next year we will start selling them WAY sooner. I figure we can make $1000. Family and friends are getting homemade gift baskets for the holidays. I am with you Donna, you can not put a price tag on the time. I enjoyed it very much, and to get $150 at the end was a sweet surprise!

It's not just that people overvalue their freetime.  They underestimate their ability to do something themselves.  Recently, my husband and I were going to hire a mason to put in some brickwork in our front yard.  The estimate was $700.  We didn't really have that much, so we started doing some online research on how to do it ourselves.  3 half-days and $250 later, we have some lovely brickwork, and we have the added pride in having done the work ourselves.  Not to mention we learned a new skill!  

Jules, a friend and I made elderberry wine one year. I can't say the endeavor was a success; the wine didn't turn out well. But we did pick the elderberries ourselves. The best and easiest places were out on country roads, next to old barns and sheds. Elderberries also like to grow next to water and I mean real close to water. Find an old broomstick and put either a bent nail or hook on it to pull the full heads into reach.

I now live in a very urban area so I haven't spotted any elderberries but I wish you luck!

I have made jam and canned and made bread and lots of things over the years.  My kids talk about the memories they have of helping me and eating the delicious jam with homemade bread. It's those intangibles that make it hard to put a value on things like home canning. Though I admit my original intent was to take advantage  of the free produce from our apple and pear trees, raspberries from the garden and blackberries from under the high tension wires. With the stock market crashing today, I think it was a good choice.

I still have some jars of jam that my mother in law put up years ago. She's infirm now so it's a reminder of better times. I never thought of putting up and ad to pick fruit. What a great idea!.

I haven't canned in many years but it's a great idea for gifts. I don't know anyone who doesn't like home canned jellies and jams!

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