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#4 make jam or preserves

March 6, 2017 by anne Leave a Comment

Starting week two of the connect over food challenge/contest and number 4 is one my favorite things to make and give away. Nothing impresses people like something sealed in a jar. It isn’t just the giving that provides and opportunity to connect over food. Making jam, preserves or pickles are a great way to connect over food for several reasons.

*this post contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission, at no cost to you, if you make a purchase after clicking on the link.

Canning is connecting

Canning of jams, preserves, and pickles was too long for the graphic, and the reason these are great ways to connect is just as long. Canning and giving away your bounty allows you to pass down family recipes, share some deliciousness, make someone’s day and impress people. That last one feels great, doesn’t it? It is even more than ego, though. Impressing the person you gift it to also serves as an opening for a conversation about food, how you learned this impressive skill or why this doesn’t make you Martha Stewart. For those of you that have already tried your hand at canning you know the secret. It isn’t that hard, and not even as time-consuming as you might think.

If you want to learn and have a mom, dad, aunt, uncle or grandparent that can teach you. Plan a date this summer to get together and share the experience. You might not even have to wait, some jams you can make all year round. I have a champagne jelly recipe that can be made without the constraints of the growing season. Canning is a great way to make use of large quantities of fruit and veggies at the farmers market. You can find out about some of these ideas in the podcast episode with Suzanne, the founder of Indy Food swap and master canner. If you head to the Indy Winter market you can probably find a few things to make into pickles. Pickles aren’t just for cucumbers. Below I have a recipe for pickled radishes that are delicious.

Canning supplies

I went to college at Ball State University so when it comes to canning I get a little partial about my jars. The founders of my college are the same family that makes the Ball canning jars. I have a sentimental attachment to Ball jars and recommend them for everything. You can find them at a lot of places, but if you shopping at their store at freshpreserving.com Through April 29, 2017, you can get free shipping on all orders over $100. If you are planning for big summer canning this would be a great deal. Just for the fact that you don’t have to lug them home. They even have the fancy colored glasses they rereleased in the past few summers.

Canning Recipes

Not only was Ball a provider of the tools needed to can, they have always been a resource for great recipes. They have taken very seriously their role in preserving, no pun intended, the tradition of canning. Their site has a collection of their best recipes. The most popular recipes as rated by customers.

Some of my favorites are these radish pickles (recipe below), strawberry jalapeno, and blackberry-thyme jam, or use the jars for baking instead.

Do you have a favorite recipe for canning? Share your favorite canning story on Instagram to be entered in the Connect Over Food Contest

pickled radishes
Print Recipe
Quickly pickled radishes that are good for sandwiches, burgers, salads or a quick snack.
  • Coursecanning, vegetable
Servings Prep Time
1 jar 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
20 minutes 4 hours
Servings Prep Time
1 jar 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
20 minutes 4 hours
pickled radishes
Print Recipe
Quickly pickled radishes that are good for sandwiches, burgers, salads or a quick snack.
  • Coursecanning, vegetable
Servings Prep Time
1 jar 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
20 minutes 4 hours
Servings Prep Time
1 jar 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
20 minutes 4 hours
Ingredients
  • 3/4 lb radishes greens removed
  • 4 fennel fronds
  • 5 cloves garlic, sliced
  • 1 Tablespoon fennel seeds
  • 1 1/4 cup apple cider vinegar
  • 1 cup water
  • 2 Tablespoons wildflower honey
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt
Servings: jar
Instructions
  1. rinse radishes and slice in 1/4 inch rounds
  2. Pack radishes, fennel frond and garlic into a half-pint canning jar.
  3. Put fennel seeds, apple cider vinegar, water, honey and salt in a sauce pan and heat to a rolling boil. Stir to dissolve honey and salt.
  4. Remove brine from heat and pour over radishes. Make sure the radishes are covered by the brine
  5. Allow the brine and radishes to come to room temperature, 70°F. This should happen within 2 hours. Cover jar and place in fridge.
  6. Let cool completely. For the best pickles leave them for at least a day before eating. Will keep in the fridge for about a month, or until you eat them all. Whichever comes first.
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Filed Under: canning, connect over food, featured, food, Uncategorized

pickled radishes quick

August 5, 2015 by anne 2 Comments

radish pickles quick

There is a misconception that pickling something has to take all day. This must come from the images of grandmothers sitting in the kitchen with bushel after bushel of cucumbers making enough pickles to last all winter. I know that is what I think of, well not grandma, but my mother. She would spend days putting the garden bounty to good use. Let’s all wipe that image from our heads and get ready to learn how to make pickles in under an hour.

The pickles, or quick pickles as they are frequently called, won’t last you the winter but they will go a good couple of weeks in the fridge. That is assuming you don’t eat them well before a few weeks are up. You can use the same process to can pickles that will last through the winter. If that is your goal you can make enough for a family of 4 in an afternoon. You can learn more about that process and get some recipes from this article I wrote for Wayfair.

Today we are on quick pickles. The sky is the limit with this method. You can pickle darn near anything. To prove the point I had some pickled blueberries on a sandwich the other day. They were delicious and likely made in the exact same way as these radishes. I am looking into this so we can have them on a salad in the near future. I will be sure to get back to you when I have them finished.

My radishes were inspired by The Picnic Cookbook which was the first cookbook for the cookbook club. They listed a variety of vegetables you could do such as beets, green beans, fennel and the traditional cukes. I took a little spin on this because radishes were on sale, they sounded good and apple cider vinegar was all that I had on hand. I was very happy how they turned out and couldn’t stop eating them once I opened the jar. They were a perfect topping for a pork tenderloin sandwich the other night.

The basic process is to prep a fruit or vegetable of your choice, make a brine, pour brine over said fruit or vegetable and refrigerate. Since you aren’t trying to store these at room temperature you don’t have to be as concerned with the acid levels and the safety of the food. This allows you wing the recipes a little more than you can with traditional canning. Big win for you. You can experiment with vinegars, seasonings and ratios to water until you find your perfect mixture.

Before this did you think all pickling was hard or took all day?

pickled radishes
Print Recipe
Quickly pickled radishes that are good for sandwiches, burgers, salads or a quick snack.
  • Coursecanning, vegetable
Servings Prep Time
1 jar 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
20 minutes 4 hours
Servings Prep Time
1 jar 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
20 minutes 4 hours
pickled radishes
Print Recipe
Quickly pickled radishes that are good for sandwiches, burgers, salads or a quick snack.
  • Coursecanning, vegetable
Servings Prep Time
1 jar 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
20 minutes 4 hours
Servings Prep Time
1 jar 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
20 minutes 4 hours
Ingredients
  • 3/4 lb radishes greens removed
  • 4 fennel fronds
  • 5 cloves garlic, sliced
  • 1 Tablespoon fennel seeds
  • 1 1/4 cup apple cider vinegar
  • 1 cup water
  • 2 Tablespoons wildflower honey
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt
Servings: jar
Instructions
  1. rinse radishes and slice in 1/4 inch rounds
  2. Pack radishes, fennel frond and garlic into a half-pint canning jar.
  3. Put fennel seeds, apple cider vinegar, water, honey and salt in a sauce pan and heat to a rolling boil. Stir to dissolve honey and salt.
  4. Remove brine from heat and pour over radishes. Make sure the radishes are covered by the brine
  5. Allow the brine and radishes to come to room temperature, 70°F. This should happen within 2 hours. Cover jar and place in fridge.
  6. Let cool completely. For the best pickles leave them for at least a day before eating. Will keep in the fridge for about a month, or until you eat them all. Whichever comes first.
Share this Recipe
Powered byWP Ultimate Recipe

Filed Under: canning, recipes

As a home cook and gardener, a former grocery store manager, and an advocate for improving our food system I have thousands of hours of research and real-world experience on how to get good food on our plates. My new challenge and my main focus is how to encourage my daughter to love food & eating as much as we do.

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