I have been using a steam canner for 30 years, and I still love it, not to mention we are in a drought and water usage is a big issue. I also put my jars upside down over the steam holes to sterilize the inside and get them hot prior to putting the contents inside; I do this while I am prepping the contents, so my work flows
Wow, I have that same dress. I thrifted it when I was staying in Fl to care for my mom and just love the way it sits and flows. On the steam canning front, Rose Red Homestead says it’s ok to use any equipment that lets you have a tight lid and gives off steam the entire time, such as a pressure canner without adding the weight or jiggler. If you can see a strong stream of steam the tire time, it’s doing the same thing.
This was just great. Really informative. And, as a french man, and i am sorry in advanced if i might be shocking some of you, but Melissa, you are just an extremely smart and beautiful woman. Your channel is my main guide to prepare our future family life back to France from China. We will buy a small vineyard and go homesteading...which is really a weird life, yet, in France. Although, homesteading is catching up simply because we are getting poorer and poorer thanks to the European Union and Germany... Thanks again for all this wealth of knowledge you share with us.
We have a freeze dryer that has been a life saver for this. We took all of the food out of our freezer and put it through our freeze dryer and then onto the shelf. Have freeze dried leftovers this way as well. We love not wasting food.
I absolutely LOVE my steam canner - it makes such a huge difference! It doesn't get nearly as hot in the kitchen, it doesn't take nearly as long for it to get ready for your jars, and it's not nearly as heavy. I just got mine last year, but wish I had it much sooner! Oh, how I love to hear those 'pings'!
I love that I can easily keep my jars hot upside down the the steam canner. Putting empty jars in a water bath canner to keep hot is a nightmare of floating and having to dump out hot water.
Just made blueberry/strawberry jam today using my steam canner. I love using that canner and I always use low sugar pectin with fresh fruit since they are sweet enough.
I was able to pick up BRAND NEW in the box steam canner at a yard sale for $4!!! I was so excited to say the least. Peach salsa was its first voyage. 🍑
Always enjoy learning from your vast knowledge that for some reason isn't as valued as it once was because people became dependent on grocers and corporate farming.
aaaawwwwhhhh...i just watched the grand-ma cherry trees story..so, so sweet of you...We need more Melissa's familly and her husband's family in the world.
Perfect timing as I just brought home 25 lbs of cherries yesterday. One of my preserving goals this year is doubling the various cherries on my shelves 😊 Great video Melissa! #winpreserveyourownfood
I just found your channel I love canning and you are so right a about the ding on the canning jars I get excited when I hear it because I know my hard work is not in vein tyfs much love and hugs and prayers
I just bought 2 steam canners and LOVE them!!! So easy to put anything that needs to have skins removed in the canner and steam the skins off. So much faster than boiling. Wish I would have bought them years ago. So much faster and less heat added to the house.
I made the best Jam I have ever made by watching you!! So thank you for this video I learned a lot from you. Plus I bought the steamer. It is so much easier to use. Thanks for all your help.
I've never used a steam canner before but it seems like a quicker/easier method of sealing jars vs. water baths. I just harvested a large batch of raspberries to make jam with. Great video!
It is amazing. I just bought 2 and I used one for steaming peach skins off and the other kept my jars hot. I even used it the other night to steam my sweet corn for dinner.
I've been using a steam canner for years to but a different model. I actually think an outside because I have a glass top stove and it keeps the kitchen cooler. I very rarely ever had a seal fail and I've never gotten sick and there are several extension offices around the country that recommend these. They're definitely lighter weight easier to move and mine holds five or six quarts at a time grateful. If it's really hot inside your house you should try canning outside! I use our glass top patio table and Coleman camping cook stove with propane
I watched Mary's nest video, to check the set she would put a plate in the freezer and would put a spoonful on it. To check she would draw a line through the middle. If it was jellied it was set. Just another way to do it.
I found this recipe and wanted to know if it would preserve well for Jam. I wanted to substitute the sugar for honey. What are your thoughts? Mixed Berry Jam 16 cups of berries 1 1/2 cups sugar 1/2 cup chia seeds Cook down your berries until soft & then use an immersion blender. I don't like my jam chunky so I blend until I don't see big chunks. Put back on the stove, add your sugar and cook down until it's a tad thicker. Add chia seeds and simmer for another 20 minutes or so. Jar up and can, freeze or eat fresh!
I will say I’ve noticed that Pamonas- does not prohibit mold growth nearly as well after opening is regular jams. You need to use the entire jar in about a week. Additionally, it’s only shelf stable, canned for one year as opposed to the typical 5+ for regular canning.
Love this method. To get a bit more cherry-lime flavour could I add lime zest? I have never added zest to jam so not sure how it would impact shelf life.
I just bought the steam canner after watching your video. Today, I canned 11 pints of apricot jam. All lids pinged and I am allowing them to cool until tomorrow. So far, so good! On another note, where did you get the temperature strips on your kombucha jar?
If you search for "cast iron dutch oven" you should get results. There's at least one knowledgeable lady that's done testing on lead and other heavy metal levels in cookware and compared brands (even brand name) so it might be advisable to research that first. Also, yes, there are also videos on UA-cam about baking bread in them. They make great roasts, stews, soups, etc. and are oven safe as well because most are just coated cast iron. All the best!
This brand of pectin and calcium powder is very specific and has its own precise instructions. They won’t apply to any other product. Follow the instructions for each product as directed.
I’ve used the liquid and the sure gel pectin. I found that the liquid makes a funny texture ring around the jelly when you open the jelly and put in the fridge. Just my view point. Others might like it.
Hi I used my news team counter same as years today for the first time making raspberry jam with just two quarts of raspberries and two and half cups of sugar No lemon juice I don't have a recipe my problem was that the information given in the canner does not give any recipes for time So I processed it the jam in the half-point jars the tiny jars like you used I think that's half pint I processed the raspberry jam for 10 minutes I did not know if the steam canner had a different process time than the water bath canner and I cannot find any information or recipes for processing times for raspberry jam and again I did not use lemon juice in my raspberry jam
Please click the recipe link in the video description, it clearly states everything including your processing times for altitude. At 3,500 you add an additional 10 minutes, for 20 minutes total
I'm so confused about canning 😔 so water bath or steam canning is only for 'acidic' foods? How do you can something like beans? I don't really like foods that are too acidic.
Or heat them up. Botulism ! The poison of the bacterium is complex, fragile, only develops over time and without (or very little oxygen) and it does not fare well if there is some acidity. - Meat, fish, and sausage were sources of poisoning in the past (quite dangerous) especially if they were not heated. Even short heating up will destroy the poison and it is safe to eat. All other things will be noticed (mould, fouling) - but botulism you cannot see, taste or smell. It is not impossible that fruit or vegetable preserves would allow it to develop (although the main problems were with meat and fish - so the authorities regulated that food industry. They have extra protocols for heating up fish - people eat that cold out of the can).
If you ALWAYS heat them up, work fast and very cleanly and methodically (the steam heater likely helps with that ) - and do not give away any jars where you took liberties (not adding the recommended acid, but also not following the protocols that heat up longer) you should be O.K. At worst a jar will go bad, but you will notice. And maybe inspecting them so you can see if bubbles form that show fermenting (a jar could explose and create a mess).
The USDA or comparable sites have information. Caning gone wrong is a public health risk. If you KNOW what _could_ go wrong you can tweak the process. As long as you are not selling or giving food away.
Can you offer preservation methods that don't require many other inputs like sugar? Drying cherries for instance, but that requires electricity or appropriate weather to dry, and perhaps appliances. Yes the jam is good tasting, but some consider sugar as white poison that happens to taste wonderful (which is how all poisons like that work else no one would ingest the poison, as ant honey tricks the ants to poison themselves.voluntarily and with uncanny speed). Personally I'm ok with salt but reticent to use sugar or honey. Ever ferment cherries? Not like wine, but sort of like cherry pickles? So a sour ferment, but using cherries or fruit of some sort, in order to allow unrefrigerated storage without loss.
I blend frozen black raspberries, frozen strawberries and a bit of raw cream, nothing else added. it's not as sweet as ice cream, but trivially simple to make, a gelato of sorts,and everyone eats all they get. Once used to this, ice cream seems way too sweet and not very flavorful. It freezes rock hard, but allowed to slow melt in refig before eating takes on a wonderful gelato texture.
I have been using a steam canner for 30 years, and I still love it, not to mention we are in a drought and water usage is a big issue. I also put my jars upside down over the steam holes to sterilize the inside and get them hot prior to putting the contents inside; I do this while I am prepping the contents, so my work flows
Wow, I have that same dress. I thrifted it when I was staying in Fl to care for my mom and just love the way it sits and flows. On the steam canning front, Rose Red Homestead says it’s ok to use any equipment that lets you have a tight lid and gives off steam the entire time, such as a pressure canner without adding the weight or jiggler. If you can see a strong stream of steam the tire time, it’s doing the same thing.
This was just great. Really informative. And, as a french man, and i am sorry in advanced if i might be shocking some of you, but Melissa, you are just an extremely smart and beautiful woman. Your channel is my main guide to prepare our future family life back to France from China. We will buy a small vineyard and go homesteading...which is really a weird life, yet, in France. Although, homesteading is catching up simply because we are getting poorer and poorer thanks to the European Union and Germany...
Thanks again for all this wealth of knowledge you share with us.
As a diabetic, I’m glad to see more recipes using less sugar, thank you for the lesson and sharing! Love and hugs from Texas!
We have a freeze dryer that has been a life saver for this. We took all of the food out of our freezer and put it through our freeze dryer and then onto the shelf. Have freeze dried leftovers this way as well. We love not wasting food.
I absolutely LOVE my steam canner - it makes such a huge difference! It doesn't get nearly as hot in the kitchen, it doesn't take nearly as long for it to get ready for your jars, and it's not nearly as heavy. I just got mine last year, but wish I had it much sooner! Oh, how I love to hear those 'pings'!
Do you mean compared to a big pressure canner?
@@tammycraine7493 No compared to a water bath canner only.
I love that I can easily keep my jars hot upside down the the steam canner. Putting empty jars in a water bath canner to keep hot is a nightmare of floating and having to dump out hot water.
Just made blueberry/strawberry jam today using my steam canner. I love using that canner and I always use low sugar pectin with fresh fruit since they are sweet enough.
I was able to pick up BRAND NEW in the box steam canner at a yard sale for $4!!! I was so excited to say the least. Peach salsa was its first voyage. 🍑
thank you, finally someone (you) addressed the inside of canner to be 180 degrees. thank you, I made marmalade today. and it turned out great.
Could listen to you all day.😍😍😍
Always enjoy learning from your vast knowledge that for some reason isn't as valued as it once was because people became dependent on grocers and corporate farming.
aaaawwwwhhhh...i just watched the grand-ma cherry trees story..so, so sweet of you...We need more Melissa's familly and her husband's family in the world.
Perfect timing as I just brought home 25 lbs of cherries yesterday. One of my preserving goals this year is doubling the various cherries on my shelves 😊 Great video Melissa! #winpreserveyourownfood
I purchased this after watching you. Made raspberry jam today. Much quicker, less water, easier to lift.
If she's 90, don't wait until Xmas to give her some, sooner rather than later or hopefully as well as later!
I like the steam canner!!! And your recipe!!!
Oooo I love those Blue Willow plates! My nanna had those and I've always thoight they were so beautiful and olde worlde.
Great video, I DO need a steam canner!
I need an apron like yours too, love it!
I never heard of steam canning...thanks for the introduction.
I just found your channel I love canning and you are so right a about the ding on the canning jars I get excited when I hear it because I know my hard work is not in vein tyfs much love and hugs and prayers
This, I can do. Thank you for sharing!
I'm very interested in getting a steam canner. Thanks for this video. By the way,you look adorable in that dress and apron!
In purchased a steam canner last summer and I love it!❤
I love you measuring cup.
I just bought 2 steam canners and LOVE them!!! So easy to put anything that needs to have skins removed in the canner and steam the skins off. So much faster than boiling. Wish I would have bought them years ago. So much faster and less heat added to the house.
I made the best Jam I have ever made by watching you!! So thank you for this video I learned a lot from you. Plus I bought the steamer. It is so much easier to use. Thanks for all your help.
I am thinking with the looming power issues... That canning is the better option.
Best video yet. Thank you
15:00. That is called "invoking cook's privilege."
I've never used a steam canner before but it seems like a quicker/easier method of sealing jars vs. water baths. I just harvested a large batch of raspberries to make jam with. Great video!
It is amazing. I just bought 2 and I used one for steaming peach skins off and the other kept my jars hot. I even used it the other night to steam my sweet corn for dinner.
Now I want to make cherry jam! It looks so good. I’ve also just started using that pectin and I love it so much.
I've been using a steam canner for years to but a different model. I actually think an outside because I have a glass top stove and it keeps the kitchen cooler. I very rarely ever had a seal fail and I've never gotten sick and there are several extension offices around the country that recommend these. They're definitely lighter weight easier to move and mine holds five or six quarts at a time grateful. If it's really hot inside your house you should try canning outside! I use our glass top patio table and Coleman camping cook stove with propane
I most definitely will be investing in a steam canner
Who disliked this video?? Haters gonna hate. Thanks for the video.
Nothing beats the "ping"!
I watched Mary's nest video, to check the set she would put a plate in the freezer and would put a spoonful on it. To check she would draw a line through the middle. If it was jellied it was set. Just another way to do it.
I found this recipe and wanted to know if it would preserve well for Jam. I wanted to substitute the sugar for honey. What are your thoughts?
Mixed Berry Jam
16 cups of berries
1 1/2 cups sugar
1/2 cup chia seeds
Cook down your berries until soft & then use an immersion blender. I don't like my jam chunky so I blend until I don't see big chunks. Put back on the stove, add your sugar and cook down until it's a tad thicker. Add chia seeds and simmer for another 20 minutes or so. Jar up and can, freeze or eat fresh!
Looks delicious, another great video.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Nice to see you in a dress as my grandmother used to do. Seems so much more like the good ole days. BTW I thought you did great work!
Do u do pickles this way too. How would u know the process time
I will say I’ve noticed that Pamonas- does not prohibit mold growth nearly as well after opening is regular jams. You need to use the entire jar in about a week. Additionally, it’s only shelf stable, canned for one year as opposed to the typical 5+ for regular canning.
That's determined by how much sugar you add, not Pamonas itself
I would like to make this jam. Can I use any pectin? I just buy a box of it. Thank you love your video!
If I only have a water bath canner (sorry for this dumb question because I have never used it) can I do that and keep everything else the same?
Not a dumb question and answer is yes 😊
Hi How to make a sourdough bread type texture without the Sourness, as it make my stomach suffer. Please let me know. thanks.
Can you also use freshly pressed juice? In most recipes bottled lemon juice is used. I usually buy fresh organic lemons here in Germany. Thanks 😊
With tart or pie cherries you can use fresh but not with the sweet cherries because they're not as acidic and require the bottled.
You can use your pressure canner as a steam canner as well.
How so?
I need that de-pitter device!!
I saw ball made a low sugar pectin option online? Have you tried?
Looks fantastic, I hope camera guy got some nummies..💛👍
Love this method. To get a bit more cherry-lime flavour could I add lime zest? I have never added zest to jam so not sure how it would impact shelf life.
Yes, you can add a bit more, not a problem
🥞🥞 Please put a little on my Pancakes. LOL
I just bought the steam canner after watching your video. Today, I canned 11 pints of apricot jam. All lids pinged and I am allowing them to cool until tomorrow. So far, so good! On another note, where did you get the temperature strips on your kombucha jar?
Just from Amazon. Congrats on your jars!
What was that yellow pot and where did you get it? I think you mentioned it was enamel coated cast iron? Could this also be used for baking bread in?
If you search for "cast iron dutch oven" you should get results. There's at least one knowledgeable lady that's done testing on lead and other heavy metal levels in cookware and compared brands (even brand name) so it might be advisable to research that first. Also, yes, there are also videos on UA-cam about baking bread in them. They make great roasts, stews, soups, etc. and are oven safe as well because most are just coated cast iron. All the best!
Thank you so much for this video! I just wanted to mention that the name of the pectin is pronounced PAH-MO-NAHS pectin. :D
Can I substitute clear jel for the pectin and calcium powder?
This brand of pectin and calcium powder is very specific and has its own precise instructions. They won’t apply to any other product. Follow the instructions for each product as directed.
I’ve used the liquid and the sure gel pectin. I found that the liquid makes a funny texture ring around the jelly when you open the jelly and put in the fridge. Just my view point. Others might like it.
Hi I used my news team counter same as years today for the first time making raspberry jam with just two quarts of raspberries and two and half cups of sugar No lemon juice I don't have a recipe my problem was that the information given in the canner does not give any recipes for time So I processed it the jam in the half-point jars the tiny jars like you used I think that's half pint I processed the raspberry jam for 10 minutes I did not know if the steam canner had a different process time than the water bath canner and I cannot find any information or recipes for processing times for raspberry jam and again I did not use lemon juice in my raspberry jam
Can you use stevia to sweeten jam to steam can?
Yes!
Do you have experience or advice for canning like this but using say Monk Fruit or another non sugar sweetener???
I'm planning on using allulose and Pamona's pectin. I've heard it's do-able.
Can you use sugar subscribe in this recipe ?
Yes, the instructions with the pectin list some but I haven't tested it with any personally
Ugh im lost becuz im using water bath its 15 min for 3500 feet at 15 take the lid off turn off heat?
Please click the recipe link in the video description, it clearly states everything including your processing times for altitude. At 3,500 you add an additional 10 minutes, for 20 minutes total
I'm so confused about canning 😔 so water bath or steam canning is only for 'acidic' foods? How do you can something like beans? I don't really like foods that are too acidic.
You need a pressure canner to can foods with low acidity.
Or heat them up. Botulism ! The poison of the bacterium is complex, fragile, only develops over time and without (or very little oxygen) and it does not fare well if there is some acidity. - Meat, fish, and sausage were sources of poisoning in the past (quite dangerous) especially if they were not heated. Even short heating up will destroy the poison and it is safe to eat.
All other things will be noticed (mould, fouling) - but botulism you cannot see, taste or smell.
It is not impossible that fruit or vegetable preserves would allow it to develop (although the main problems were with meat and fish - so the authorities regulated that food industry. They have extra protocols for heating up fish - people eat that cold out of the can).
If you ALWAYS heat them up, work fast and very cleanly and methodically (the steam heater likely helps with that ) - and do not give away any jars where you took liberties (not adding the recommended acid, but also not following the protocols that heat up longer) you should be O.K. At worst a jar will go bad, but you will notice. And maybe inspecting them so you can see if bubbles form that show fermenting (a jar could explose and create a mess).
The USDA or comparable sites have information. Caning gone wrong is a public health risk. If you KNOW what _could_ go wrong you can tweak the process. As long as you are not selling or giving food away.
Jelly, Jam, Preserves. It looks like your making Preserves.
Maybe Haywood County
It was not very clear to me: what brings the cooking time down to 4 minutes?
I noticed you didn't skim the foam off the top of the cherries before you put them in the jars. I thought this was important
❤
Can you offer preservation methods that don't require many other inputs like sugar? Drying cherries for instance, but that requires electricity or appropriate weather to dry, and perhaps appliances. Yes the jam is good tasting, but some consider sugar as white poison that happens to taste wonderful (which is how all poisons like that work else no one would ingest the poison, as ant honey tricks the ants to poison themselves.voluntarily and with uncanny speed). Personally I'm ok with salt but reticent to use sugar or honey. Ever ferment cherries? Not like wine, but sort of like cherry pickles? So a sour ferment, but using cherries or fruit of some sort, in order to allow unrefrigerated storage without loss.
Seek out a video on fermentation
Awesome Melissa,looks delicious.Thank you for all the great videos
Welcome!
There is one incorrect statement you made about steam canning. The recipe processing time needs to be 45 minutes or shorter. :)
Correct
I’m guessing you don’t have A/C and are suffering through the western heat wave. Maybe an ice cream making vid is on tap to help cool you off?!?!
I blend frozen black raspberries, frozen strawberries and a bit of raw cream, nothing else added. it's not as sweet as ice cream, but trivially simple to make, a gelato of sorts,and everyone eats all they get. Once used to this, ice cream seems way too sweet and not very flavorful. It freezes rock hard, but allowed to slow melt in refig before eating takes on a wonderful gelato texture.
Steam canner...sorry talk text never works.
Do you have a sister? Man, you're pretty.
Thats gonna make you thick
🤨🥴🙄