Extension Notes …

Posted July 23, 2014 at 2:03 pm

Home canning the right way:

New Extension canning

publications are available

Local gardens, orchards and farmers markets are bursting with fresh produce, and home canning season is in full swing.

If you’re planning to can at home this summer, be sure to use only tested recipes that follow USDA safe canning recommendations.

A great place to start is your local Cooperative Extension office, where a new series of home canning publications is now available.

These publications provide research-based information for safe home canning.

They cover home canning basics, jams and jellies, tomatoes, salsa, pickles, vegetables and fruits.

For more information, contact the Clinton County Cooperative Extension Service at 387-5404.

Time for pickles

Source: Debbie Clouthier,

Extension Associate for Food Safety and Preservation

There is nothing that sets off a cold cut sandwich better than the taste of a pickle, and with so many varieties, you are bound to find one to suit every palate. So it probably won’t surprise you that pickles are a popular home food preservation item.

To ensure safe, tasty home-canned pickles, always follow research-based recipes, such as those offered by Extension, that have been tested for product safety. Follow the recipe and use the proper amounts of the appropriate ingredients to yield the best flavor from your food and to prevent food-borne illness.

Quick-process pickles usually consist of cucumbers or other vegetables, vinegar, spices and seasonings. Always use fresh, firm vegetables for pickling. Discard a one-sixteenth slice from the blossom end of the vegetable to help keep the final product firm.

Blossoms contain enzymes that can cause vegetables to soften. Soaking the cucumbers or other vegetables in salt water for several hours before covering with the pickling liquid will allow for easier packing.

When making pickles, use only commercial vinegar that has at least five percent acidity. Do not dilute the vinegar unless specified in the recipe, because the acidity is needed for a safe product. The addition of vinegar makes pickles a high-acid food, which allows them to be safely processed using a boiling-water canner. Use canning or pickling salt. Table salt may make the pickling mixture cloudy. Use white sugar unless the recipe calls for brown.

Quick-process pickles are more flavorful if allowed to sit for several weeks after processing. This allows the vegetables to aromatically blend with the seasonings and spices.

If you are new to home canning, a good place to start is with the Extension publication FCS3-578 “Home Canning Basics.” More information on pickling and recipes for beginning, intermediate and advanced canners and for individuals with dietary restrictions are available in publication FCS3-582 “Home Canning Pickled and Fermented Foods.”

Both publications are available online at http://www2.ca.uky.edu/agc/pubs/FCS3/FCS3578/FCS3578.pdf and http://www2.ca.uky.edu/agc/pubs/FCS3/FCS3582/FCS3582.pdf or through the Clinton County Cooperative Extension Service.

Educational programs of the Kentucky Cooperative Extension serve all people regardless of race, color, age, sex, religion, disability, or national origin.