Canning is a valuable skill because it’s completely low-tech. If you have a way to boil water, you have a way to preserve food.
Learning to use the two different types of canning methods, water bath canning and pressure canning, and familiarizing yourself with those techniques, means that you will have a different comfort level when attempting them over an open fire in the back yard, for instance.
THINKING OUTSIDE OF THE CANNING POT
Consider some different ways that you might be able to bring a large pot of water to a boil. If you are lucky enough to have a woodstove with a flat surface in your home, you will easily be able to can your harvest. However, in the middle of summer, when harvests are coming in, a blazing fire inside your home is likely to make the environment nearly unbearable.
Another option is to construct an outdoor fireplace. The grill or cooking surface must be sturdy enough to hold a heavy pot full of water and at least half a dozen jars full of food or a disaster of broken glass and ruined food could occur.
Some options for outdoor canning are:
- A brick of concrete fireplace with a fireproof cooking surface
- A fire pit with a grill over the top
- A Mexican style “beehive” oven
Whatever method of outdoor canning you use, make sure you have plenty of wood to burn in order to keep the heat high enough to maintain the pressure in a pressure canner or to maintain a hard boil in a water bath canner. Your method should allow you to tend the fire without moving your canning pot. You should also have plenty of heavy towels and heat protection for adding and removing your jars from the canner. Extreme caution should be used when cooking over an open fire.
Stock up on your basic supplies (lids, rings, jars, pectin, vinegar, salt and sugar). Tattler is the only company that makes reusable lids – the rest of the snap lids on the market must not be re-used. The Tattler lids are pricey but they do pay for themselves after a few seasons.
Learning to can now, in a more ideal environment, means that you will be able to adapt your methods better in the event that the grid goes down. Personally, my first two attempts at jam-making resulted in….well, let’s call it syrup, or perhaps ice cream topping. I was able to figure out how to improve my process and stock up on a type of pectin that works better for me. However, if my first attempt at jam-making had occurred after a long-term disaster, the supplies I had on hand would be all I had available with which to work.
The key to survival is versatility. Being able to adapt your current canning methods to techniques that do not require the grid will allow you to thrive by preserving your harvests and your game in the same way our ancestors did.
Books can be your best pre-collapse investment.
The Lost Ways (Learn the long forgotten secrets that helped our forefathers survive famines,wars,economic crisis and anything else life threw at them)
Survival MD (Best Post Collapse First Aid Survival Guide Ever)
Conquering the coming collapse (Financial advice and preparedness )
Liberty Generator (Build and make your own energy source)
Backyard Liberty (Easy and cheap DIY Aquaponic system to grow your organic and living food bank)
Bullet Proof Home (A Prepper’s Guide in Safeguarding a Home )
Family Self Defense (Best Self Defense Strategies For You And Your Family)
Survive Any Crisis (Best Items To Hoard For A Long Term Crisis)
Survive The End Days (Biggest Cover Up Of Our President)