Bottling homemade pasta sauce

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Ellendra
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Re: Bottling homemade pasta sauce

Post: # 125791Post Ellendra »

contadina wrote:I agree Americans are over-cautious when bottling tomato sauce - they suggest putting citric acid or lemon juice in it for goodness sake.

In America, if someone gets food poisoning because of a recipe you gave, they or their next-of-kin can sue you for millions.

Plus, its hard to find tomatoes over here that are NOT low-acid tomatoes. Since its the acidity that prevents botulism (which can easily survive boiling), the addition of lemon juice is the safest way to preserve it.

I'd rather use real old-fashioned tomatoes and skip the lemon juice.

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Re: Bottling homemade pasta sauce

Post: # 125800Post contadina »

Passata recipe

Halve or quarter tomatoes into a large pan and boil until broken down sufficiently to run through a passata-maker, food mill or sieve. Simmer pulp until you get to a desired thickness and add salt, a little sugar and any herbs that you want then jar in sterilised jars. Italians use a big metal net-like spoon (it looks a bit like a lacross stick) to ensure that they just jar pulp and no liquid; but it's not a biggie, you'll just have to reduce it a little longer when you come to use it if it's too thin. Each jar should have around 2 cms headroom and ensure that the tops of the jars and lids are clean.

Wrap jars in cloth or newspaper and place in warm water bath - the water level needs to be one to two inches above the top of the tallest jars. The cover is put on the pan and it is allowed to return to a full rolling boil, at which time the processing time is begun. Boil for around 30 minutes. Take jars out when the water has cooled. If sealed okay store somewhere cool and dark. If any are not sealed okay you can redo the half hour in the water bath or stick in the fridge and use within the week.

I've done a photo diary here http://www.growveg.info/viewtopic.php?f ... ata#p65441 I think you may have to join to see it.

This is how I like my sun-dried tomatoes. Slice in half, cover in salt and leave out in the sun, bring in each evening until dry. When dry rinse in vinegar, wring, place in sterilised jar and cover in olive oil.

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Re: Bottling homemade pasta sauce

Post: # 125833Post hedgewitch »

contadina wrote:A year.
REALLY???!!!
A Year!!
WOW!
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contadina
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Re: Bottling homemade pasta sauce

Post: # 125834Post contadina »

That's if you've got any left by then. We run out early last and had to buy shop-bought - no where near as good! This year we did about 150 kilos worth of tomatoes so fingers crossed it will last the whole year.

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Re: Bottling homemade pasta sauce

Post: # 125835Post ina »

hedgewitch wrote:
contadina wrote:A year.
REALLY???!!!
A Year!!
WOW!
I've got some pasta sauce that's two years by now - still perfectly ok. It's mixed veg sauce, not just tomato. Cooked, and then bottled - no sugar or vinegar.
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Re: Bottling homemade pasta sauce

Post: # 125841Post Big Al »

[/quote]

I've got some pasta sauce that's two years by now - still perfectly ok. It's mixed veg sauce, not just tomato. Cooked, and then bottled - no sugar or vinegar.[/quote]


I've got some beetrootbottled now and I boiled the beetroot, skinned it and sliced it up. Put it into jars (previously sterelised with hot water) and filled with vinigar. I then put the two jars on a tray and into the oven for 30 minutes.

I took out the hot jars of beetroot and vinigar and put the tops on and left until the button poped in.

mnid you we opened the first one yesterday about 4 weeks after making so these two will be gone before long...... Pasta sauce is a good idea and one i never thought of.... where's my pinny?
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Re: Bottling homemade pasta sauce

Post: # 125988Post Stormy8 »

Hello! I am American, and yes we are crazy about sterilization of homemade food products. I'm glad that the methods that I've read on this post have worked for everyone...but I have to say :shock: !! I won't even water-bath tomatoes mixed with any other vegetables (i.e. salsa). I will only use a pressure canner for that!

My dh and I just pressure canned some lovely vegetable soup (with meat) today, this was my first experience with a pressure canner. Anyway, just wanted to say hello from the States!! :sunny:
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Re: Bottling homemade pasta sauce

Post: # 126020Post Big Al »

Stormy8 wrote:Hello! I am American, and yes we are crazy about sterilization of homemade food products. I'm glad that the methods that I've read on this post have worked for everyone...but I have to say :shock: !! I won't even water-bath tomatoes mixed with any other vegetables (i.e. salsa). I will only use a pressure canner for that!

My dh and I just pressure canned some lovely vegetable soup (with meat) today, this was my first experience with a pressure canner. Anyway, just wanted to say hello from the States!! :sunny:
A pressure canner........??

You can't leave it as that.....lol.
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Re: Bottling homemade pasta sauce

Post: # 126021Post Big Al »

Big Al wrote:
Stormy8 wrote:Hello! I am American, and yes we are crazy about sterilization of homemade food products. I'm glad that the methods that I've read on this post have worked for everyone...but I have to say :shock: !! I won't even water-bath tomatoes mixed with any other vegetables (i.e. salsa). I will only use a pressure canner for that!

My dh and I just pressure canned some lovely vegetable soup (with meat) today, this was my first experience with a pressure canner. Anyway, just wanted to say hello from the States!! :sunny:
A pressure canner........??

You can't leave it as that.....lol.

sussed it thanks to utube... It's a pressure cooker....... Fill the jars with produce, fill with water. lid, put in pressure cooker and boil for 30 minutes..... basically.... but check out this for yourselves..
Take care,

Alan
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Re: Bottling homemade pasta sauce

Post: # 126025Post contadina »

Pressure cookers are great if you are doing the odd few jars, but when you are jarring 100s a giant pan is more suitable. I only jar products which are safe to use a waterbath for. If you want to add meat, beans and certain veg you should use a canning machine.

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Re: Bottling homemade pasta sauce

Post: # 126448Post Stormy8 »

Big Al wrote:
Big Al wrote:
Stormy8 wrote:Hello! I am American, and yes we are crazy about sterilization of homemade food products. I'm glad that the methods that I've read on this post have worked for everyone...but I have to say :shock: !! I won't even water-bath tomatoes mixed with any other vegetables (i.e. salsa). I will only use a pressure canner for that!

My dh and I just pressure canned some lovely vegetable soup (with meat) today, this was my first experience with a pressure canner. Anyway, just wanted to say hello from the States!! :sunny:
A pressure canner........??

You can't leave it as that.....lol.

sussed it thanks to utube... It's a pressure cooker....... Fill the jars with produce, fill with water. lid, put in pressure cooker and boil for 30 minutes..... basically.... but check out this for yourselves..
Take care,

Alan
Actually a pressure canner and pressure cooker are Not interchangeable. You may use a pressure Canner to cook food, but as they are very large you would have to cook stew or something for your family and for all your neighbors to fill it up! You may not use a pressure Cooker to can things. Just wanted to clear that up!!
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Re: Bottling homemade pasta sauce

Post: # 126462Post ina »

Stormy8 wrote: Actually a pressure canner and pressure cooker are Not interchangeable. You may use a pressure Canner to cook food, but as they are very large you would have to cook stew or something for your family and for all your neighbors to fill it up! You may not use a pressure Cooker to can things. Just wanted to clear that up!!
Well, you can use a pressure cooker to bottle things - and I can't see why canning should be different. The only limitation is size; if the pressure cooker is smaller, then naturally you can only bottle small jars.
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Re: Bottling homemade pasta sauce

Post: # 126572Post Ellendra »

ina wrote:
Stormy8 wrote: Actually a pressure canner and pressure cooker are Not interchangeable. You may use a pressure Canner to cook food, but as they are very large you would have to cook stew or something for your family and for all your neighbors to fill it up! You may not use a pressure Cooker to can things. Just wanted to clear that up!!
Well, you can use a pressure cooker to bottle things - and I can't see why canning should be different. The only limitation is size; if the pressure cooker is smaller, then naturally you can only bottle small jars.

Its more a liability issue. A pressure cooker, depending on the brand and quality, doesn't always keep the pressure as consistent as a pressure canner.

That said I have used a pressure cooker for canning before. It worked for about 6 months, then I started having trouble with the jars sealing at first, but the food going off anyway. I'm sticking to waterbath canning until I can save up for a better canner.

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Re: Bottling homemade pasta sauce

Post: # 243914Post carolinew »

From what I've read pressure canners allow you to select specific pressures, suitable to the needs of the food you're sterilising for storage ie killing the botulism, which is the baddie that matters. And books/internet sites / etc are unanimous in emphasising that you must use the correct pressures for the correct amount of time, or the food isn't safe. It's only a 1 in 100 chance of it being unsafe - but if it IS unsafe then death or paralysis is the likely outcome. So, not really a risk worth taking.

Waterbath canning is for high acidic foods which kill botulism.

I can't find any pressure canners in the UK for love nor money - only in the US. And they're big and heavy, meaning that the postage is more expensive than the canner. Surely there's a business opening here for somebody, importing them? I often come across people on allotment forums who want to buy them.

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Re: Bottling homemade pasta sauce

Post: # 244379Post patR »

I never boil my jars afterward.... I make pasta sauce, put it as hot as possible into redhot jars, cover top with layer of olive oil which acts as a seal against air getting in ... and screw on the lids... never had a problem...
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