Remember how grandmother's cellar shelves were packed with jars of tomato sauce and stewed tomatoes, pickled beets and cauliflower, and pickles both sweet and dill? Learn how to save a summer day - in batches - from the classic primer, now updated and rejacketed. Use the latest inexpensive, timesaving techniques for drying, freezing, canning, and pickling. Anyone can capture the delicate flavors of fresh foods for year-round enjoyment and create a well-stocked pantry of fruits, vegetables, herbs, meats, flavored vinegars, and seasonings. The Big Book of Preserving the Harvest introduces the basic technique for all preserving methods, with step-by-step illustration, informative charts and tips throughout, and more than 150 recipes for the new or experienced home preserver. Among the step-by-step tested Green Chile Salsa, Tomato Leather, Spiced Pear Butter, Eggplant Caviar, Blueberry Marmalade, Yellow Tomato Jam, Cranberry-Lime Curd, Preserved Lemons, Chicken Liver PatT, and more.
A lot of good recipes in this book, and a nice mix of common and more unusual ones. Also has the best equivalencies chart (Appendix C) out of any of the books I've read, showing both the typical number of fruits/vegetables in a pound and also the approximate number of cups you'll get out of that amount, which is very handy if you don't happen to have a kitchen scale with you when you're at the farmer's market! :)
A book filled with unique recipes - I have made several, most recently the crockpot apple butter. There are many others I am planning to make soon. I like the way the author gives the step-by-step details for jams and jellies. Also, she has some unique flavors and lots of herb jellies included - perfect for marinades and dressings.
A great book for canning, other methods of preservation and recipes. The book even includes information on when a crop is ready for harvest based on appearance and the best methods of preserving each major fruit/vegetable. Worth a read!
Quite good as a reference, and to know the basics, but as a recalcitrant urbanite with a demanding job, no kids, and who does not like to get up early at weekends to get to the farmers’ markets before they run out of everything, I don’t really see myself making a lot of these recipes. Still, I don’t fully regret having bought the book to learn the principles of some techniques.
Fantastic recipies, well documented processes, and a bit of everything. I was not too interested in drying, despite my love of tea, but it was great that they covered it in the book as I agree it is an important part of preserving goods.
If you already have the Ball basics books this definitly the next book to pick up about canning and preserving.
I owned this book until I loaned it out four years ago. I had a different edition, which I think I liked better. This book is still a good reference and educational book loaded with recipes for the person wishing to preserve their garden's harvest.
Great resource for canning, dehydrating or freezing seasonal produce for those dark days of winter. Decent assortment of recipes, but is no replacement for Ball's Book of Canning which everyone who cans should own.
The Big Book of Preserving the Harvest isn't going to give you all the basic information you'd need to can plain tomatoes and freeze corn, but the section introductions are good.
Not bad. This has a couple of recipes I may try AND got me geeked to bid on some new gadgets from Ebay like the Squeezo Strainer (and no, I did not make up that word).
This is a semi-creative book on preserving the seasons's bounty. I use it as a reference point sometimes, but don't find it that inspiring. There are some good tips and recipes, though.
Library book sale find, Oriental Pork Roll recipe in here I am dying to try, when it is not 100 degrees out, because it has to bake in the oven for 3 hours. A few things I would like to can, Corn & Zucchini Salsa. Another Green Tomato Dip, never heard of using eggs, flour, and vegetable oil in a water bath canning recipe and only processing for 10 minutes, it really sounds good just have my doubts about it being safe. It sounds like an Amish recipe I saw a while ago that called for miracle whip, almost the same ingredients. Worth a try to maybe cut the recipe in half, then refrigerate to be safe. Had some interesting info on when canning began. When and if I make anything in here I will update this review.
I liked the chart of the best ways to preserve your different harvests. It’s lacking any pictures of recipes and while they aren’t necessary they do help inspire me. Brief history of canning and several pages on canning safety.
I don't think there were any recipes that I found to be extremely new, but I did enjoy reading and re-learning about the hows and whys of pickling, drying, freezing and canning.