Making Vegetable Stock for the Pantry -by Sunscape

in Foodies Bee Hive25 days ago

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It is too hot to be outside gardening, so instead I decided to start cooking down all the vegetable scraps I had frozen over the past few months. I pulled out the big roaster and emptied all the scraps in which practically filled it.

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I had corncobs, celery, carrots, onions, broccoli stems, cauliflower stems, and some garlic skins. You can see that I had a lot accumulated, and it was taking up a lot of room in the freezer.

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I covered the veggies with water to the top of the roaster and let it simmer for 24 hours. I decided to let it go overnight as it was too late to process that day. After removing all the scraps, I strained the stock into a larger pan.

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Once that was done, I filled a large kettle halfway with the stock, then added more water since it was so concentrated. While the stock came to a boil, I washed and heated up the Mason Jars and set up to pressure can.

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I love the color of vegetable stock, and it already tastes so delicious and will be perfect for soups this winter.

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After boiling for 10 minutes or so, I filled the quart Mason Jars to 1-inch headspace.

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I use vinegar to wipe the rims of my jars before adding the lids and rings to make sure I get a good seal. Into the canner they went and cooked for 1 hour and 15 minutes at 13 lbs. of pressure, which is where my canner seems to settle even though it only needs 10 lbs. for my altitude.

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I got 8 quarts of vegetable broth to put onto the pantry shelf. I know once I start harvesting produce from the gardens and preserving, I will have plenty more to process in the future.

I also have enough left to put together some soups on another day. I just need to go get some chicken before I can process those up. I'm certainly in the canning mood, so who knows what will happen next, lol.

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Saving vegetable scraps in the freezer to make stock is an idea that has never entered my head! I may have to give that a try. That seems like an awfully long processing time for a pressure canner. I'd have to have a good book at hand to read while I babysat the canner; mine has to be constantly monitored because it refuses to maintain a steady pressure.

You should save your veggie scraps they make a nice stock for soups. Pressure canners are fussy, mine fluctuates for the first half hour until I get it to the right temp, lol. I usually work on a puzzle when canning since I have to watch it so closely.

That's another good idea for passing the time. I just have to be careful I don't get too absorbed in what I am reading and forget to keep an eye on the gauge. I sit in a kitchen chair in front of the stove so I can glance up at it. I once borrowed a new canner from a neighbor for some reason. I think it was an All American brand. The pressure stayed right where I wanted it to, and it was wonderful. If I was just starting out as a young person, I would have run out and bought one just like it. But I doubt if I'll be doing enough canning in the next 10 years or so to justify spending $400 on a new pressure canner.

I totally agree, $400 is a lot of money but I know everyone loves them. I'm good with mine, I have two now. One is over 30 + years old, the new one I bought last year, and I can do a double layer of half-pints which really cuts down on time. I put up a lot every year so having them both makes life a bit easier when I do large batches. The tomatoes will be coming in hard this week with the next heat wave. And it begins, lol. Have fun in the kitchen.

I somehow ended up with two pressure canners, too, and occasionally run both at the same time, except then I have to keep track of which timer is for which canner, because they never get started at the exact same time. Ha ha! One is probably 30 years old, the other maybe 15-20. I don't really remember when I got them. I started out 40 years ago with my mother's really old pressure canner that had 5, 10, and 15 pound weights to put on it. You probably remember those, too.

I won't be dealing with tomatoes for quite some time yet. They don't ripen up as quickly here as they did when we lived in Minnesota, perhaps because it isn't as humid and the nights here are cooler. There have been some years when I only got one or two red tomatoes before the frosts got hard and I had to bring in all the green ones and wait for them to ripen in the house. On the other hand, the nice thing about that is I end up canning tomato things when it's cooler weather!

I've never done vegetable stock. My husband did NOT like "soup" so i never made many. But since my brother moved in, we've made a few. I still have to make chicken bone stock. Maybe that can be a Thursday afternoon project...

We both love soup, so broth is a staple for us. I need to get some chicken bones stocked up to make some this fall. lol Never resting too much, are we?

Not hardly…. Sigh..

What a great use of veggie scraps to ensure nothing goes to waste, and I love your whole process to make sure everything is processed to ensure they stay safe for consumption in the coming months

Thank you so much! I do prepare them according to the food guide preservation book. Have a great day.

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