Information and discussion about canning and dehydrating tomatoes and other garden vegetables and fruits. DISCLAIMER: SOME RECIPES MAY NOT COMPLY WITH CURRENT FOOD SAFETY GUIDELINES - FOLLOW AT YOUR OWN RISK
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#1 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Kansas, zone 5
Posts: 524
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If I could treat this like the gardenweb harvest forum, I would be glad
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~Lori "Most folks are about as happy as they make up their minds to be." -Abraham Lincoln |
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#2 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Kentucky
Posts: 162
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Due to a late plant out because of rains, my tomatoes are going to be later than normal...I'll do salsa and sauce for sure. Got several other veggies and melons that I'll be preserving some way also...Thinking about freezing melon.
I just got a weather warning that said that heat indexes will be over 110* the next two days....where are you in KY? We may be neighbors. Haven't seen stink bugs in any numbers yet...and I agree with you...they're the pitts. |
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#3 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Kansas, zone 5
Posts: 524
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The heat here was a big issue last summer when I did up what few tomatoes I got my hands on. I'm thinking about setting up a canning station in the garage with perhaps a turkey cooker type thing for anything that I can BWB.
I planted out all my peppers today and hope to try some fermented tabasco sauce and dried paprika. I planted a total of 36 pepper plants (hot and sweet) so I hope to get plenty although locals around here claim they never have luck with peppers. I want to be able to chop some for the freezer because that is too handy for sauces or soups. I doubt I'll get enough strawberries for anything since DH directed his friend to plow through them when plowing the rest of my garden.
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~Lori "Most folks are about as happy as they make up their minds to be." -Abraham Lincoln |
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#4 |
Tomatoville® Recipe Keeper
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Roseburg, Oregon - zone 7
Posts: 2,822
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"...DH directed his friend to plow through them when plowing the rest of my garden."
He did what???? ![]() ![]()
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Corona~Barb Now an Oregon gal |
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#5 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Kansas, zone 5
Posts: 524
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I was pretty bummed but he thought he was helping me out since the garden was new-plowed in the fall and although I have quite a few of the "cold" veggies in, a big part of my garden was reclaimed to the pasture. He didn't know that I had planted a long row of strawberries at the front. LOL, he is always doing stuff like that. One year I had planted 9 blueberry bushes which honestly looked like sticks. He was tilling....you know the rest. This year I planted 6 bareroot raspberry plants and took a board and made a sign: "Attention David!!! Although we look like sticks, we are not. We are raspberry plants that want to live. Please do not kill us!"
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~Lori "Most folks are about as happy as they make up their minds to be." -Abraham Lincoln |
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#6 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: texas
Posts: 1,451
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I have suffered the same fate due to people wanting to "help" Son ran over strawberries that were in a mound type system with the riding lawnmower. My husband finished them off the next time thinking they were already dead. 2 bareroot raspberry bushes? pulled up. weedeated onions and melon vines. then there is the squash eating kitty that thinks the plants do not belong in my garden. He also rolled all in my newly planted seeds and now I have what I believe is a watermelon plant in the middle of a row. Caught my other Cat trying to dig up newly planted tomatoes. I will be happy if I have anything to harvest.
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#7 |
Tomatovillian™ Honoree
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Lincoln, NE
Posts: 791
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bought a new larger freezer last summer - just in time for strawberry harvest - we go to a farm and pick. Kept the smaller freezer and am glad I did! So far I have cooked up a spinach mixture - carrots, mushroom, garlic and frozen 7 pints - that's a lot of fresh spinach! A really great crop this year. Will be freezing some spring fresh rhubarb in the next day or so. Peas hopefully in about a month - 3 varieties. And hopefully the strawberry farm will have a bumper crop this year - they had the big freeze last year and a lighter freeze the year before. I am thinking of buying a box of oranges tomorrw - 49 cents a lb for navels. I know they aren't juicers but the price is good ??
Piegirl |
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#8 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Hampton, Virginia
Posts: 1,563
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I was been Harvesting my Chesapeake Heirloom Tomatoes this whole summer; and once that they have a longer "Shelf Life" than any Heirloom Tomato Grown here at Angel Field.
I group of Chesapeake's Tomatoes are still healthy for Tomato Sandwiches a Month 1/2. That is almost 2 months. They do grow slower than other tomatoes but the Shelf Life is Longer for Harvesting for the winter months.
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May God Bless you and my Garden, Amen https://www.angelfieldfarms.com MrsJustice as Farmer Joyce Beggs ![]() |
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