Holly shows how to make a quick and easy lemon honey apple jam using ingredients you can easily pick up from your local farmers market or your garden.
Canning at home guide. All about canning vegetables, canning meat, pressure cooker canning, home canning tips and recipes
Showing posts with label Honey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Honey. Show all posts
Monday, November 24, 2014
Lemon Honey Apple Jam - Canning What You Grow
Labels:
Apple,
apples,
canner,
Canning,
Canning (Invention),
fair trade,
Fruit Preserve,
headspace,
Honey,
Howto,
jam,
jars,
Lemon (Organism Classification),
lids,
non gmo,
ORGANIC,
peeler,
sb canning,
Sugar
Thursday, May 29, 2014
Canning green beans we bartered honey for.
I posted on craigslist looking for people to barter honey for fresh vegetables. We ended up with 16 qts of green beans. Thank you Misty Prepper for the green...
Labels:
ball blue book,
barter,
Canning,
Food Storage,
green beans,
Honey,
People,
prep,
prepper,
prepping,
pressure canner
Saturday, November 12, 2011
Honey, I’m home
The new hive supers and brood boxes arrived this week, sent in a backbreaking UPS shipment from Brushy Mountain Bee. Along with a smoker, protective clothing, and a Spring order for sixty thousand Italian bees, we’re getting serious about honey.
View the Original article
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Chicken and Sweet Potatoes in Honey Mustard Sauce
I got this idea in the frozen food section of my local grocery store. Marie Callender TV Dinners to be exact. I have never been able to can a honey mustard sauce successfully. I tried with powdered mustard and all kinds of mustard and after canning, it simply disappears. I even used some bottled honey mustard. No luck, it just tastes like honey. I now cook the chicken in a honey sauce and add mustard when reheating. I canned the honey, sweet potatoes, and chicken in quarts. I also have chicken in pint jars and sweet potatoes in quart jars and that may be easy if you are feeding more than two people. This combination is great.
For each quart:
1 cup of chicken cut into bite sized pieces and then lightly stir fried
1/2 to 3/4 cups of honey (or to taste)
Fill the rest of the jar with sweet potatoes that have been peeled and cut into big hunks.
Fill with a light chicken broth to the fill line
Can at 11 lbs pressure (or for your altitude) for 90 minutes (quarts) 75 minutes (pints)
When read to eat, drain the liquid in a saucepan, add a tablespoon of mustard (or more or less) stir and thicken with cornstarch, then add the chicken and sweet potatoes and heat.Posted byCynat7:13 PM
View the Original article
For each quart:
1 cup of chicken cut into bite sized pieces and then lightly stir fried
1/2 to 3/4 cups of honey (or to taste)
Fill the rest of the jar with sweet potatoes that have been peeled and cut into big hunks.
Fill with a light chicken broth to the fill line
Can at 11 lbs pressure (or for your altitude) for 90 minutes (quarts) 75 minutes (pints)
When read to eat, drain the liquid in a saucepan, add a tablespoon of mustard (or more or less) stir and thicken with cornstarch, then add the chicken and sweet potatoes and heat.Posted byCynat7:13 PM
View the Original article
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)