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November 28, 2002
QUESTION: Do you have articles on canning?
It is something I would like to try. -Luann Boeckerman,
Greenacres, WA
MARYJANE: Quart jars full of ready-made
apple pie filling are the perfect starting place for someone canning for
the first time. There is an abundance of good canning apples available
this time of year. Lined up in a pantry, they are worthy of display and
photography.
Apple pie filling needs to be tender, thickened properly, sweetened perfectly,
carefully spiced and delicately blushed. Because raw apples shrink a great
deal during baking, apple pies tend to develop a gap between the top crust
and fruit, causing the top crust to crumble when the pie is sliced. In
this recipe, the filling is precooked and thus preshrunk, eliminating
the gap and producing a full, shapely pie that slices effortlessly for
serving well-formed individual slices. Precooked filling also allows you
the choice of covering the pie with a lovely lattice top. This recipe
makes a softer filling than one made with raw apples, giving weight and
smoothness to the pie.
Gather the following:
- Manual & tools for canning
For canning efficiency, there are many books to guide you through
the process. Found almost always where Ball brand or Kerr brand
canning jars are sold, the Ball Blue Book® Guide is a resource
you can trust when you preserve foods by methods based on safe
science. Order one online from <homecanning.com>
- 7 wide mouth quart jars and lids
- 18 pounds (approx.) red skinned apples
such as Cameo, Gala, Winesap, Braeburn, and Jonagold
- 4½ cups sugar
(organic sugar is now available where natural foods are sold)
- 1 cup corn or rice starch
(organic rice starch is available mail-order by calling 888-750-6004)
- 2 tablespoons cinnamon
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon nutmeg
- 3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
- 10 cups water
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Donna Goodwin and four women friends "put-up" 140 quart jars
of apple pie filling made entirely from roadside apples gathered along
Palouse country roads.
In a large pot, combine sugar, starch, cinnamon, salt, nutmeg, lemon
juice and water. Wash, core, pare and slice apples. Leave some skins on
for coloring. (If you are using an apple peeler, this can be accomplished
by the use of a lever designed to hold the peeling mechanism away from
the apple.) Add apples to syrup. Bring to boil while stirring. Pack, hot,
into canning jars, leaving ½" headroom. Wipe the tops of jars
carefully, making sure they are clean. Adjust caps. Process quarts for
20 minutes in boiling water bath. For a pressure canner, process quarts
at five pounds pressure for 10 minutes. Follow instructions per canning
manual for determining whether or not your jars have sealed and are safe
for storage.

For a novel new idea using a jar of your ready-made apple pie filling,
go to www.maryjanesfarm.org and follow
directions for making a Tarte
Tian.
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An old-fashioned hand-crank apple peeler will,
in one step, 1) peel, core and slice; 2) peel only; 3) core and
slice; 4) core and peel; or 5) core only. Slices are uniform, ¼
inch thick and perfect for pies.
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Optional tools:
All American Pressure Cooker/Canner made in Manitowoc,
Wisconsin. Available mail-order, item #921. (888-438-5346, www.lehmans.com)
*Apples can be safely processed using the traditional boiling water bath
method. However, processing fruits under pressure conserves water and
energy.
Back to Basics Apple Peeler made in Sandy, Utah. Available
mail-order, item #NP861. (888-438-5346, www.lehmans.com)
Send your questions to MaryJane Butters, c/o MaryJanesFarm, 1000 Wild
Iris Lane, Moscow, Idaho, 83843. Questions may also be e-mailed to maryjane@maryjanesfarm.org.
Please include your name and daytime telephone number. For more information,
visit www.maryjanesfarm.org
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