It's a bit early for this much snow on the mountain tops. Not a good omen! We got back here on Friday evening and it has been COLD and raining since we got here. We're expecting snow tonight. Harry says not to worry ... according to him we'll get a snowfall, THEN we'll get Indian Summer. I hope he's right.
We brought fresh produce home from the Okanagan Valley. Today we worked on tomatoes.
We started with 30 pounds of Roma tomatoes. First we quartered the tomatoes and put them through a tomato press. A tomato press is soooo cool! You put the tomatoes in the top and turn the crank. The tomato puree comes out the right side. The peels and seeds come out the left side. We pressed all 30 pounds in about an hour and a half.
Thirty pounds of romas yielded us 12 quarts of tomato puree.
While Harry readied cooking pans and measured puree, I chopped the mirepoix for the Italian-style sauce we had decided to make first. Chopping onions gets me every time. However, swimming goggles work wonders!! Yeah, yeah ... I KNOW I look stupid.
We cooked the sauce, then processed it. We bought a steam bath canner in our travels and it is really cool. It uses about 1/4 of the water and energy of a traditional water-bath canner.
At the end of the day, we had 20 - 500 ml jars of tomato sauce : 15 of Italian-style and 5 plain. (Conversion: 500 ml is slightly larger than a pint.)
... all in a day's work ...
OK, we'll have to talk because I've been looking at those steam canners. And now I want a tomato press too!
ReplyDeleteTotally loving the steam canner. SOOOOO much more efficient than a water bath. However, it is only good for those things meant to be processed in a water bath. Doesn't replace the need for a pressure cooker for those low acid foods.
ReplyDeleteThe tomato press is not expensive and can be used on fruits, berries, and tomatoes. Quite versatile, actually. We got it at an Italian market.