Miss Abigail did her fair canning yesterday. I was personally glad that she was willing to repeat the 4-H canning project this year. (If Abigail were a Border Collie I would describe her as "biddable." She is so good to go along with all I ask her to do!) I felt that repeating the project would help solidify the skills that she learned last summer and help her feel confident that she could preserve food this way. She canned regular quick pickles and two kinds of pickled fruit. The pickled cantaloupe recipe was a repeat from last year. We tried pickling cherries just because we had cherries ready to can. The cantaloupe looks so pretty in the jar that she will exhibit that one. Here is the recipe for pickled cantaloupe, in case you want to try it.
Cut one just barely ripe cantaloupe into 1" pieces, as evenly square as possible. 7 cups of cantaloupe will fill three or four pint jars. (Abigail used a melon ball tool, just so that the fruit would look pretty in the jar. Because the judge doesn't open the jar, about the only way to gain points in a judging situation is to be exact on the headspace and to make things as pretty as you can!)
Combine 1 1/2 cups white vinegar and 1 cup water in a medium saucepan. Make a spice bag with 1 stick cinnamon, 1 teaspoon whole cloves, and 1/2 teaspoon whole allspice. Bring liquid to a boil. Reduce heat and let it simmer for 5 minutes. Remove from heat and add melon. Let stand about 2 hours. Add 2 1/4 cups sugar to the melon. Bring to a boil, stirring until sugar dissolves. Reduce heat; simmer until cantaloupe become slightly transparent. (Don't let this go on too long or the cantaloupe will become mushy!)
Begin to heat the water in the water bath canner. Prepare clean jars and heat these in the water canner. Heat the lids in a small saucepan to soften rings. Working quickly, one at a time, remove the jars from the canner and drain briefly. Pack the hot melon into the jars, leaving 1/4-inch headspace. Ladle hot pickling liquid over melon, again leaving 1/4-inch headspace. Remove any air bubbles. Clean the rims and adjust the two piece lids.
Once all the jars are in the canner, make sure there is about 2 inches of water over top of the jars and bring the water to a full boil. Process the jars for 15 minutes, keeping the water boiling the whole time.
Allow the jars to cool and listen for the "pings" that tell you the jar has sealed. BTW, sometimes you won't hear the ping, but when the lid is fully concave, the jar is sealed. Wash the jars and clean the rings before storing in the cupboard (and certainly before exhibiting in the fair!)
On to the other pickles...
and cherries...
I have had a fun time canning this year, but Abigail has quite a head start on me (I'm 47:) I am interested to know what that pickled cantaloupe tastes like.
ReplyDeleteI would love to learn to can! There are so many things I want to learn though - latest wish is to learn to make soft cheeses at home!
ReplyDeleteGreat job, Abigale! The jars look so pretty. I bet more winning ribbons are coming your way!
ReplyDeletefascinating products! I think I'm a pretty basic, plain canner.
ReplyDeleteJust wondering if you used the same recipe when canning the cherries just the cherries in place of melon and also how many melons it took for you to get the 7 cups needed!
ReplyDeleteThanks in advance
Catherine, sorry to be so long to answer - Abigail used two melons and she needed to be picky about the shape of the balls. You know how things have to be more perfect for the fair. Of course it would depend on how big the melon was and how you packed the jars as well. You could certainly get more cantaloupe in a jar than we did if the balls were on the small side, or if you used cut pieces instead of balls.
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