Free Seeds (or How to Save Seeds for Next Year)

Upping My Homesteading Game

Day 273 of 365

Yesterday, when I was really sick, I had no choice but to just sit there and sit there. I do not watch much television, but yesterday was a tv-watching day. I found a fantastic program on the Magnolia Network called Magnolia Workshops, and if you have Discovery Plus or some way to access the Magnolia Network, I cannot recommend these workshops enough. The workshops are short video lessons in gardening, cooking, art, and such, and I watched a couple that really inspired me.

For three years, I have been wanting to try canning with a pressure cooker, but I have always been nervous because I worry about things going wrong. I worry some about a pressure canner explosion, but I mostly worry about not canning properly and having food be wasted. I feel safer with freezing. However, our two deep freezers were so full last year that we could barely close them. It made me realize I really need to learn how to can beyond water-bath canning.

You can use simple water-bath canning for acidic foods, such as fruit jams and the spaghetti sauce I make, but to can beans, for example, you need to use a pressure cooker.

It just so happened that one of the first workshops I watched yesterday was a step-by-step video on making applesauce and canning it with a pressure cooker. The woman doing the workshop was so calming, and I was mesmerized–and convinced I can do this.

So, last night, after three years of wanting to do it, I bought a pressure cooker almost just like the one in the video, and I am ready to up my homesteading game.

I am determined to cut down on the items we buy at the grocery store. Two of the things we buy frequently are canned pears and canned pinto beans. We also have so many tomatoes left over each year that we realized it would be nice to can some tomatoes just as tomatoes alone and not as a part of my spaghetti cause. I also love canned green beans and haven’t had them in years because we always freeze our green beans, so for sure, this year, I am determined to can pears, pinto beans, tomatoes, and green beans.

There is a spectrum for homesteading. Everyone is in a different place, but I have found that if I try to just add a little bit every year, over time, I really get somewhere. Maybe slow is best. A wise teacher told me that just today.