Canning Fruit
Canning consists in sealing in air-tight cans or jars, fruit
which has been previously boiled. It is a very simple process, but
requires a thorough understanding of the scientific principles
involved, and careful management, to make it successful. The result of
painstaking effort is so satisfactory, however, it is well worth all
the trouble, and fruit canning need not be a difficult matter if
attention is given to the following details:—
Select self-sealing glass cans of some good variety. Tin cans
give more trouble filling and sealing, are liable to affect the flavor
of the fruit, and unless manufactured from the best of material, to
impair its wholesomeness. Glass cans may be used more than once, and
are thus much more economical. Those with glass covers, or
porcelain-lined covers, are best. Test the cans to see if they are
perfect, with good rubbers and covers that fit closely, by partly
filling them with cold water, screwing on the tops, and placing bottom
upward upon the table for some time before using. If none of the water
leaks out, they may be considered in good condition. If the cans have
been previously used, examine them with special care to see that both
cans and covers have been carefully cleaned, then thoroughly sterilize
them, and fit with new rubbers when necessary.
Cans and covers should be sterilized by boiling in water for
half an hour, or by baking in an oven, at a temperature sufficient to
scorch paper, for two hours. The cans should be placed in the water or
oven when cold, and the temperature allowed to rise gradually, to avoid
breaking. They should be allowed to cool gradually, for the same
purpose.
Select only the best of fruit, such as is perfect in flavor
and neither green nor over-ripe. Fruit which has been shipped from a
distance, and which is consequently not perfectly fresh, contains germs
in active growth, and if the least bit musty, it will be almost sure to
spoil, even though the greatest care may be taken in canning.
Poor fruit will not be improved by canning; over-ripe fruit
will be insipid and mushy; and though cooking will soften hard fruit,
it cannot impart to it the delicate flavors which belong to that which
is in its prime. The larger varieties of fruit should not be quite soft
enough for eating. Choose a dry day for gathering, and put up at once,
handling as little as possible. Try to keep it clean enough to avoid
washing. If the fruit is to be pared, use a silver knife for the
purpose, as steel is apt to discolor the fruit. If the fruit is one
needing to be divided or stoned, it will be less likely to become
broken if divided before paring.
Cook the fruit slowly in a porcelain-lined or granite-ware
kettle, using as little water as possible. It is better to cook only
small quantities at a time in one kettle. Steaming in the cans is
preferable to stewing, where the fruit is at all soft. To do this,
carefully fill the cans with fresh fruit, packing it quite closely, if
the fruit is large, and set the cans in a boiler partly filled with
cold water, with something underneath them to prevent breaking,—muffin
rings, straw, or thick cloth, or anything to keep them from resting on
the bottom of the boiler (a rack made by nailing together strips of
lath is very convenient); screw the covers on the cans so the water
cannot boil into them, but not so tightly as to prevent the escape of
steam; heat the water to boiling, and steam the fruit until tender.
Peaches, pears, crab apples, etc., to be canned with a syrup, may be
advantageously cooked by placing on a napkin dropped into the boiling
syrup.
Fruit for canning should be so thoroughly cooked that every
portion of it will have been subjected to a sufficient degree of heat
to destroy all germs within the fruit, but overcooking should be
avoided. The length of time required for cooking fruits for canning,
varies with the kind and quality of fruit and the manner of cooking.
Fruit is more frequently spoiled by being cooked an insufficient length
of time, than by overcooking. Prolonged cooking at a boiling
temperature is necessary for the destruction of certain kinds of germs
capable of inducing fermentation. Fifteen minutes may be
considered as the shortest time for which even the most delicate fruits
should be subjected to the temperature of boiling water, and thirty
minutes will be required by most fruits. Fruits which are not perfectly
fresh, or which have been shipped some distance, should be cooked not
less than thirty minutes. The boiling should be very slow, however, as
hard, rapid boiling will break up the fruit, and much of its fine
flavor will be lost in the steam.
Cooking the sugar with the fruit at the time of canning, is
not to be recommended from an economical standpoint; but fruit thus
prepared is more likely to keep well than when cooked without sugar;
not, however, because of the preservative influence of the sugar, which
is too small in amount to prevent the action of germs, as in the case
of preserves, but because the addition of sugar to the water or fruit
juice increases its specific gravity, and thus raises the boiling
point. From experiments made, I have found that the temperature of the
fruit is ordinarily raised about 5° by the addition of the amount of
sugar needed for sweetening sub-acid fruit. By the aid of this
additional degree of heat, the germs are more certainly destroyed, and
the sterilization of the fruit will be accomplished in a shorter time.
Another advantage gained in cooking sugar with the fruit at
the time of canning, is that the fruit may be cooked for a longer time
without destroying its form, as the sugar abstracts the juice of the
fruit, and thus slightly hardens it and prevents its falling in pieces.
The temperature to which the fruit is subjected may also be
increased by the same method as that elsewhere described for
sterilizing milk, the covers of the cans being screwed down tightly
before they are placed in the sterilizer, or as soon as the boiling
point is approached, so that the steam issues freely from the can.
If this method is employed, it must be remembered that the cans should
not be removed from the sterilizer until after they have become cold,
or nearly so, by being allowed to stand over night.
Use the best sugar, two tablespoonfuls to a quart of fruit is
sufficient for most sub-acid fruits, as berries and peaches; plums,
cherries, strawberries, and currants require from five to eight
tablespoonfuls of sugar to a quart. Have the sugar hot, by spreading it
on tins and heating in the oven, stirring occasionally. See that; it
does not scorch. Add it when the fruit is boiling. Pears, peaches,
apples, etc., which contain a much smaller quantity of juice than do
berries, may be canned in a syrup prepared by dissolving a cup of sugar
in two or three cups of water. Perfect fruit, properly canned, will
keep without sugar, and the natural 'flavor of the fruit is more
perfectly retained when the sugar is left out, adding the necessary
amount when opened for use.
If the fruit is to be cooked previous to being put in the
cans, the cans should be heated before the introduction of the fruit,
which should be put in at a boiling temperature. Various methods are
employed for this purpose. Some wrap the can in a towel wrung out of
hot water, keeping a silver spoon inside while it is being filled;
others employ dry heat by keeping the cans in a moderately hot oven
while the fruit is cooking.
Another and surer
way is to fill a large dishpan nearly full
of scalding (not boiling) water, then gradually introduce each can,
previously baked, into the water, dip it full of water, and set it
right side up in the pan. Repeat the process with other cans until four
or five are ready. Put the covers likewise into boiling water. Have in
readiness for use a granite-ware funnel and dipper, also in boiling
water; a cloth for wiping the outside of the cans, a silver fork or
spoon, a dish for emptyings, and a broad shallow pan on one side of the
range, half filled with boiling water, in which to set the cans while
being filled. When everything is in readiness, the fruit properly
cooked, and at a boiling temperature, turn one of
the cans down in the water, roll it over once or twice, empty it, and
set in the shallow pan of hot water; adjust the funnel, and then place
first in the can a quantity of juice, so that when the fruit is put in,
no vacant places will be left for air, which is sometimes
quite troublesome if this precaution is not taken; then add the fruit.
If any bubbles of air chance to be left, work them out with a fork or
spoon handle, which first dip in boiling water, and then quickly
introduce down the sides of the jar and through the fruit in such a way
that not a bubble will remain. Fill the can to overflowing, remembering
that any vacuum invites the air to enter; use boiling water or syrup
when there is not enough juice. Skim all froth from the fruit, adding
more juice if necessary; wipe the juice from the top of the can, adjust
the rubber, put on the top, and screw it down as quickly as possible.
If the fruit is cooked in the cans, as soon as it is sufficiently
heated, fill the can completely full with boiling juice, syrup, or
water; run the handle of a silver spoon around the inside of the can,
to make sure the juice entirely surrounds every portion of fruit, and
that no spaces for air remain, put on the rubbers, wipe off all juice,
and seal quickly.
Canning
Utensils.
As the fruit cools, the cover can be tightened, and this
should be promptly done again and again as the glass contracts, so that
no air may be allowed to enter.
If convenient to fill the cans directly from the stove, the
fruit may be kept at boiling heat by placing the kettle on a lamp stove
on the table, on which the other utensils are in readiness. Many
failures in fruit canning are due to neglect to have the fruit boiling
hot when put into the cans.
When the cans are filled, set them away from currents of air,
and not on a very cold surface, to avoid danger of cracking. A good way
is to set the cans on a wet towel, and cover with a woolen cloth as a
protection from draughts.
After the cans have cooled, and the tops have been screwed
down tightly, place them in a cool place, bottom upward, and watch
closely for a few days. If the juice begins to leak out, or any
appearance of fermentation is seen, it is a sign that the work has
failed, and the only thing to do is to open the can immediately, boil
the fruit, and use as quickly as possible; recanning will not save it
unless boiled a long time. If no signs of spoiling are observed within
two or three weeks, the fruit may be safely stored away in a dark, cool
place. If one has no dark storeroom, it is an advantage to wrap each
can in brown paper, to keep out the light.
Sometimes the fruit will settle so that a little space appears
at the top. If you are perfectly sure that the can is tight, do not
open to refill, as you will be unable to make it quite as tight again,
unless you reheat the fruit, in which case you would be liable to have
the same thing occur again. Air is dangerous because it is likely to
contain germs, though in itself harmless.
If mold is observed upon the top of a can, it should be
opened, and the fruit boiled and used at once, after carefully skimming
out all the moldy portions. If there is evidence of fermentation, the
fruit should be thrown away, as it contains alcohol.
If care be taken to provide good cans, thoroughly sterilized,
and with perfectly fitting covers; to use only fruit in
good condition;
to have it thoroughly cooked, and at boiling temperature when put into
the can; to have the cans well baked and heated, filled completely and
to overflowing, and sealed at once while the fruit is still near
boiling temperature, there will be little likelihood of failure.
Opening
Canned Fruit.—Canned fruit is best opened a short time before
needed, that is may be will aėrated; and if it has been canned without
sugar, it should have the necessary quantity added, so that it may be
well dissolved before using.
Fruit purchased in tin cans should be selected with the utmost
care, since unscrupulous dealers sometimes use cans which render the
fruit wholly—unfit for food.
The following rules which we quote from a popular scientific
journal should be 'carefully observed in selecting canned fruit:—
"Reject every can that does not have the name of the
manufacturer or firm upon it, as well as the name of the company and
the town where manufactured. All 'Standards' have this. When the
wholesale dealer is ashamed to have his name on the goods, be shy of
him.
"Reject every article of canned goods which does not show the
line of resin around the edge of the solder of the cap, the same as is
seen on the seam at the side of the can.
"Press up the bottom of the can; if decomposition is
beginning, the tin will rattle the same as the bottom of your
sewing-machine oil can does. If the goods are sound, it will be solid,
and there will be no rattle to the tin.
"Reject every can that show any rust around the cap on the
inside of the head of the can. Old and battered cans should be
rejected; as, if they have been used several times, the contents are
liable to contain small amounts of tin or lead" RECIPES.
To
Can Strawberries.—These are generally considered more
difficult to can than most other berries. Use none but sound fruit, and
put up the day they are picked, if possible. Heat the fruit slowly to
the boiling point, and cook fifteen minutes or longer, adding the sugar
hot, if any be used, after the fruit is boiling. Strawberries, while
cooking, have a tendency to rise to the top, and unless they are kept
poshed down, will not be cooked uniformly, which is doubtless one
reason they sometimes fail to keep well. The froth should also be kept
skimmed off. Fill the cans as directed above,
taking special care to let out every air bubble, and to remove every
particle of froth from the top of the can before sealing. If the
berries are of good size, the may be cooked in the cans, adding a
boiling syrup prepared with one cup of water and one of sugar for each
quart can of fruit.
If after the cans are cold, the fruit rises to the top, as it
frequently does, take the cans and gently shake until the fruit is well
saturated with the juice and falls by its own weight to the bottom, or
low enough to be entirely covered with the liquid.
To
Can Raspberries, Blackberries, and Other Small Fruits.—Select
none but good, sound berries; those freshly picked are best; reject any
green, over-ripe, mashed, or worm-eaten fruit. If necessary to wash the
berries, do so by putting a quart at a time in a colander, and dipping
the dish carefully into a pan of clean water, letting it stand for a
moment. If the water is very dirty, repeat the process in a second
water. Drain thoroughly, and if to be cooked previous to putting in the
cans, put into a porcelain kettle with a very small quantity of water,
and heat slowly to boiling. If sugar is to be used, have it hot, but do
not add it until the fruit is boiling; and before doing so, if there is
much juice, dip out the surplus, and leave the berries with only a
small quantity, as the sugar will have a tendency to draw out more
juice, thus furnishing plenty for syrup.
Raspberries are so juicy that they need scarcely more than a
pint of water to two quarts of fruit.
The fruit may be steamed in the cans if preferred. When
thoroughly scalded, if sugar is to be used, fill the can with a boiling
syrup made by dissolving the requisite amount of sugar in water; if to
be canned without sugar, fill up the can with boiling water or juice.
Seal the fruit according to directions previously given.
To
Can Gooseberries.—Select such as are smooth and turning red,
but not fully ripe; wash and remove the stems and blossom ends. For
three quarts of fruit allow one quart of water. Heat slowly to boiling;
cook fifteen minutes, add a cupful of sugar which has been
heated dry in the oven: boil two or three minutes longer, and can.
To
Can Peaches.—Select fruit which is perfectly ripe and sound,
but not much softened. Free-stone peaches are the best. Put a few at a
time in a wire basket, and dip into boiling water for a moment, and
then into cold water, to cool fruit sufficiently to handle with
comfort. The skins may then be rubbed or peeled off easily, if done
quickly, and the fruit divided into halves; or wipe with a clean cloth
to remove all dirt and the wool, and with a silver knife cut in halves,
remove the stone, and then pare each piece, dropping into cold water at
once to prevent discoloration. Peaches cut before being pared are less
likely to break in pieces while removing the stones. When ready, pour a
cupful of water in the bottom of the kettle, and fill with peaches,
scattering sugar among the layers in the proportion of a heaping
tablespoonful to a quart of fruit. Heat slowly, boil fifteen minutes or
longer till a silver fork can be easily passed through the pieces; can
in the usual way and seal; or, fill the cans with the halved peaches,
and place them in a boiler of warm water with something underneath to
avoid breaking; cook until perfectly tender. Have ready a boiling syrup
prepared with one half cup of sugar and two cups of water, and pour
into each can all that it will hold, remove air bubbles, cover and
seal. A few of the pits may be cooked in the syrup, and removed before
adding to the fruit, when their special flavor is desired.
ANOTHER METHOD.—After paring and halving the fruit, lay a
clean napkin in the bottom of a steamer; fill with fruit. Steam until a
fork will easily penetrate the pieces. Have ready a boiling syrup
prepared as directed above, put a few spoonfuls in the bottom of the
hot cans, and dip each piece of fruit gently in the hot syrup; then as
carefully place it in the jars. Fill with the syrup, and finish in the
usual way.
Peaches canned without sugar, retain more nearly their natural
flavor. To prepare in this way, allow one half pint of water to each
pound of fruit. Cook slowly until tender, and can in the usual manner.
When wanted for the table, open an hour before needed, and sprinkle
lightly with sugar.
To Can
Pears.—The pears should be perfectly ripened, but not soft.
Pare with a silver knife, halve or quarter, remove the seeds and drop
into a pan of cold water to prevent discoloration. Prepare a syrup,
allowing a cup of sugar and a quart of water to each two quarts of
fruit. When the syrup boils, put the pears into it very carefully, so
as not to bruise or break them, and cook until they look clear and can
be easily pierced with a fork. Have the cans heated, and put in first a
little of the syrup, then pack in the pears very carefully; fill to
overflowing with the scalding syrup, and finish as previously directed.
The tougher and harder varieties of pears must be cooked till
nearly tender in hot water, or steamed over a kettle of boiling water,
before adding to the syrup, and may then be finished as above. If it is
desirable to keep the pears whole, cook only those of a uniform size
together; or if of assorted sizes, put the larger ones into the syrup a
few minutes before the smaller ones. Some prefer boiling the kins of
the pears in the water of which the syrup is to be made, and skimming
them out before putting in the sugar. This is thought to impart a finer
flavor. Pears which are very sweet, or nearly tasteless, may be
improved by using the juice of a large lemon for each quart of syrup.
Pears may be cooked in the cans, if preferred.
To Can
Plums.—Green Gages and Damsons are best for canning. Wipe
clean with a soft cloth. Allow a half cup of water and the same of
sugar to every three quarts of fruit, in preparing a syrup. Pick each
plum with a silver fork to prevent it from bursting, and while the
syrup is heating, turn in the fruit, and boil until thoroughly done.
Dip carefully into hot jars, fill with syrup, and cover immediately.
To
Can Cherries.—These may be put up whole in the same way as
plums, or pitted and treated as directed for berries, allowing about
two quarts of water and a scant pint of sugar to five quarts of solid
fruit, for the tart varieties, and not quite half as much sugar for the
sweeter ones.
To
Can Mixed Fruit.—There are some fruits with so little flavor
that when cooked they are apt to taste insipid, and are much improved
by canning with some acid or strongly flavored fruits.
Blackberries put up with equal quantities of blue or red
plums, or in the proportion of one to three of the sour fruit, are much
better than either of these fruits canned separately. Black caps are
much better if canned with currants, in the proportion of one part
currants to four of black caps.
Red and black raspberries, cherries and raspberries, are also
excellent combinations.
Quinces
with Apples.—Pare and cut an equal quantity of firm sweet
apples and quinces. First stew the quinces till they are tender in
sufficient water to cover. Take them out, and cook the apples in the
same water. Lay the apples and quinces in alternate layers in a
porcelain kettle or crock. Have ready a hot syrup made with one part
sugar to two and a half parts water, pour over the fruit, and let it
stand all night. The next day reheat to boiling, and can.
Quinces and sweet apples may be canned in the same way as
directed below for plums and sweet apples, using equal parts of apples
and quinces, and adding sugar when opened.
Plums
with Sweet Apples.—Prepare the plums, and stew in water
enough to cover. When tender, skim out, add to the juice an
equal quantity of quartered sweet apples, and stew until
nearly tender. Add the plumbs again, boil together for a few minutes,
and can. When wanted for the table, open, sprinkle with sugar if any
seems needed, let stand awhile and serve.
To Can
Grapes.—Grapes have so many seeds that they do not form a
very palatable sauce when canned entire. Pick carefully from the stems,
wash in a colander the same as directed for berries, and drain. Remove
the skins, dropping them into one earthen crock and the pulp into
another. Place both crocks in kettles of hot water over the stove, and
heat slowly, stirring the pulp occasionally until the seeds will come
out clean.
Then rub the pulp through a colander, add the skins to it, and
a cupful of sugar for each quart of pulp. Return to the fire, boil
twenty minutes until the skins are tender, and can; or, if preferred,
the whole grapes may be heated, and when well scalded so that the seeds
are loosened, pressed through a colander, thus rejecting both seeds and
skins, boiled, then sweetened if desired, and canned.
To
Can Crab Apples.—These may be cooked whole, and canned the
same way as plums.
To Can
Apples.—Prepare and can the same as pears, when fresh and
fine in flavor. If old and rather tasteless, the following is a good
way:—several thin slices of the yellow part of the rind, four cups of
sugar, and three pints of boiling water. Pare and quarter the apples,
or if small, only halve them, and cook gently in a broad-bottomed
closely-covered saucepan, with as little water as possible, till
tender, but not broken; then pour the syrup over them, heat all to
boiling, and can at once. The apples may be cooked by steaming over a
kettle of hot water, if preferred. Care must be taken to cook those of
the same degree of hardness together. The slices of lemon rind should
be removed from the syrup before using.
To
Can Pineapples.—The writer has had no experience in canning
this fruit, but the following method is given on good authority: Pare
very carefully with a silver knife, remove all the "eyes" and black
specks; then cut the sections in which the "eyes" were, in solid pieces
clear down to the core. By doing this all the valuable part of the
fruit is saved, leaving its hard, woody center. As, however, this
contains considerable juice, it should be taken in the hands and wrung
as one wrings a cloth, till the juice is extracted, then thrown away.
Prepare a syrup with one part sugar and two parts water, using what
juice has been obtained in place of so much water. Let it boil up, skim
clean, then add the fruit. Boil just as little as possible and have the
fruit tender, as pineapples loses its flavor by overcooking more
readily than any other fruit. Put into hot cans, and seal.
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