hattyn wrote:What dishes do you most associate with birthdays,
My known recipe addition for that year: a gingerbread house fashioned after our home.
Do you ever eat your gingerbread house? I guess this is premature, because this will be the FIRST gingerbread house. Do you plan to eat it or keep it for a few years as a permanent display?
JFLS wrote:14. Place regulator on cooker. Increase heat to high. When regulator begins to rock, reduce heat to medium/low and maintain for 50 minutes.
JFLS wrote:12. Put 7 cups cool water in pressure cooker, with rack. Place pudding on rack.
National Center for Home Food Preservation wrote:1. Put 2 to 3 inches of hot water in the canner. Place filled jars on the rack, using a jar lifter. Fasten canner lid securely.
JFLS wrote:13. Close cooker without safety valve (regulator) in place and heat on high until steady stream of steam appears. Reduce heat to medium and steam for 20 minutes without pressure.
National Center for Home Food Preservation wrote:Air trapped in a canner lowers the temperature obtained at 5, 10, or 15 pounds of pressure and results in under processing. The highest volume of air trapped in a canner occurs in processing raw-packed foods in dial-gauge canners. These canners do not vent air during processing. To be safe, all types of pressure canners must be vented 10 minutes before they are pressurized.
To vent a canner, leave the vent port uncovered on newer models or manually open petcocks on some older models. Heating the filled canner with its lid locked into place boils water and generates steam that escapes through the petcock or vent port. When steam first escapes, set a timer for 10 minutes. After venting 10 minutes, close the petcock or place the counterweight or weighted gauge over the vent port to pressurize the canner.
National Center for Home Food Preservation wrote:Using pressure canners
Follow these steps for successful pressure canning:
1. Put 2 to 3 inches of hot water in the canner. Place filled jars on the rack, using a jar lifter. Fasten canner lid securely.
2. Leave weight off vent port or open petcock. Heat at the highest setting until steam flows from the petcock or vent port.
3. Maintain high heat setting, exhaust steam 10 minutes, and then place weight on vent port or close petcock. The canner will pressurize during the next 3 to 5 minutes.
4. Start timing the process when the pressure reading on the dial gauge indicates that the recommended pressure has been reached, or when the weighted gauge begins to jiggle or rock.
5. Regulate heat under the canner to maintain a steady pressure at or slightly above the correct gauge pressure. Quick and large pressure variations during processing may cause unnecessary liquid losses from jars. Weighted gauges on Mirro canners should jiggle about 2 or 3 times per minute. On Presto canners, they should rock slowly throughout the process.
6. When the timed process is completed, turn off the heat, remove the canner from heat if possible, and let the canner depressurize. Do not force-cool the canner. Forced cooling may result in food spoilage. Cooling the canner with cold running water or opening the vent port before the canner is fully depressurized will cause loss of liquid from jars and seal failures. Force-cooling may also warp the canner lid of older model canners, causing steam leaks. Depressurization of older models should be timed. Standard-size heavy-walled canners require about 30 minutes when loaded with pints and 45 minutes with quarts. Newer thin-walled canners cool more rapidly and are equipped with vent locks. These canners are depressurized when their vent lock piston drops to a normal position.
7. After the canner is depressurized, remove the weight from the vent port or open the petcock. Wait 2 minutes, unfasten the lid, and remove it carefully. Lift the lid away from you so that the steam does not burn your face.
8. Remove jars with a lifter, and place on towel or cooling rack, if desired.
Any suggestions on butchers who (1) sell good, clean white (food grade) suet and (2) are willing to mess up their meat grinder to mince it for me (last year I got tendonitis using a cheese grater on three pounds of suet).
Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
Thank you for the recipe. It's delightful to use something your family has valued for over 100 years. BTW - I make my own candied peel, which I will share the recipe soon.
I realize this is a traditional recipe passed down through the family. Sometimes there are techniques which are followed though the reason for doing them is not always known. I have done quite a bit of work with pressure canners, so I recognize some well-intended mis-information and probably relatively new information since this recipe was reworked for pressure processing:JFLS wrote:14. Place regulator on cooker. Increase heat to high. When regulator begins to rock, reduce heat to medium/low and maintain for 50 minutes.
What level of pressure? 5, 10 or 15 pounds?
&&&JFLS wrote:12. Put 7 cups cool water in pressure cooker, with rack. Place pudding on rack.
You don't need or want so much water in a pressure cooker.National Center for Home Food Preservation wrote:1. Put 2 to 3 inches of hot water in the canner. Place filled jars on the rack, using a jar lifter. Fasten canner lid securely.
&&&JFLS wrote:13. Close cooker without safety valve (regulator) in place and heat on high until steady stream of steam appears. Reduce heat to medium and steam for 20 minutes without pressure.
In the recipe you have, you may reduce the non-pressure time from 20 to 10 minutes for the following reasons:National Center for Home Food Preservation wrote:Air trapped in a canner lowers the temperature obtained at 5, 10, or 15 pounds of pressure and results in under processing. The highest volume of air trapped in a canner occurs in processing raw-packed foods in dial-gauge canners. These canners do not vent air during processing. To be safe, all types of pressure canners must be vented 10 minutes before they are pressurized.
To vent a canner, leave the vent port uncovered on newer models or manually open petcocks on some older models. Heating the filled canner with its lid locked into place boils water and generates steam that escapes through the petcock or vent port. When steam first escapes, set a timer for 10 minutes. After venting 10 minutes, close the petcock or place the counterweight or weighted gauge over the vent port to pressurize the canner.
&&&
The following are instructions intended for Pressure canning but it applies to pressure cookers as well:National Center for Home Food Preservation wrote:Using pressure canners
Follow these steps for successful pressure canning:
1. Put 2 to 3 inches of hot water in the canner. Place filled jars on the rack, using a jar lifter. Fasten canner lid securely.
2. Leave weight off vent port or open petcock. Heat at the highest setting until steam flows from the petcock or vent port.
3. Maintain high heat setting, exhaust steam 10 minutes, and then place weight on vent port or close petcock. The canner will pressurize during the next 3 to 5 minutes.
4. Start timing the process when the pressure reading on the dial gauge indicates that the recommended pressure has been reached, or when the weighted gauge begins to jiggle or rock.
5. Regulate heat under the canner to maintain a steady pressure at or slightly above the correct gauge pressure. Quick and large pressure variations during processing may cause unnecessary liquid losses from jars. Weighted gauges on Mirro canners should jiggle about 2 or 3 times per minute. On Presto canners, they should rock slowly throughout the process.
6. When the timed process is completed, turn off the heat, remove the canner from heat if possible, and let the canner depressurize. Do not force-cool the canner. Forced cooling may result in food spoilage. Cooling the canner with cold running water or opening the vent port before the canner is fully depressurized will cause loss of liquid from jars and seal failures. Force-cooling may also warp the canner lid of older model canners, causing steam leaks. Depressurization of older models should be timed. Standard-size heavy-walled canners require about 30 minutes when loaded with pints and 45 minutes with quarts. Newer thin-walled canners cool more rapidly and are equipped with vent locks. These canners are depressurized when their vent lock piston drops to a normal position.
7. After the canner is depressurized, remove the weight from the vent port or open the petcock. Wait 2 minutes, unfasten the lid, and remove it carefully. Lift the lid away from you so that the steam does not burn your face.
8. Remove jars with a lifter, and place on towel or cooling rack, if desired.
Thanks, again!
alriemer wrote:My grandmother's jello salads - one layer salad with strawberries, strawberry jello and sour cream; the other a mixed salad with lime jello, pineapple and cottage cheese. Sounds ghastly but results are remarkable. Probably helps to have grown up with these.
Ann Fisher wrote:
And on a further digression, I recently picked up a cookbook put together by the Seney Michigan Historical Society in the early 60's. Seney is a tiny town on one of the best trout steams in Michigan (Hemingway called it the Big Two-Hearted River, but he was writing about the Fox River in Seney). It is also in the heart of the best blueberry country I know of. The entire cookbook had one recipe that used trout, two that used blueberries (and one of those called for canned pie filling), and at least 15 that called for fruit cocktail and miniature marshmallows. Oh, and two recipes for Pork Cake.
gleam wrote:There were some worse ones in that cookbook, too... at least a half dozen or more dishes that used cream of mushroom soup.
JiminLoganSquare wrote:Trivia Note: Why use suet? Suet melts at a relatively high temperature (higher than shortening or butter). This allows the cake part of the pudding to cook solid before the suet melts. The un-melted suet, acting like a sort of random lost wax mold, holds open pores that allow the pudding to remain light and crumbly. Eventually, as the steaming continues, the suet melts to the bottom. If you used shortening or butter instead of suet, you would end up with something the approximate density of a white dwarf star.