Canning and Preserving
Home food preservation techniques using jars and cans
Canning in jars extends shelf life by killing microorganisms with heat and creating a vacuum seal that prevents recontamination. Two main methods: water-bath canning (for high-acid foods, pH < 4.6) and pressure canning (for low-acid foods).
⚠️ WARNING: Improper canning of low-acid foods (vegetables, meat) can cause botulism, which is deadly. Always follow tested recipes and the correct canning method.
Canning methods
1. Water-bath canning (85-100°C)
For acidic foods with pH < 4.6: fruits, jams, pickles, tomatoes with citric acid. Time: 10-45 minutes depending on product and jar size.
2. Pressure canning (121°C)
Mandatory for low-acid foods (pH > 4.6): vegetables, meat, soups, stews. Requires a pressure canner. Time: 20-90 minutes depending on product.
pH scale and safety
pH < 4.6 (acidic): safe with water-bath canning – fruits, tomatoes with lemon, pickles
pH > 4.6 (low-acid): requires pressure canning – vegetables, meat, fish
Step by step: water-bath canning
- 1. Prepare clean equipment and wash jars in hot soapy water
- 2. Prepare the product using a tested recipe
- 3. Fill hot jars, leaving 1-2 cm headspace
- 4. Wipe jar rims, place lids, screw bands fingertip tight
- 5. Place in boiling water (water 2-3 cm above lids)
- 6. Boil for recommended time, remove, and cool
- 7. Check seals: lid should be concave and not click
Storage and inspection
- • Store in cool (10-15°C), dark, dry place
- • Label jars with date and contents
- • Inspect regularly: cracks, leaks, bulging lids, mold
- • Typical shelf life: 1-2 years for fruit, 2-5 years for high-temp meats
When to discard
- • Bulging or dome-shaped lid (may indicate gas production)
- • Leakage, cracked jar, rusted lid
- • Foam, mold, cloudy liquid (if it wasn’t cloudy initially)
- • Off smell after opening