I grew up in a family that grew vegetables and made freezing and 'preserves' to last through the winter. I watched my mom and dad toil in the hot sun and scramble to prepare and preserve the food so it did not spoil. They raised organic food even before the term was coined. For many years, I grew a garden also. I improved on the method for growing vegetables that my parents never knew about. While they plowed the garden and exposed it, I learned from "Back to Eden" that planting in wood chips eliminated the need for watering and fertilizing. I learned that just like in the animal kingdom, predator insects attacked the weak and the young plants while leaving the healthy plants alone. Depleted soils produced weakened plants. Wood chips replenish the soil like glacial dust does and produce hearty and healthy plants. All store bought vegetables, even the organic ones, lack minerals in the soil they are raised in and are not in optimal balance as wild plants are.
Because of the amount of work when harvesting comes, I have stopped gardening. The biggest obstacle is the harvest. When the harvest is ready, it seems that all the vegetables come in at the same time. I recall having to give away vegetables because I couldn't keep up with processing them for preservation. Tomatoes, cucumbers, squash, peppers, spinach, etc. ALL have different methods for preservation. It's a lot of work!! And demands an 'All hands on deck' mentality.
Growing a garden is a lot of monitoring and nursing. The harvest is the beginning of the real work. It happens all at once and preserving the food takes knowledge, skill, sweat, stress, and a lot of hands to get er' all done.
You need to stagger the plantings of your vegetables. For example, plant part of them one week and then more a week or two later. You can also choose varieties that take more or less time to mature.
With tomatoes, you can choose indeterminate varieties. They come off slow and steady as long as the weather is warm enough. Determinate varieties come off all at once.
Everything you listed can be canned in jars, except for the spinach, so I don't see the necessity for any other preservation method. I wouldn't depend on a freezer for vegetables. Dehydrating takes too long, unless you have a large outdoor setup. The electric dehydrators for your kitchen take too long, and if you have only one, you can't dehydrate much at one time.
You can put up a lot of food in jars in just a day, if you plan things out. I would help my mother peeling and canning tomatoes when I was younger. On those, we used a simpler method. Cook the tomatoes in open pots, as many as you have. Then fill the sterilized jars and seal. We could go through a whole washtub full of tomatoes by the afternoon. It didn't take "all hands on deck" either, just my mother and me. And she did most of the work.
Practice and watch YouTube videos to see how other people can food in mass quantities.
Thanks. It's good advice. As you know there's many variables, including time, and all those unforeseen hazards. At times, I think I knew the weather forecast better than the weather stations did. Everything from bad seeds, to the weather, to birds, to...... and of course the latitude and elevation, and more play a factor to these variables. I've done what you wrote in the past. For the avg. individual who works in an office and away from home, having a wife and kids, time is a limiting factor too.
I've grown veggies all the way into January covering the plants at night with plastic sheeting and had to be always vigilant of the temperature. Making use of clear plastic and assuring the plastic never touched the plants, and brushing the snow off when it required was all very memorable. All of this in my opinion, doesn't really compare to the work of harvesting, preparing, and preserving those vegetables. Blanching of tomatoes, peeling the skins off them to can them, picking all of those small cucumbers, washing them, sterilizing, having ample apple vinegar, and assuring the 'right' amount of ingredients for all the pickling batches, etc. is a lot of work! Then there is assuring having adequate space to store them.
I had raspberry plants that were very 'invasive' and easily escaped their confines, but man did they ever produce. Almost every day, I picked those berries and harvested them by washing them and putting them in freezer bag, after freezer bag, and having to do this every week in the summer. There were two productive cycles in the summer for these. I'd easily get 15 freezer bags full of raspberries each year. From those I'd make the best jam anywhere. I had a strawberry garden as well. I'd make strawberry jam. I'd add just enough lemon juice to bring out the flavor of those strawberries. The kids love it. Neighbors would ask me for my recipe. I'd oblige them and would give it to them, but they never used it because buying it from a grocery store was more convenient for them. The same was true when I had too much of a vegetable coming in at once. I'd give the neighbors the surplus as an act of kindness. I could have easily just let it all rot and throw it away, but that's not how I think. Not once was the favor ever returned in all the years I lived there. There was a mulberry tree that grew in back of my yard. I use to get several freezer bags full of mulberries too. The way I looked at it. if I didn't pick those mulberries, the birds would and they'd get drunk on them. A couple times birds flew into my glass window and bounced off. I was helping those little fellows out by picking all those mulberries. I'd put out bird seed feeders and had several bird houses all around the house. I made mulberry jam as well. With the frozen bags of raspberries, strawberries, and mulberries, I use to make smoothies. My wife and kids loved these smoothies for a while, but their tastes changed and at soon fell out of fashion. We use to make pancakes using these as well.
There's more, but I mainly ran the entire show. It's great to have help when you're trying to bypass the need for corporate big top grocery stores.
I grew up in a family that grew vegetables and made freezing and 'preserves' to last through the winter. I watched my mom and dad toil in the hot sun and scramble to prepare and preserve the food so it did not spoil. They raised organic food even before the term was coined. For many years, I grew a garden also. I improved on the method for growing vegetables that my parents never knew about. While they plowed the garden and exposed it, I learned from "Back to Eden" that planting in wood chips eliminated the need for watering and fertilizing. I learned that just like in the animal kingdom, predator insects attacked the weak and the young plants while leaving the healthy plants alone. Depleted soils produced weakened plants. Wood chips replenish the soil like glacial dust does and produce hearty and healthy plants. All store bought vegetables, even the organic ones, lack minerals in the soil they are raised in and are not in optimal balance as wild plants are.
Because of the amount of work when harvesting comes, I have stopped gardening. The biggest obstacle is the harvest. When the harvest is ready, it seems that all the vegetables come in at the same time. I recall having to give away vegetables because I couldn't keep up with processing them for preservation. Tomatoes, cucumbers, squash, peppers, spinach, etc. ALL have different methods for preservation. It's a lot of work!! And demands an 'All hands on deck' mentality.
Growing a garden is a lot of monitoring and nursing. The harvest is the beginning of the real work. It happens all at once and preserving the food takes knowledge, skill, sweat, stress, and a lot of hands to get er' all done.
You need to stagger the plantings of your vegetables. For example, plant part of them one week and then more a week or two later. You can also choose varieties that take more or less time to mature.
With tomatoes, you can choose indeterminate varieties. They come off slow and steady as long as the weather is warm enough. Determinate varieties come off all at once.
Everything you listed can be canned in jars, except for the spinach, so I don't see the necessity for any other preservation method. I wouldn't depend on a freezer for vegetables. Dehydrating takes too long, unless you have a large outdoor setup. The electric dehydrators for your kitchen take too long, and if you have only one, you can't dehydrate much at one time.
You can put up a lot of food in jars in just a day, if you plan things out. I would help my mother peeling and canning tomatoes when I was younger. On those, we used a simpler method. Cook the tomatoes in open pots, as many as you have. Then fill the sterilized jars and seal. We could go through a whole washtub full of tomatoes by the afternoon. It didn't take "all hands on deck" either, just my mother and me. And she did most of the work.
Practice and watch YouTube videos to see how other people can food in mass quantities.
Thanks. It's good advice. As you know there's many variables, including time, and all those unforeseen hazards. At times, I think I knew the weather forecast better than the weather stations did. Everything from bad seeds, to the weather, to birds, to...... and of course the latitude and elevation, and more play a factor to these variables. I've done what you wrote in the past. For the avg. individual who works in an office and away from home, having a wife and kids, time is a limiting factor too.
I've grown veggies all the way into January covering the plants at night with plastic sheeting and had to be always vigilant of the temperature. Making use of clear plastic and assuring the plastic never touched the plants, and brushing the snow off when it required was all very memorable. All of this in my opinion, doesn't really compare to the work of harvesting, preparing, and preserving those vegetables. Blanching of tomatoes, peeling the skins off them to can them, picking all of those small cucumbers, washing them, sterilizing, having ample apple vinegar, and assuring the 'right' amount of ingredients for all the pickling batches, etc. is a lot of work! Then there is assuring having adequate space to store them.
I had raspberry plants that were very 'invasive' and easily escaped their confines, but man did they ever produce. Almost every day, I picked those berries and harvested them by washing them and putting them in freezer bag, after freezer bag, and having to do this every week in the summer. There were two productive cycles in the summer for these. I'd easily get 15 freezer bags full of raspberries each year. From those I'd make the best jam anywhere. I had a strawberry garden as well. I'd make strawberry jam. I'd add just enough lemon juice to bring out the flavor of those strawberries. The kids love it. Neighbors would ask me for my recipe. I'd oblige them and would give it to them, but they never used it because buying it from a grocery store was more convenient for them. The same was true when I had too much of a vegetable coming in at once. I'd give the neighbors the surplus as an act of kindness. I could have easily just let it all rot and throw it away, but that's not how I think. Not once was the favor ever returned in all the years I lived there. There was a mulberry tree that grew in back of my yard. I use to get several freezer bags full of mulberries too. The way I looked at it. if I didn't pick those mulberries, the birds would and they'd get drunk on them. A couple times birds flew into my glass window and bounced off. I was helping those little fellows out by picking all those mulberries. I'd put out bird seed feeders and had several bird houses all around the house. I made mulberry jam as well. With the frozen bags of raspberries, strawberries, and mulberries, I use to make smoothies. My wife and kids loved these smoothies for a while, but their tastes changed and at soon fell out of fashion. We use to make pancakes using these as well.
There's more, but I mainly ran the entire show. It's great to have help when you're trying to bypass the need for corporate big top grocery stores.
Love reading this! Thanks for sharing.
I loved my gardens. Of all the skills I've ever worked on my gardens wer the most enjoyable.
I look forward to being g in. A place where I can do it again.