Pressure canning food - eviltoast

So me and my dad were talking about pressure canning and how it’s very uncommon. I’ve never talked to anyone irl that pressure cans, maybe some water bath canning but that’s it. I wonder why it’s so uncommon? You can get a pressure canner for less than 150$ and it’s incredibly useful.

I mainly use it for stock/broth but you can use it for so many things, tomatoes, soups, chili, baked beans, stew, spaghetti sauce, etc… Honestly, anyone who cooks whole chickens somewhat regularly should invest in a pressure canner. I cook two whole chickens at a time and use the carcass to make about 14 litres of stock. I also make beef, turkey, pork and smoked variations of these.

It’s so much better than buying your stock at the store. I will admit that it is a lot of work, from start to finish it takes me about 3 days because I wet brine my chickens. But you could just buy the bones from your butcher which I have done. Just wondering if anyone else does this or reasons why you don’t do it?

  • Tolookah@discuss.tchncs.de
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    6 months ago

    Pressure cookers are quite awesome things, but I don’t think your ninja gets to the 15psi that Grandma’s cooker gets to. (Most of the electric ones don’t, last I looked into it).

    • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      i know it doesn’t. that is an important thing to remember. the 15 psi is needed for very-long-term storage.

        • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          I bet it was better than when it was first canned.

          In the same way that roasted beef is better a day or two later, canned goods develop in ways you can’t get any other way.