Have More In Winter, Too!
NOW we come to a part of the "Have-More" Plan that probably
gives Ed and me the most satisfaction of all-preserving
food in various ways so that we "live off the fat of the
land" all year round.
Food preservation also has very practical compensations.
Vegetables cleaned and prepared in the summer or fall save
hours of shopping and of preparation in the kitchen during
months to come. Furthermore, home preserved food costs
less. For example, our home preserved tomatoes cost us
about 5¢ per quart.
Folks today are lucky to have two wonderful modern ways of
conserving food: quick freezing and pressure canning -
besides that dependable old stand-by, the root cellar. One
obvious rule applies to them all: use only the best of your
fruits and vegetables, those just ripe and free from
blemishes. If you take tough old string beans and freeze or
can them, you're still going to have tough old beans. At
first it hurts to throw away even one bean you've raised.
But it isn't long before you realize you have plenty of the
best and you can afford to give the few tough ones to the
pigs or chickens.
If you want to keep your preserving to a minimum, enjoy
your food to the fullest extent while it is at the height
of its season instead of trying to have something different
every day of the week. We certainly do not get tired of
eating sweet corn nearly every day for weeks when it comes
fresh from our own garden.
To show you how we have a lot of variety in our home-grown
food with the least effort, here is a list of foods we
emphasized, each in season. We don't claim we ate only
these items at these times, but we used them primarily - we
supplement our home-grown list with things we don't grow,
for instance, seafood, beef, etc.)
SUMMER (July-September)
Fresh garden vegetables - tomatoes, peas, string beans,
lima beans, beets, corn, cucumbers, lettuce, summer squash,
egg-plant, new potatoes, etc. Fresh fruits, raspberries,
strawberries, blackberries, etc. Broilers, roasters,
rabbit. All kinds of frozen meat (from winter killing).
Milk, butter, cottage cheese, eggs.
FALL (October-December)
Root cellar vegetables - cabbage, beets, carrots, turnips,
Hubbard and acorn squash, potatoes, Jerusalem artichokes
(leave in ground). Greens still in garden: kale, broccoli,
chinese cabbage, collards. Stored fruits - apples and
pears. Baked beans and stews. Chicken, fricassee or pies
(culled hens), broilers and roasters. Other fowl - (geese,
turkeys, ducks). Lamb, chevon, rabbit. Milk, eggs, cheese.
WINTER (January-March)
Vegetables and fruits - rest of those stored in the root
cellar - some canned and frozen vegetables, fruits. Fresh
pork or chevon, smoked hams and shoulders, sausage, bacon.
Frozen or fresh chicken. Other fowl (as you cull). Rabbit.
SPRING (April-June)
Vegetables and fruits - canned or frozen. Spring garden
greens, such as dandelions, beet tops, asparagus. Fresh
rhubarb. Jerusalem artichokes, and parsnips left in garden
over winter. Radishes, lettuce. Hams and bacon (cured in
winter). Baked beans. Broilers, frozen or fresh. Other
meats from freezer. Milk and eggs.
While we're making lists, here's one you'll find helpful in
deciding whether to store, can, freeze or dehydrate the
various vegetables from your garden.
Easy Storage: potatoes, carrots, beets, onions,
winter squash, turnips.
Best for Freezing: all meats and poultry, snap
beans, shell beans, lima beans, asparagus, peas, corn, all
greens and berries.
Best to Can: tomatoes, snap beans, shell beans,
soy beans, peas, corn and some fruits depending on your own
likes.
Most Successfully Dried: soy beans, lima beans,
kidney beans, peas, corn, onions, some fruits.
Cold Storage or Root Cellar
It so happens
that the old trick of putting away root vegetables and some
fruits in a cool, moist place is both easy and cheap and
for certain things the best way to store.
The necessary conditions are a cool, moist atmosphere
(temperature 35° up to 45°), darkness, and
protection from rats and mice.
We are unfortunate in having a very small basement. What we
would have liked is a cellar storage section about 10' x 6'
and at least 6' high, for standing room and plenty of shelf
space. A section of the basement can be walled off with
economical concrete blocks or insulating board. Good
insulation and a close-fitted insulated door are most
important, especially if you have a furnace in the
basement. A small window is also necessary in order to
control the temperature within the storage unit. An earthen
floor is best - it gives your storage the proper humidity.
If you have a cement floor you must sprinkle it with water
every day or two, or keep a bucket of water in the room. In
basement storage it is also best to pack carrots, beets,
and other root vegetables (except potatoes) in a barrel or
crock with damp leaves or sand.
But don't hurry your harvesting to put the vegetables in
storage. It is the early part of the storage period that is
most dangerous. It's hard to get the temperature down to
40° or less when the weather is still warm so leave
root crops in the soil until the ground is almost ready to
freeze. Tomatoes, onions, squash and pumpkins, of course,
have to come in before the first killing frost.
Squash, pumpkins and dry beans keep best in the attic, if
you're lucky enough to have one that's warm and
dry. Onions should be kept cool and dry.
Lettuce, spinach, broocoli, cauliflower, brussel sprouts,
collards, kale and Chinese cabbage are hardy enough to
survive light frosts and can even be left in the garden
long after frosts if they are given protection with straw.
We have been surprised how long you can eat right out of
your garden, even in our cold New England climate. At times
we have had some of these hardy vegetables in the garden
until December. We've found, too, you can save your
full-sized green tomatoes - just pull up the whole vine
before the first frost and hang, or store the tomatoes in
small baskets. They will gradually ripen if kept in a warm
(not hot!)place.
But don't make one mistake we did! We didn't weed out the
poor specimens at first and we lost a lot of our precious
vegetables.
Bank storage space if you have a hill handy-can be made
with concrete or heavy lumber walls and ceiling. It should
be at least 6' x 5' x 5' high and covered with 3 feet of
dirt. No extra moisture or damp packing is necessary. In
fact, getting plenty of drainage is the main problem along
with keeping out vermin.
There are other methods of storage: sinking a barrel
upright in the ground which is not too satisfactory because
it holds so little. Another is the trench method which is
simply digging a trench below frost and lining with straw;
vegetables are then added, and all is covered. Obviously,
it's not easy digging vegetables out and you can't check up
on them easily.
For people with small cellars like us or for those of you
who are planning new houses with radiant heating (which
doesn't require expensive cellar space), it might be
possible to have shed-type storage space attached to the
garage. Of course, the walls would have to be insulated, as
with the other methods, and the thickness would have to be
determined by the material you used. We have not tested out
this idea but it would seem to be a workable plan.
Obviously, cold storage is such an easy way to conserve
food that it is probably the first method you will want to
take advantage of.
Hub of The Homestead THE FREEZER
If you could take a peek in our freezer today, or any day,
you would see an amazing, wonderful assortment of delicious
foods. For on our miniature farm, nearly all activities
lead to the freezer. Into it goes almost any thing and
everything we can raise, plus items we buy. And the food
comes out fresh whenever we want it - summer or winter. No
other method of preserving food has ever made such a happy
situation possible.
From the standpoint of abundance, we have eaten better on
our homestead than we ever have before - and that includes
the war years of scarcity and rationing. The chicken we
take out of our freezer is tender, delicious. Yes, we have
corn-on-the-cob and lush raspberries in January, and
goodtasting greens as well as lots of other things from our
past year's garden . . . and it tastes as good as it did
fresh out of the garden.
Ed and I both believe the quick-freezer is one answer to
man's long search for a way to harness the bounty of
nature. At any rate, we know it's a way ordinary people
like us can have more security and independence than we
ever thought possible.
The freezer was one of the first big capital investments we
made and after using it, it would still be the first if we
were starting over again. Ed loves to say that if you want
to get your wife interested in homesteading, just get her a
freezer. I must admit it helped intrigue me with country
living and now I'm glad it did, for I would never go back
to the city.
A freezing cabinet cuts your cost of living and at the same
time raises your standard of living. Even if you did not
raise any of your own food you could buy fresh vegetables,
fruits or meat in quantities at wholesale or seasonal
prices and store them away. The cabinet should eventually
pay for itself from your savings in such buying. It costs
very little to run a freezer - about the same as an
electric refrigerator.
Of course, if you raise your own food the savings are even
greater. If you hunt or fish, you can put away some of your
favorite wild duck or fresh trout for the time you couldn't
otherwise enjoy such delicacies. Or you can even make some
good trades with your friends - we have swapped some of our
home grown fowl and meat for such tasty things as newly dug
clams, fresh fish and that rare treat, venison.
You already know that in comparison with canned foods, many
frozen foods taste better, look better and have more food
value. We have even found that vegetables and fruits frozen
immediately after picking are better than the so-called
"fresh" stuff you buy in the market. When you stop to think
how many hundreds or thousands of miles an out-of-season
tomato or cauliflower travels to meet you you realize that
the word "fresh" may mean a variety of things.
As a home-maker I have found there are many, many pleasures
connected with our freezer besides its unequalled service
in preserving foods. A freezer saves a tremendous amount of
shopping time because you have your own little storehouse
of vegetables, fruits and meats , ready to use. If
you find you need a lot of fresh bread and don't make your
own, you simply buy a large quantity and freeze it. What's
more, you can freeze stale bread and when it defrosts, it's
fresh again. Practically a miracle, isn't it?
A freezer has fascinating possibilities. Every fall we
freeze lots of sweet apple cider at a cost of 2¢ a
quart for morning fruit juice, or it's elegant for hot,
mulled cider on a winter's evening. Also when I make stews,
soups or home-baked beans, it's just about as easy to cook
double or triple the amount needed and freeze some for
future use. You can also freeze cakes and pies - or the
dough to be used for pies and cookies. There seems to be no
limit as to what a freezer can do.
If you are preserving your own foods, you'll find that
freezing is far easier than canning. To show you how simple
it is, here are the steps involved in freezing green peas:
1. Pick the peas from your garden.
2. Shell and wash the peas, discarding old or imperfect
ones.
3. Blanch peas. That simply means placing peas in a
colander or wire basket and immersing them in rapidly
boiling water (at least a gallon to a pound of peas) for
one minute. Then immediately immerse peas in cold running
water.
5. Drain and pour peas in to a moisture-vapor-proof bag or
container and seal.
Quick freezing fruits is absurdly simple. Take strawberries
for instance. Remove stems, wash, cover with sugar syrup,
package, freeze. When it comes to meats, it's nothing at
all once the meat is cleaned and cut, ready for cooking.
Just wrap and freeze.
There is a wide assortment of containers made especially
for freezing - that is, vapor and moisture proof. I won't
describe these here, for you will have to get a bulletin or
book with complete directions if you are going to freeze
foods.
We bought our freezer shortly before Pearl Harbor and paid
$440 for it. It is a 13 cubic foot cabinet and holds
approximately 700 pounds of food. The price we paid was
high, but few freezers had been made at the time we bought
ours. Now, many large companies are building them, with
mass production the price is lower; $230 for one similar to
ours.
Many people have been using frozen food lockers which have
rented for $6-$15 a year. If the locker plant is situated
conveniently to your home, you may prefer this method of
having a frozen food supply. A locker plant usually offers
the convenience, of packaging and cutting meat for you and
also provides a place to hang and cool meat before
freezing.
However, I personally prefer a quick-freezer at home where
I can tuck away a few boxes of fruits or vegetables or a
small quantity of meat as I find time to prepare them. When
you are raising large quantities of your own food, it may
become practical to use both a home freezer and a locker,
as you would then have the convenience of both
arrangements. Or another plan would be to build (or have
built) your own freezer room and cool room.
From our own experience we have learned several things
about buying and running a freezer. We made a serious
mistake in placing our freezing cabinet in our garage where
the temperature drops below freezing in the winter. We
discovered that such low temperatures prevent the motor
from operating properly, so we now have it in our "Harvest
Room." After having our freezer break down once and losing
some of our hard-earned foods, we know now that there
should be some signal to warn you when the temperature
rises above the danger point. There should also be
instructions fastened on the freezer to tell you when and
where to oil the motor. These things we learned from our
one bitter lesson and we wanted to pass them along. It pays
to buy a good cabinet from a reputable dealer and with so
many new designs developed during the war years it will be
wise to look over a number of freezers before choosing
yours. Whatever your intentions are on using a freezer, we
would certainly recommend getting one with a special
compartment for quick-freezing your own food.
We certainly believe that food freez ers widely distributed
will make as phenomenal a change in this country as did low
priced cars. With a good freezer and a little piece of land
you can be just about as independent and as secure as you
wish. The freezer can be the secret of one goal all we
Americans constantly work for - freedom from want. Anyhow,
that's what our freezer means to us.
Home Canning
When guests come in unexpectedly for meals, Mrs. R. can
serve a wonderful dinner on short order, complete with
half-a-dozen meat choices, corn-on-the-cob, and fresh
strawberry shortcake. If you want to interest your wife in
home food production, plan to get her a quick freezer.
There was a time when practically every article written on
canning started out with the old saw - "Eat what you can -
and can what you can't."
Today, that's so far from reality it isn't even funny. Of
course, you eat all you want during July, August, September
and October directly from the garden. Then, as we've
pointed out, it's easiest to utilize a root cellar. Next is
preservation by freezing - if you're lucky enough to be
able to use this wonderful new method. Then comes canning.
In all frankness, it is best to preserve certain things in
glass jars - tomatoes, sauerkraut, pickles, stewed fruits,
preserves and jelly. But canning, even with a pressure
cooker, is more difficult than freezing and the results,
minus the exceptions noted, are, we think, inferior to
freezing.
I will say that the savings in canning your own fruits and
vegetables instead of buying them is tremendous. I know
that's contrary to what we've been told, but it's true
because you do it all on your own place-you don't pay for
all the traveling raw vegetables do to get to a factory and
back in cans to grocery shelves. Take the popular tomato as
an example - here is the cost of our 75 quarts of home
canned tomatoes the b est we can figure it:
75 quarts commercially sell at 22¢ each - $16.50 Our
Savings; 80%.
And we do not blush at saying our tomatoes are superior to
what you can buy in taste, color and texture!
Prejudice had been built up against home canning by making
it appear to be a back-breaking complicated chore. But we
have found it fun by doing only a few jars each day in the
summer instead of trying to do it all in a few days. It is
pretty simple, especially with the help of the booklets put
out by the canning jar companies. We happen to have a Kerr
booklet (Kerr Glass Manufacturing Co., Huntington, W. Va.)
which cost 10¢ and which led us successfully through
all our canning, though neither Ed nor I had ever canned
before.
Canning is not complicated but it does require accuracy. To
make the work easier, get all your equipment ready to use
before you actually prepare the food. And by all means do
your preparatory work in a pleasant place. At first we did
ours on our back terrace, but now we have our delightful
"Harvest Room."
It is usually suggested that you plan 100 quarts of fruit
and vegetables for each member of your family, but if you
are seriously trying to be self-sufficient and are
preserving food only by canning we believe you would want
somewhat more. However, the first year aim for the 100 and
the next year you'll be able to adjust the amount to your
own needs. The 100 quarts should be approximately divided
into one-third fruits, one-third vegetables and one-third
tomatoes or tomato juice.
That figure sounds rather forbidding doesn't it, from the
standpoint of quantity and time to preserve? Let's take up
the question of quantity. In the case of apples, one bushel
produces about 20 quarts; cherries, 24 quarts; peaches, 25
quarts, plums, 30 quarts; berries, 24 quarts. That is a
good deal more of each fruit than any one person will eat
during the non-productive season. So to achieve your goal
you would only have to can a few quarts of each fruit as it
came in season. The same principle applies to vegetables.
As for canning equipment, by all means try to get a
pressure canner. It is recommended by all authorities as
the safest way to can your vegetables properly and it saves
time, fuel and work.
Still unknown to thousands of families the pressure canner
is also a miraculous cooker. It will cook a complete meal
in 10 to 15 minutes, including soup, roast and vegetables!
Using little water, it saves valuable vitamins and
minerals. It tenderizes cheaper cuts of meat. It can
preserve surplus meat, poultry or fish, although we believe
that the quick-frozen method is best.
As for pressure cooker size you will want an 18 quart
canner (holds 5 quart jars) or a 25 quart size (7 jars).
With the canner you will receive a booklet giving you a
time table for processing and general directions for
canning.
Even if you don't go in for all the "Have-More" Plan , we
believe in "canning all you can" anyway - and that goes for
peace time as well as during a war or a depression. Believe
me, it will give you a tremendous feeling of satisfaction
and security when you begin to line up the jars on your
shelves. Ed is just as proud as I am to point to the
canning shelf and say, "I canned those bread and butter
pickles." Such bragging is good for the soul - it's one of
those intangible satisfactions you get from homesteading.
Salt Some Away
Another easy way to keep certain vegetables is to salt them
down. The one big fault with this method is that it
destroys a lot of the vitamins and minerals. For this
reason we have not done any brining (except to make
sauerkraut, ham and salt pork).
Everybody knows about salting cabbage to make sauerkraut. I
put mine up in jars as I have found this even easier than
the crock method. It is also possible to salt away corn,
beans, cauliflower, turnips and peppers.
Alternate layers of washed vegetables and salt are packed
into earthen crocks and weighted down. If enough brine
to.cover vegetables completely is not formed, a
concentrated brine made with boiling water may be added.
Use 3 1/4 cups of salt (common or coarse salt is better
than fine tablesalt) to 6 quarts of water. Keep in a cool
place - the vegetables are ready to use at any time.
To desalt for use, put salted vegetables in a big pan,
cover with cold water, heat to luke warm, stir and pour off
water. Repeat until vegetables are only slightly salty.
Then you can cook in regular manner.
Dehydration
During the early part of the war I read a lot of articles
telling how wonderfully easy it was to dry your vegetables
and fruits at home. Well - in our attempt to carry out
miniature farming in the easiest, most modern way, we
borrowed one of the very best home model dehydrators which
set back one of our neighbors about $40.
We soon found that proper dehydration is not so terribly
simple after all. It takes as much preparatory work as
canning and it is more difficult than freezing foods. We
think its worst feature is the long drawn out drying
process. It takes 10 hours just to dry the food
thoroughly; you can scarcely complete the project in one
day.
In our section of the country where there is much moisture
in the air, dehydrated food should be packed in tightly
sealed jars so it won't absorb water again until you use
it. And when you do, dried food takes pre-soaking to return
it to its normal state.
We do not believe home dehydration will ever be
widely used in America except where it is specifically
desirable for reasons of taste, geography or space.
Frankly, we couldn't stand the taste of the three things we
tried - snap beans, spinach and broccoli. But if your
family is extremely fond of dried beans and peas then it
would be worthwhile to dry them. Also, we all know that
certain fruits are splendid dried.
If you are interested in drying foods, we suggest you try
it out in your cooking oven first and see if you like the
idea. You'll get about the same results you'd get with a
special machine. Place oven door open and set the
temperature at 165°. You'll have to get the length of
time for drying your specific vegetable or fruit from an
instruction booklet. Then freshen up the dried samples,
cook them and see if you like them. If you do approve, you
can either buy or build a dehydrator.
You can build a dehydrator using a small electric fan and a
bathroom heater but the thermostat is quite important. It
is probably just as well to buy the whole dehydrator or
else use your oven. Detailed building plans may be obtained
from your County Farm Agent.
We'd suggest you read a little booklet called "Dehydrating
Fruits and Vegtables," put out by General Electric Company,
Schenectady, N. Y. It costs 10¢ but it is well worth
reading before you decide to go in for
dehydration.
Suggested Reading:
ABC of Home Freezing , $1.00. The Countryman's
Cookbook, the ideal cook book for the country place.
De licious and wholesome ways to cook food you raise
yourself. ($3.25)