Canning Humpies
Posted: Wed Sep 07, 2011 5:30 pm
Anyone have a good process for canning humpies? Judging by the excellant posts on this site I'm sure someone can help me out. Let's hear it.
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First and foremost you must look up the time and pressure required to process. I can't remember off the top of my head. It is the most important part besides clean, clean, clean!!!!!! Everything must be sterilized. Now that I’ve sufficiently scared you, it's really pretty easy.rdefreese wrote:Anyone have a good process for canning humpies? Judging by the excellant posts on this site I'm sure someone can help me out. Let's hear it.
I use the recipe that came with my pressure canner, and it's pressure and time. For my pressure canner (a 12qt Mirro), it's 10lbs pressure for 110 minutes EXCEPT for elevations above 1000', then it's 15lbs pressure for 110 minutes. We're at 2300' so I use 15lbs pressure.Bodofish wrote:soooo I'm going by what the home canners say on time and temp.
If you process the fish till it's cooked all the veggies will be done too. I never use a receipe, I just do it. Well as far as filling the jars. Follow time and temp as a minimum. Canning flesh is serious bizzzz.
That's sounds spot on. Of course with the commercial rigs we went quite high but those were big pressure vessels 5' high and 18' long with a set of tracks down the middle for loading, All fed by a big boiler.hewesfisher wrote:I use the recipe that came with my pressure canner, and it's pressure and time. For my pressure canner (a 12qt Mirro), it's 10lbs pressure for 110 minutes EXCEPT for elevations above 1000', then it's 15lbs pressure for 110 minutes. We're at 2300' so I use 15lbs pressure.Bodofish wrote:soooo I'm going by what the home canners say on time and temp.
If you process the fish till it's cooked all the veggies will be done too. I never use a receipe, I just do it. Well as far as filling the jars. Follow time and temp as a minimum. Canning flesh is serious bizzzz.
The recipe is simply fish, plus 1/2 teaspoon canning salt per pint (do not use table salt), plus hot water. The only other instruction is to pour hot water over the fish and gently scrape the skin until it is white and clean. It then says to wipe dry and cut into sections. I just put the fish in without scraping the skin, and it's awesome.
I've heard of others adding onions, garlic, spices, etc., but I haven't tried that yet. My canner does not specify a time for quart jars, only pints, and that's what I use.
Works very well with Roosevelt rainbows and I'm sure it would work just as well with salmon. Tastes great right out of the jar, and better than any commercially canned fish I've ever had. Enjoy!