The Farm Girl’s Guide to Preserving the Harvest: How to Can, Freeze, Dehydrate, and Ferment Your Garden’s Goodness

Preserving food can be one of the most intimidating aspects of homesteading and cooking. Luckily, no one makes it as easy and as much fun as farm-girl-in-the-making Ann Acetta-Scott. For a beginner new to the world of preserving, the ideal tool is a detailed reference guide, and in The Farm Girl’s Guide to Preserving the Harvest, Ann covers all the basics on canning, dehydrating, freezing, fermenting, curing, and smoking, including how to select and use the right tools for each method.

This guide takes home preservers through the beginning, moderate, and advanced stages of preserving. Newcomers can start with a simple jam and jelly recipe using a hot water bath canner, while others may be advanced enough to have mastered the pressure canner and are ready to move onto curing and smoking meat and fish.

With more than 30 delicious and healthy recipesand Ann’s expertise and encouragement, the home preserver will build confidence in the most common methods of preserving.

From the Publisher

greens, flowers, eggs, tomatoes, peppers, preservation, food, healthy, garden, vegetables, fruitsgreens, flowers, eggs, tomatoes, peppers, preservation, food, healthy, garden, vegetables, fruits

Learn to Preserve the Flavors of Every Season

“Preserving foods in no way should be intimidating, and that’s exactly why I needed to write this book. You’re on your way to becoming your own grocery store. Get ready to be freed, to be empowered, and to enjoy the process along the way.” – Ann Accetta-Scott

The Process of Preserving…

kombucha, guide, garden, vegetables, fruits, pesto, food, sustainable, do-it-yourself, healthykombucha, guide, garden, vegetables, fruits, pesto, food, sustainable, do-it-yourself, healthy

kombucha, guide, garden, vegetables, fruits, pesto, food, sustainable, do-it-yourself, healthykombucha, guide, garden, vegetables, fruits, pesto, food, sustainable, do-it-yourself, healthy

kombucha, guide, garden, vegetables, fruits, pesto, food, sustainable, do-it-yourself, healthykombucha, guide, garden, vegetables, fruits, pesto, food, sustainable, do-it-yourself, healthy

kombucha, guide, garden, vegetables, fruits, pesto, food, sustainable, do-it-yourself, healthykombucha, guide, garden, vegetables, fruits, pesto, food, sustainable, do-it-yourself, healthy

Pressure Canning

“I succeeded in learning how to use a pressure canner without blowing up my kitchen or killing my family. So can you. It takes learning the whys and hows, then deciding what is best for your family. You see that pressure canner sitting there? Smile at it, give it a hug, and get to know it. It will soon become your partner in preserving clean healthy foods that contain pronounceable ingredients. How can you deny yourself or your family this opportunity? You can’t, and you shouldn’t.”

Dehydrating

“The biggest misconception is that all foods which are dehydrated become brittle when completely dried. Most vegetables will finish with either a leathery or brittle texture. Dried fruits are generally brittle, leathery, or pliable. Herbs, when completely dried, are brittle regardless of the type of herb being dried. Fruit or vegetable peels can also be dried and will be brittle upon completion, making them easy to grind into powder.”

Fermenting

“The public understands that probiotics are necessary to maintain a healthy digestive system but tends to resort to a synthetic probiotic option readily available over the counter. This type of probiotic is easy to consume with the instruction of “just add water.” What most people don’t understand is that a synthetic probiotic should only be consumed for a course of ten days at a time, whereas natural probiotics found in foods and drinks can be consumed daily without any restrictions. If the thought of fermented tea, water, vegetables, and even condiments is not appealing to you, then how about sauerkraut? Sadly, in our culture,

consuming fermented foods is foreign to many, even to homesteaders, though throughout Asia, Europe, and Africa, these foods are consumed daily and are credited for maintaining good health. What is more beneficial than natural probiotics and healthy enzymes? I can’t

think of anything.”

Freezing

“Ultimately, my goal is to freeze foods that cannot be canned, dried, or do not freeze-dry well. In addition to this, I’d like more options to what’s being placed into the freezer, like vegetables and fruit, which can later be used for cooking. Additionally, I love knowing that freezing vegetables or fruit depletes very little of their nutritional content.”

Publisher ‏ : ‎ Lyons Press; Illustrated edition (May 1, 2019)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 264 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1493036645
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1493036646
Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.29 pounds
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.75 x 0.56 x 8.8 inches

$16.79

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Preserving food can be one of the most intimidating aspects of homesteading and cooking. Luckily, no one makes it as easy and as much fun as farm-girl-in-the-making Ann Acetta-Scott. For a beginner new to the world of preserving, the ideal tool is a detailed reference guide, and in The Farm Girl’s Guide to Preserving the Harvest, Ann covers all the basics on canning, dehydrating, freezing, fermenting, curing, and smoking, including how to select and use the right tools for each method.

This guide takes home preservers through the beginning, moderate, and advanced stages of preserving. Newcomers can start with a simple jam and jelly recipe using a hot water bath canner, while others may be advanced enough to have mastered the pressure canner and are ready to move onto curing and smoking meat and fish.

With more than 30 delicious and healthy recipesand Ann’s expertise and encouragement, the home preserver will build confidence in the most common methods of preserving.

From the Publisher

greens, flowers, eggs, tomatoes, peppers, preservation, food, healthy, garden, vegetables, fruitsgreens, flowers, eggs, tomatoes, peppers, preservation, food, healthy, garden, vegetables, fruits

Learn to Preserve the Flavors of Every Season

“Preserving foods in no way should be intimidating, and that’s exactly why I needed to write this book. You’re on your way to becoming your own grocery store. Get ready to be freed, to be empowered, and to enjoy the process along the way.” – Ann Accetta-Scott

The Process of Preserving…

kombucha, guide, garden, vegetables, fruits, pesto, food, sustainable, do-it-yourself, healthykombucha, guide, garden, vegetables, fruits, pesto, food, sustainable, do-it-yourself, healthy

kombucha, guide, garden, vegetables, fruits, pesto, food, sustainable, do-it-yourself, healthykombucha, guide, garden, vegetables, fruits, pesto, food, sustainable, do-it-yourself, healthy

kombucha, guide, garden, vegetables, fruits, pesto, food, sustainable, do-it-yourself, healthykombucha, guide, garden, vegetables, fruits, pesto, food, sustainable, do-it-yourself, healthy

kombucha, guide, garden, vegetables, fruits, pesto, food, sustainable, do-it-yourself, healthykombucha, guide, garden, vegetables, fruits, pesto, food, sustainable, do-it-yourself, healthy

Pressure Canning

“I succeeded in learning how to use a pressure canner without blowing up my kitchen or killing my family. So can you. It takes learning the whys and hows, then deciding what is best for your family. You see that pressure canner sitting there? Smile at it, give it a hug, and get to know it. It will soon become your partner in preserving clean healthy foods that contain pronounceable ingredients. How can you deny yourself or your family this opportunity? You can’t, and you shouldn’t.”

Dehydrating

“The biggest misconception is that all foods which are dehydrated become brittle when completely dried. Most vegetables will finish with either a leathery or brittle texture. Dried fruits are generally brittle, leathery, or pliable. Herbs, when completely dried, are brittle regardless of the type of herb being dried. Fruit or vegetable peels can also be dried and will be brittle upon completion, making them easy to grind into powder.”

Fermenting

“The public understands that probiotics are necessary to maintain a healthy digestive system but tends to resort to a synthetic probiotic option readily available over the counter. This type of probiotic is easy to consume with the instruction of “just add water.” What most people don’t understand is that a synthetic probiotic should only be consumed for a course of ten days at a time, whereas natural probiotics found in foods and drinks can be consumed daily without any restrictions. If the thought of fermented tea, water, vegetables, and even condiments is not appealing to you, then how about sauerkraut? Sadly, in our culture,

consuming fermented foods is foreign to many, even to homesteaders, though throughout Asia, Europe, and Africa, these foods are consumed daily and are credited for maintaining good health. What is more beneficial than natural probiotics and healthy enzymes? I can’t

think of anything.”

Freezing

“Ultimately, my goal is to freeze foods that cannot be canned, dried, or do not freeze-dry well. In addition to this, I’d like more options to what’s being placed into the freezer, like vegetables and fruit, which can later be used for cooking. Additionally, I love knowing that freezing vegetables or fruit depletes very little of their nutritional content.”

Publisher ‏ : ‎ Lyons Press; Illustrated edition (May 1, 2019)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 264 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1493036645
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1493036646
Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.29 pounds
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.75 x 0.56 x 8.8 inches

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The Farm Girl’s Guide to Preserving the Harvest: How to Can, Freeze, Dehydrate, and Ferment Your Garden’s Goodness
The Farm Girl’s Guide to Preserving the Harvest: How to Can, Freeze, Dehydrate, and Ferment Your Garden’s Goodness

$16.79

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