Shades-of-Oregon
Deeply Rooted
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2024
- Messages
- 886
- Reaction score
- 2,576
- Points
- 145
Haven’t heard about canned foods were bad without any signs or smell. I’ll look that up. Never experienced that thruout many years of canning.Dented or bulging cans are a sure sign, but this news story centered on cans/jars that appeared normal and tasted nearly normal. It was enough to scare off chicken-hearted me.
On edit, I wonder if following the money trail from that news story would have led to Del Monte et al. It was right at the start of the back-to-the-land movement and perhaps the commercial food industry regarded home canning as a rising competitor.
I made bread and butter pickles long ago according to a recipe, so technically they were canned in their jars, but, as with the blackberry jam I made in that same era, I refrigerated them as soon as they cooled. I think of them as "refrigerator" preserves and pickles, even though technically they weren't.
Only in this past decade did I learn about actual refrigerator pickles and jellies/jams. Easier to make, and more sensible, since ultimately I'm depending on refrigeration to preserve them. Now I usually keep a jar of pickled cut up bell peppers and sliced onions in the fridge because they last so long that way.
Thanks for the heads up.