Greetings, Rural Sprout Readers,Â
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I wanted to take just a moment this Sunday to thank all of you for reading and growing along with us at Rural Sprout. What started as one person’s quest to find good, quality information on gardening and becoming more self-sufficient has slowly blossomed into a community of loyal readers, growers, cooks, and builders.Â
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We’re glad you’re a part of Rural Sprout.Â
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And I wanted to remind you to keep those photos of your gardens, your canning, and your homestead coming in!
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Do you have a pantry slowly filling up with jar after jar of preserved goodness? Send us a picture!Â
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How about tomatoes that are going bonkers or your prized zinnias? Send us a picture!
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I love sharing your photos with our community.Â
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Speaking of a pantry filling up with jars…
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The other day I was trying to remember the first time I canned something on my own. I grew up in a family where preserving vegetables, jams, pickles and even soup and sauce was just a normal part of every summer.
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My love of cooking and comforting those I love with food has grown out of a childhood of building memories in the kitchens of the family that I love.Â
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Some of my earliest memories of my grandmothers are in their kitchens.Â
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I remember making jam one summer up on the sunny hill of my paternal grandmother’s home. I had discovered wild strawberries in the field beyond her backdoor, so she sent me out with an empty rainbow sherbet tub and had me pick as many as I could find.
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I picked until my fingertips were stained red.Â
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Then Grandma turned that tiny little pail into a few small jars of the sweetest strawberry jam I’ve ever tasted.Â
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To this day, I can still remember thinking how beautiful those jars were, lined up on the screened-in porch railing to cool, like a row of shiny rubies winking in the sun. And as priceless too. I’ve never been lucky enough to find enough wild strawberries to make another batch, but the taste lives in my memory.
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Of course, my maternal grandmother was always canning too. As a mother of five hungry kids, she had plenty of mouths to feed.
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The soft, puttering sounds of her pressure canner accentuate many of my childhood memories from her kitchen. I remember the heat of her big wood cookstove baking the house in the summer while she canned jar after jar of green beans, corn, and carrots from the garden.
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If you got to eat dinner at Gigi and Grandpa’s, she would descend into the terrifyingly dark basement and come back up with a jar of veggies or applesauce to go with the meal.
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And it was always pickles at dad’s house. Countless jars of dill pickles. Always with a clove or two of garlic and a flowering head of dill at the bottom.
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We would snack on pickle spears while playing cards in the dead of winter and argue over who got the pickled garlic clove. I remember sucking the juice from brine-soaked dill, not wanting a drop of that flavor to go to waste.Â
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We’ve got a new piece this week with twelve beginner-friendly canning recipes.Â
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That’s what sent me down memory lane. It got me thinking back to my first experience with shiny clean jars and a giant water bath canner heating up the kitchen—no grandparent looking over my shoulder to guide me.
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My first time canning on my own was a bushel of beautiful Pennsylvania peaches.
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In spite of all my years helping, I was still sure I was going to get it wrong, and we’d all die of botulism.Â
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In the end, I had around 24 quarts of rosy, gold peaches on my kitchen table, every inch of my counter was sticky, and if I had to blanch and peel another peach, I was going to cry.
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Still, I sat in my steamy kitchen enjoying the audible “pink” of the lids sealing in the delicious taste of summer in Pennsylvania.Â
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After that first batch, I dove in headfirst to canning.Â
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These days, I’ve paired down my penchant for stuff, so I no longer own a huge canner. I get along quite well with my favorite stockpot and a kitchen towel at the bottom.
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And this time of year, it rarely leaves the stovetop. Jam, chutney, and pickles are filling my pantry shelves, as the shelf where I put my empty jars throughout the year grows bare.Â
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Whether you’re new to canning or an old hand, I hope your pantry shelves are filling up too.Â
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How To Grow Rosemary From Seed Or Cuttings – Everything You Need To Know
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I don’t know about you, but I’m quite good at killing rosemary plants, but that all changes this year, thanks to this article.Â
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Everything You Need to Know to Start a Forest Garden
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If some of our recent interviews have got you curious about forest gardening, you’ll want to check out this how-to guide on starting a forest garden of your own.
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12 Simple Canning Recipes For Beginners
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Beginners can get started with any of these easy recipes – from jam to salsa; you can easily tackle any of them.Â
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I Tried 6 Top Gardening Apps – Which is the Best?
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We use our phones for nearly everything these days, why not keeping track of our gardens too? I tried a few popular gardening apps, and here’s what I found…
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How to Utilize Trap Crops To Save Your Garden From Pests
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Are you tired of pests eating up your favorite veggies? Set a trap with a trap crop!
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That's all for this week, Rural Sprout Readers.
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