After that you need to core them.
We ended up cooking a full bushel (actually a bit more) that day, so I was very glad of our new toy... You just throw tomatoes (skins and all) in the top and it skins and seeds them. We did about 75% of the tomatoes this way, doing 25% the old fashioned way so our salsa would have some tomato chunks.Then there is a LOT of seeding and chopping. With hubby and I working together it went quicker, but was still a couple good hours of work. Here is hubby chopping the five cups of diced jalapenos I needed for one of the three recipes we made...
When all that is done comes the easier part of the job, cooking the salsa. But when you are doing 15 pint batches...That is a lot of salsa, and a lot of stirring. This is where our high BTU gas stove shines, when cooking 15 pints of salsa (which started as 20 some, as we reduced it by about 1/3rd.)
Then all you have to do is stick it in the jars (which we do to quickly to get photos, ensuring hot and clean jars) and put it in the not water bath. Our new one will hold 9 quarts (or nine pints) at a time, so each batch of salsa and the pizza sauce required 2 runs of the bath. To make it quicker, we do it outside on a turkey fryer burner, which will boil the water in 10 minutes, and keep the water roiling even after adding the jars.
In the end we worked from about 2 until about 10 and we ended up with quite a few jars!
2 comments:
You and Eric never seem to stop!! How do you both work such loooooong hours in the office and then put what has to be a 40 hour work week in at your farm too?? WOW!
Yum, yum, yum! Save me a couple jars, please!
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