Well, the pressure canner made its appearance outside the pantry today, along with my canning funnel and jar lifters. Those are my tools. For pickling, I use my canning kettle because with their vinegar and salt, they do not require the extra heat the canner produces but are happily and safely processed in what we call a water bath. In some ways, I really prefer the pressure canner because it requires less water in it, making it less heavy to deal with, and because the jars and lids do not need sterilizing before using as they do with the canning kettle.
I snapped all of the beans I had in the refrigerator and they added up to seven fine quarts, which is the exact capacity of the canner. That was quite pleasing. I did, however, learn a lesson today and I learned it by making a mistake which is about the best way to really learn something.
I've been using a pressure cooker my entire cooking life. I even bought one when I was in college and that was one of the few things I brought with me when I left college in Denver to move to Tallahassee. That, and a rocking chair, and some parakeets.
I still have the rocking chair. Oh, I still have a pressure cooker, it's just a different one.
Anyway, when you're using a pressure cooker, you can sort of cheat when it comes to releasing the pressure after you've finished cooking. You can do this by running water over the lid after taking it off the stove or slightly tipping the little weight thing that goes on top of the cooker so that it releases the steam that's built up inside. You aren't supposed to do this but my mother always did it and some woman who taught her to use a pressure cooker must have done it too. And thus, that has been my habit as well.
I'd never done that with the pressure canner though because I'm a relatively new learner about the device and my theory is that you should follow the rules until you have a true knowledge of how something works. But today I was feeling sort of like I knew what I was doing and after the little valve on the lid which pops up when there is pressure in the canner, had gone down, I sort of tilted the pressure weight thingie which was still hissing just a tiny bit and thought I'd let all the pressure release, or at least well enough, and then I opened the lid and let me tell you- not a good idea. Nothing blew up or anything like that but one of the jar lids sort of buckled and the liquid in all the jars was still just boiling away.
"I'm sorry!" I said to my beans, and put that lid back on and secured it.
Everything turned out all right although I am going to put the one jar whose lid seemed to take the brunt of it all in the refrigerator and use those first.
You can see that jar on the far left.
And that took me about all day long. Okay. Not really. About three hours though, and I'm a fast bean snapper. While I was working, I was listening to a very good book that I finished about the same time the beans went into the canner.
The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store by James McBride.
Sigh. I bet he's a good one.
I'm not even going to try and tell you what the book is about because it is a rather involved story but at its core it's about a community in Pennsylvania in the 1930's where Jewish immigrants and Black folks who have moved up north searching for a better life, live side-by-side in a rather run-down neighborhood. McBride's mother was Jewish, his father Black so I guess in a way, this book is what he's done with his own heritage. The first book I ever read by him was a memoir. The Color of Water. That one was specifically about his mother and I will always believe that title is the best title of a book ever.
I loved this book and I'll probably either listen to it again or read it with my eyes.
On to Zepbound, Day Two.
Well, y'all, after doing a little research, I have discovered that many people who begin taking the drug feel the effects within hours. It's not just me. Today has been much like yesterday. I think of food because I've got a seventy-year habit of that but I don't crave, or even want the food I'm thinking of. My brain isn't constantly doing a review of what I know is in the refrigerator to figure out what I want to eat next. I know I have a lot to learn here. If I am eating a great deal less, I need to make sure that what I eat is nutritionally dense. This only makes sense. And many people seem to report that their tastes change on the drug. That steamed vegetables are more pleasing. That they don't crave cream in their coffee. That they don't even crave coffee the way they did. Now I don't know what's going to happen in my experience but I know that my appetite has been very easy to satisfy again today. I do feel hunger when it's been some time since I ate but a small amount of food is enough. I honestly do not want more. This can and probably will change. We shall see.
But I will tell you this- just the fact that I feel like a "normal" person when it comes to the meaning and importance of food in my life for the first time ever seems like a miracle.
I do not use that word lightly or with hyperbole. People for whom food is basically fuel have no understanding whatsoever how different it is for many of us who, all our lives have been told to "just eat less, exercise more!" which is every bit as helpful as telling a junkie to "just stop doing heroin!"
And speaking of junkies whom I love (okay, well, whatever), today is Sunday and this morning I ran across this video and it seemed to me to be the perfect Sunday morning hymn for the Church of the Batshit Crazy.
Plus, he looks damn good.
Your comment about the Stones reminded me of a brilliant idea I read today, that Taylor Swift, Springsteen and the Stones give a free concert on the mall during Donald’s bd spectacle! Isnt that the greatest idea? Suz
ReplyDeletePretty sure that's not going to happen. No way would the administration allow them to set up a single chair for such an event there.
DeleteAmazing that the Zepbound has started "working" almost immediately. I understand that the medication can have several unpleasant side effects and I hope that they do not spoil your Zepbound journey. I guess that your prescriber has alerted you to these potential issues.
ReplyDeleteWhat unpleasant side-effects? Like gastric things? So far I've had zero problems but of course this is early days.
DeleteInteresting observation about the new med. It sounds as if it turned off a switch in the brain. This sounds good if food just gets into proportion in your day. You sound a lot happier, too.
ReplyDeleteExactly. That's exactly what it does. Or perhaps it turns ON a switch in the brain. The one that tells us when we're really hungry or not, and when we're full.
DeleteYour green beans look mighty good.
ReplyDeleteThe Zepbound is working some magic for you.
I am happy for you and your positive experience.
Well, very, very much too soon to really tell.
DeleteBotulism beans, the housewife's revenge ,always comes to mind seeing home made canned beans.
ReplyDeleteI am sure that you will be fine on Zepbound- it has a pretty good reputation. But, if for one minute, you start feeling weird...well ,you know. Dump that idea. Wishing you well , thanks for talking about it- a worthy consideration for this fatty.
What sort of weird? So far the only weirdness is that I don't feel like I need to eat all the time. And that is pretty weird.
DeleteI've never killed anyone with my canned goods yet! I'll try and keep it that way.
Used to go to my aunt's to help her can green beans when I was a girl. Remember vividly one day the pressure cooker blew its top. We were in the garden picking more beans and heard this WHOMP. Went to the house and the kitchen was covered in glass and green beans. All we did the rest of the day and most of the next was scrape green beans off every surface. Years later I went to visit my aunt. She'd gotten a new stove. Said when they pulled the old one out, there were all these lumps on the cabinet sides and behind the stove. She couldn't figure out what it was - then she remembered the day the pressure cooker exploded. All she could do was stand there and laugh.
ReplyDeleteWe began moving around the country when I was 14 Thought for years I didn't like vegetables.What I didn't like were commercially prepared (especially in tin cans) vegetables. I'd grown up on fresh or home canned and was spoiled rotten!
I did blow a pressure cooker once. I was cooking a pot of black soybeans and it didn't explode but the weight got pushed off and the beans hit the ceilings, the walls, everything. Not a good day. Soy beans are really too frothy to pressure cook. I'm sure you will never forget the day your aunt's pressure cooker exploded. It's really good that y'all were not in the kitchen.
DeleteI bet you hated canned and frozen vegetables. And fresh vegetables in the grocery stores still aren't as good as the ones we grow ourselves, and they're a lot better than they used to be.
I wish I could get over my fear of canning! My mom always did the "tilt and lift" thing with the pressure cooker and that's what I did, until I gave up using it all together because I was always terrified it would explode. It's weird really because my DIL loves hers and is terrified the slow cooker will blow up - the exact opposite of me - I love my slow cooker!!!! And thank you for that book recommendation. I have put it on my wish list on Audible, although at the moment I'm really not using Audible much, to be honest! Maybe when the plumber leaves and I can get out more!
ReplyDeleteHow could a slow cooker explode?
DeleteA lot of people are really scared of pressure cookers but they are amazing when it comes to cooking tougher cuts of meat in shorter amounts of time. Also great for cooking beans which can take hours, like black beans and garbanzo beans.
I really liked that book.
I got my (storebought) beans done too, diagonally sliced, blanched and frozen. I don't think I will ever have a pressure cooker, in the past I've read stories of how they've blown up and left a mess all over the kitchen and I am sure they are safer now, but i'll feel safer if I never get one. And where on earth would I put it anyway? My kitchen is tiny. I do have a slow cooker that I always forget about, it's a small one and only cooks enough to serve two people.
ReplyDeletePressure cookers can explode but I think, as you say, they are much safer now than they used to be. But if you don't really care to use one, no reason why you should.
DeleteHere’s to all of that... and to beans!
ReplyDeleteAnd we shall be eating beans again tonight!
DeleteI'm glad the Zepbound is going well. So the pressure differential between the inside and outside of the jars caused the lid to buckle, you think? Or was it the abrupt shift in temperature?
ReplyDeleteProbably the pressure differential. This is all science though, so, I really have no idea how it all works. I sure learned my lesson.
DeleteI have never canned anything and have never wanted to really. I used to make dill pickles in a crock years ago but haven't done that for years and years since the crock cracked!
ReplyDeleteGlad you are having good results with your new med.
I have several crocks and I have made pickles in those, too. I hope to do that this summer!
DeleteHi, I bought McBride's book for my sister because her maiden name is James and her married name is McBride. And of course I read it first, and I loved it.
ReplyDeleteThat's so great!
DeleteLovely looking beans there, and thanks for the story about them (well, real life) and I'm glad you didn't have any more problems. Beans you've grown and canned will certainly be delicious! Glad the new med is having results you wanted.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Barbara.
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ReplyDeleteSo glad you are getting immediate relief from the tyranny of food. I'm curious if it will change your relationship to cooking?
I think I had a pressure cooker early in my second marriage. I only used it once or twice because, frankly, it scared me.
I was curious about the cooking question too. I think my cooking may change in some ways. I am hoping it inspires me to do more back to the basics stuff. Like, dirt to table in fewer steps.
DeletePressure cookers scare a lot of people.
Those beans are sOOOOOOO GREEN
ReplyDeleteAnd thus, we call them green beans!
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