Hugs thx for the info!
yeah I've always wondered about the whole you can't do that deal... when there is stuff just like that on our grocery store shelves...
First year I canned pumpkin I pureed it before looking up canning times... well I wasn't going to let it go to waste and went ahead and canned it anyhow... and not one jar went bad... and I had like 23 jars... LOL so after that I figured the usda's recomendations were just that a guide to get you started... not set in stone...
I plan on trying to can milk if I ever get our dairy animal... That way we have milk on hand when they dry up to kid again... I don't have a lot of freezer space so if I want homegrown milk I'll have to can it... plus right now we don't have a place to put another freezer... So I figure if eagle brand can do it then so can I... LOL
I found more info on the canning of cheese... basically same info you stated... it's info from backwoodshome.com website...
Canning cheese Ask Jackie article...
I read somewhere about you canning cheese. Now I cant find out how. Can you tell me where to look or better yet, how to do it?
Cathy Adams
Camden, OH
You wont find this one in a canning manual, but I experimented around and found something that works for me. One day I was canning tomatoes while whacking a chunk of cheddar cheese for lunch. Mmmm, I wondered. Tomatoes are acid. Cheese is acid. So I cut up cubes of cheese, sitting a wide-mouthed pint jar in a pan of water, on the wood stove. Slowly cubes of cheese melted and I added more until the jar was full to within half an inch of the top. Then I put a hot, previously boiled lid on the jar, screwed down the ring firmly tight and added the cheese to a batch of jars in the boiling water bath canner to process. It sealed on removal, right along with the jars of tomatoes. Two years later, I opened it and it was great. Perhaps a little sharper than before, but great. So I started canning cheese of all types (but not soft cheeses) and, so far, theyve all been successful. To take the cheeses out of the jar, dip the jar in a pan of boiling water for a few minutes, then take a knife and go around the jar, gently prying the cheese out. Store it in a plastic zip lock bag.
She also has info on canning BACON!!!
http://www.backwoodshome.com/articles2/gay127.html