Mickey328 said:
I'm curious, Moolie. Does your family eat most of your canned goods, or do you sell them?
We eat it all
We are big fruit eaters, and my Mom canned like this when I was a kid so it's what I'm used to (we lived in a big fruit-growing area in BC called the Okanagan Valley when I was small so fruit was all around us). Through the summer months my biggest goal (other than keeping the garden alive) is to find the best deals on enough fruit and tomatoes to get us through to the next summer--peaches, pears, apples/applesauce, fruit cocktail (peaches/pears/pineapple/grapes/cherries). WAY cheaper than I could ever buy commercially canned from the grocery store.
Our other canned staples are canned meats--mostly ground bison but also chicken, beef, and pork canned in chunks which all make for super quick easy dinners. Plus what everyone here calls "convenience meals" like soups, chili, baked beans, stew etc.
Beyond those staples I also make dill pickles, bread & butter pickles, pickled beets, dilly pickled beans, various relishes/antipasto/chutneys as meal accompaniments. And jams. There's probably more, this is just off the top of my head.
I only began using my Mom's old pressure canner a few years ago, but I've been doing all the fruit, tomatoes, pickles/relishes, and jam since I got married 19 years ago. Mom bought the pressure canner in order to can salmon when we lived on Haida Gwaii/Queen Charlotte Islands in BC. Most kids grow up on peanut butter or tuna sandwiches, we grew up on salmon sandwiches and everything else--but it was what was local and cheap so we ate it. I avoided salmon for a number of years after we left the islands, but now appreciate it again--and how lucky we were to have had it so good when we were kids.
I've always given away a few jars of jam and pickles and relishes at Christmas, and I think there are a few family members who actually count on getting a jar of something in their stockings each year.
But most of it is for us
