Kate Downham wrote:\Getting a pressure canner seems like it might help to save the meat out of the freezer, and would be handy for other things too, but I am wondering how it would fare on a wood cooking stove?
Gail Gardner @GrowMap
Small Business Marketing Strategist, lived on an organic farm in SE Oklahoma, but moved where I can plant more trees.
"All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us." ~ Tolkien
Benedict Bosco wrote: Raise smaller animals and process them more often - probably the most effective way to store the meat, really, is on the animal. This is where the high-yielding breeds of today work against you - if you can process an animal and use most of the meat in a short window of time, your preservation needs fall dramatically.
Whathever you are, be a good one.
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Philip McGarvey wrote:I've pressure canned on a wood stove once and it worked fine - in an outdoor kitchen. I also sometimes use the rocket stove to bring the canner up to pressure before moving it to a propane stove for the 90 minutes at a constant temp - since if I'm canning I want the rocket stove heating water the whole time anyway.
One question I have. What are the consequences of having too much heat going into the pressure canner? I get that the jiggler will jiggle constantly, and that's annoying, but is it going to mess with the jars or the food at all or damage anything? I suppose it's a matter of degree (pun intended!), but for any normal wood stove temps, do I really have to worry about not letting it get too hot?
I'd love to only have to be monitoring whether the temp inside the canner is getting below 240.
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I knew that guy would be trouble! Thanks tiny ad!
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