Michigan Thread - all are welcome!

Even if there is no other reason to can tomatoes, it might be worth doing it for the sole reason of fully appreciating how easy peaches are to can.
I think peaches and tomatoes are on par with difficulty/ease of canning. Both get the scalding/cold water treatment for peeling, both need their center part removed.

I haven't canned peaches in a long time...
 
I didn't plant a garden this year. I did plant 4 cherry tomato varieties. I just pick the ripe ones and eat them right there.
Even though I didn't have a garden I have still been working that monster compost heap. All of that black gold would have made for a beautiful garden. Maybe next year. :gig
 
I didn't plant a garden this year. I did plant 4 cherry tomato varieties. I just pick the ripe ones and eat them right there.
Even though I didn't have a garden I have still been working that monster compost heap. All of that black gold would have made for a beautiful garden. Maybe next year. :gig
Idk, 4 cherry tomatoes?

That’s a borderline garden.

You’re holding the soil over for next year.

Better than some of us (me) did this year.
 
I think peaches and tomatoes are on par with difficulty/ease of canning. Both get the scalding/cold water treatment for peeling, both need their center part removed.

I haven't canned peaches in a long time...
Hm, well, I don't scald/chill the peaches, I can peel them faster and nearly as cleanly with a paring knife. Or the tomatoes, for that matter, since discovering the freeze first method.

The peach pits may slow me down as much as the tomato cores when the tomatoes are as high quality as the peaches are. I'm not sure though; the pits twist out pretty well when the peaches are in the right ripeness window and I'm not sure I've ever had high quality tomatoes to can. Growing up, we sold the good ones. Growing my own recently has been problematic. I bought canning tomatoes last year but it was a terrible year for tomatoes - I tried a half dozen usually good sources that didn't have any before finding one that had some I wouldn't have bought under any other circumstances. I mean, yes, the core cuts easily and only half the peach comes clean with the first twist but with tomatoes you have to deal with how much to cut and with the splashy mess of it.

Perhaps there are other differences in how we do each.
 
Hm, well, I don't scald/chill the peaches, I can peel them faster and nearly as cleanly with a paring knife. Or the tomatoes, for that matter, since discovering the freeze first method.
Well, I have never heard of this method! I might try it... except that I can a lot of tomatoes. I don't know if I have enough freezer space. 42 quarts this year. Since I had a lot of sunscald/rot on the shoulders, I probably did 60-70 quarts' worth of 'maters. LOTS of waste, so it was good that I planted so many plants.
 

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