What did you do in the garden today?

Great, thank you. So if you're only getting one you should go for pressure?

Also, does anyone dehydrate?

I started with water bath canning. But, now have a stovetop pressure canner. I use it to pressure can veg, but have only done this a little bit. I have also cooked in it-amazing to cook a chicken or small turkey quickly, or make other foods.

Dehydrator: if you make jerky, read instructions carefully bc there are specific requirements to make it safe to eat. Both of my dehydrators have adjustable temp, and can go high enough for jerky. But, one of them instructs you to bake the jerky after it is done dehydrating whereas the other one does not provide that instruction. Excalibur is a well known dehydrator brand. But, I bought a circular stacked tower one from Amazon that performs well too (forget the brand). Dehydrators take time …you will prep items, lay them in, wait for many hours, to then remove a small amount of food. This is not a bad thing, just realize that you will want to have expansion trays or get a larger dehydrator than you may think, if you have the space. So, my Excalibur dehydrator is large. It stays the same size, bc it is a single unit where trays slide inside. But, my stacked dehydrator has a base with trays- can be stacked 9 trays high. These trays collapse for storage, so the storage size is much smaller than the working size. For a small home or apartment it is the better choice.
 
I would start with water bath canning, it's the easiest. See how you like that then you can move on the pressure canning.
I would recommend this too. It's a lot of the same technique, without the added worry? danger? of the pressure canner.
Great, thank you. So if you're only getting one you should go for pressure?

Also, does anyone dehydrate?
I used to water bath can in my pressure canner all the time. I have a large skillet lid that can cover the canner, so I use that and not the locking lid. (I suppose you can leave the lid off, but I don't want a large pot of boiling water steaming up my house in August.)

The reason I bought a regular water bath canner is because the pressure canner, even though it's aluminum, is H.E.A.V.Y. And I got one on sale quite cheap. $15..? I think.

If I only had one, yeah, I'd chose the pressure canner. That said, I haven't pressure canned in a long time. The way things are going though, I'll be getting back into it to preserve more things.

Dehydrating! Yes! I love dried fruit, so I make a lot of that. Apples, bananas, melons, cherries. I've dried herbs, some vegetables, and have made jerky too. I have an Excalibur brand dehydrator, and it's going on 25 years old, still going strong. Yeah, they ain't cheap, but 25 years....
 
Got quite a few vegetable seeds planted yesterday! Gonna try to get companion floral seeds planted today all to grow indoors til weather straightens up...more snow ahead for the weekend.
Anybody else propagate blueberries? I trimmed our bushes and had trimmings stuck in water on table...much longer than I anticipated. Was refreshing my memory as to how to do it and realized it wasn't really the time of year to do it...went to trash em and saw little green shoots starting to form up and down little branches everywhere!
So I'm giving em a chance to root!
Guess we'll see how it goes!
 
Thank you for your reply ☺️
https://www.amazon.com/Better-Homes-Gardens-You-Can/dp/0470607564
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This is my favorite book. It explains everything in an easy way. It has tons and tons of pictures, so you don't have to guess what they are talking about.
It also tells you all the equipment you might need!
I refer to this book all the time for the directions. I've only used one or two recipes out of it, but I get it out every year to read my canning directions, lol.
 

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