In my day job raising grain I typically deal in 1000’s or 10’s of thousands of bushels of grain. A single bushel is no big deal, you spill a bushel on the ground and you may grab a shovel and clean it up, just so it doesn’t make a mess, not because a single bushel matters.
Today I bought 2 bushels of tomatoes and made and canned tomato juice and tomato sauce and crushed tomatoes and tomato paste. It gave me a whole new appreciation of just how much a bushel is.
I went over to Huntertown Gardens this morning and bought 2 bushels of canning tomatoes. Huntertown Gardens is a great place to pick up seasonal produce in small or large quantities. They’re just south of LaOtto, or north of Huntertown, on old Highway 3.
I got back home about 11 am and the tomato processing commenced.
I started out making sauce and juice with 1 bushel. I figured I could make and can the juice while the sauce was cooking down.
For sauce and juice I just quarter the tomatoes and toss them in a big granite cooker. Once they come to a boil I simmer them about 5 minutes and then run them through a food mill. The food mill takes out all the skins and seeds.
For juice I can what comes out of the food mill. For sauce that goes into a pan and cooks until it is reduced by about half, which is a nice thick sauce. That bushel of tomatoes ended up making 6 quarts of juice and about 20 pints of sauce.
With one of the remaining half bushels I canned crushed tomatoes. For those you skin and core the tomatoes, quarter them, and toss them in the cooker. You boil them for 5 minutes and then can them.
The remaining half bushel I juiced as for juice or sauce, and then cooked it down until it was thick for tomato paste. That half bushel of tomatoes, weighing 26 pounds, cooked down to about 3 1/2 pounds of tomato paste. I freeze it in ice cube trays. A cube or two of frozen tomato paste is just right for soups and stews this winter.
After processing over 100 pounds of tomatoes, this was all that wasn’t used.
And that wasn’t wasted, it went into the compost bin.
Finally the end result.
It was almost 9 pm when I finished the tomato paste and slid them in the freezer. Was is it worth it? The tomatoes cost 40 dollars and I spent a full day canning them.
I counted up all the cans and I could buy what I canned at the grocery store for about 60 dollars. Minus what the canning jar lids cost, and energy burned to can them, I probably worked all day for 15 dollars.
But the quality of my home canned tomatoes is superior to the store brands. They are dark red and bursting with tomato flavor. I know what is in each can. Each can contains exactly two ingredients, tomatoes and lemon juice (to raise the acid level for safe canning.)
It was a very rewarding way to spend a day.
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