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Ideas for canned goods gifts

Posted by ajsmama 5b (NW CT) (My Page) on
Sat, Sep 27, 14 at 9:45

My mom said she was going to buy some jams (lavender? Tomato? I don't know what else they make) from the farm down the road to give as Xmas gifts to my aunts and uncles. Then she thought of me, since I've been trying to make my farm profitable.

But I don't have anything but tomatoes and zucchini right now, I don't HAVE to make stuff from my produce, since I'm not offering this for sale to the general public (I told Mom I'd be glad to make whatever she wants and just charge her for jars and ingredients).

I don't want to make salsa since I know most of my aunts and uncles don't like spicy food and what we'd consider a mild salsa would be too hot for them. To save money on jars, however, and still make it look like a decent gift, they should probably be in pints (halfpints are nearly as expensive and 1 jar of jam looks a little stingy). Since I am free to buy ingredients and am not limited to my own produce (though Mom would like to see me use my tomatoes and get paid for them), what would you suggest that's a crowd-pleaser for non-adventurous eaters?

Maybe a spaghetti sauce (in quarts or pints, since we're talking empty-nesters pints might be OK)? Either Spaghetti Sauce w/o Meat (I do have small sweet peppers) or Tomato and Zucchini (I might have a few small yellow squash I can put in, I don't know if I can add dried herbs and maybe some peppers to that, NCHFP does say you can add 2 slices of onion per (quart?) jar, though I've never done it)?

Again, that's just an idea, I'm not limited to tomatoes, or to pints, I could do jams but was just trying to save my mom some money on jars.


Follow-Up Postings:

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RE: Ideas for canned goods gifts

Apple, (or any fruit you have) pie filling! You could include a recipe, put a cute swatch of fabric on the top, or just tie some twine around the jar, anything for cuteness. Jams are always good, as well as ice cream toppings. With your zucchini, pickle relish is so much better than any store bought relish. With your tomatoes how about a nice basic sauce with recipe card showing how to add spices to use it for spaghetti, soups, pizza sauce etc? Have fun with it and rest assured that anything homemade will be yummy and greatly appreciated!


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RE: Ideas for canned goods gifts

Zuccini...bread and butter pickles, dill spears, sweet or dill
relish, chow chow,
Tomatoes.... spaghetti sauce and pizza sauce make great
gifts as well as relishes. Personally I love to
can sauces and whole tomatoes look so pretty
in the jar.
The apple pie jam recipe around here somewhere is the best.
if you were closer we could trade, I have 200 pounds of apples and pears and sadly no tomatoes
kim


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RE: Ideas for canned goods gifts

I made catsup for my daughter. She loved it.


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RE: Ideas for canned goods gifts

A nice barbecue sauce would use up some of your tomatoes. You could go for sweet rather than spicy.


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RE: Ideas for canned goods gifts

I had planned on making zucchini relish to enter in the fair anyway so Mom can gift some of those jars if she wanted. I already made 4 pints of a Mixed Vegetable Pickle (Piccalilli) but added hot pepper flakes to it so I don't know if it's too spicy. Were talking Yankees here - they think jalapenos are hot, and mine are esp. hot this year, maybe b/c of lack of rain this month?

BBQ sauce is an option - I know Ball Complete has some recipes, any recommendations?


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RE: Ideas for canned goods gifts

I second the suggestion of zucchini bread and butter pickles. I like the recipe in Ziedrich's Joy of Pickling. I could post that if you like although I know there are probably dozens of recipes out there.

Tomato ketchup and/or chutney. There is a really good ketchup recipe in Witty's Better Than Store Bought. I have a family chutney recipe that we all love. Again, there are lots of variations out there.

Elaina


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RE: Ideas for canned goods gifts

I have The Joy of Pickling, might make those with smaller zukes next week. The large zukes are going into relish and chow-chow today and tomorrow - as I said, I was going to do relish anyway, and I've promised chow-chow with the last of my bok choy to the fife and drum corps for cookout on Friday (will just keep in the fridge, won't can, but need time for flavors to blend). Any recommended recipes for that?

Keep the ideas coming - I'll probably be working on the gifts during Oct/Nov (as well as a baby quilt I need done by Xmas).

PS - is ketchup really that popular? I figured people just have their favorite store brand, not sure how much ketchup empty-nester use during the winter anyway.


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RE: Ideas for canned goods gifts

Just thinking what I would like to get, I love the idea of the pie fillings. Even if the recipients don't bake enough to make their own crust, Intructions for use a homemade or with a purchased crust would be a nice gift. It would be even better for people who might NOT bake. I also love salsa, but you already said that was out. A basic pasta sauce is also nice. Tastes so much better with garden tomatoes than anything they could buy. I am not so much a fan of pickled veggies or relishes. Jam is always good. JMHO. Many people love pickled veggies, I am just not sure they are are widely appealing as pie, pasta and jam. Have you asked your Mom what she would like to give? Maybe she knows what they like.


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RE: Ideas for canned goods gifts

My mom doesn't really know what they like, and dad doesn't either. I've given jams to her sisters before, one of her BILs is diabetic so I always gave that aunt & uncle salsa. I've never given food (other than the Xmas stollen from their mom's recipe) to my dad's brothers, I know 1 of them doesn't like hot peppers at all. My dad only likes sweet pickles and relishes, DH doesn't like sweet, so I know it's not "one size fits all" even as far as that goes (and I wouldn't make pickles from storebought cukes anyway).

Pie filling sounds good, I'd have to buy a lot of fruit and some Cleargel (or give instructions for thickening after opening, but for non-bakers that may be a turn-off). I guess they could always use it for ice cream topping or a cobbler.

Pasta sauce is sounding better - you think pints are the right size for 2 people, I could make Ellie Topp's Chunky Tomato with Wine (skip the basil, maybe just put in a little dried herbs, after I had some basil go bitter in that recipe I don't want to use fresh in canning again)?


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RE: Ideas for canned goods gifts

I think pint would be fine for 1-2 people. Depending on how much sauce you like on your pasta, its probably perfect for 2 servings. The reason I like the pie filling is that I can tomatoes myself but not fruit. If they don't do any canning, any of those things would be fine, and the veggie items wold be better for diabetics, obviously.


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RE: Ideas for canned goods gifts

I often put together a 'meal package' as a gift - a jar of homemade pasta sauce, a package of imported pasta (sometimes I have made the pasta also) and a hunk of good parmesan. Then you could add either some homemade biscotti or a jar of homemade syrup (this year it's raspberry) for ice cream. I usually pack it in a reusable grocery bag. It always goes over really well. It does add additional expense though.
Elaina


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RE: Ideas for canned goods gifts

I don't know how much my mom wants to spend, I think this is supposed to be "just a little something" but I had thought of the pasta too - we'll see how ambitious I get, maybe I'll make and dry pasta. In fact, that gets me thinking about chicken noodle soup - my grandmother always made her own noodles, maybe a quart of chicken stock with some homemade noodles on the side would be a good gift, at least for my dad's side of the family (and pasta sauce for my mom's?)...


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