TOMATO SOUP FOR CANNING
An old recipe for tomato soup. For canning, check the Ball canning book for more up to date times for canning. Looks good although it called for 1/2 cup salt, I changed to 3 tablespoons because that seemed excessive to me. Feel free to add more if you wish.
Provided by Dienia B.
Categories Low Protein
Time 3h30m
Yield 10 pints
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Cook all vegetables together.
- When done, sieve until like a smooth paste.
- Add remaining ingredients and cook until thick.
- Seal in glass jars while hot.
- I would process in pressure cooker myself for about 90 minutes.
- I'm guessing this to be safe however, it may be less time.
GARDEN TOMATO SOUP-CANNING
Posted in response to a request for soups to can. Adapted from The USDA Canning site. The source was told to come from The Best of Friends Cookbook.
Provided by Sharon123
Categories Vegetable
Time 1h20m
Yield 6-7 quarts
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- Put all of the ingredients in a large kettle. Bring to a boil, turn down to simmer and cook until the celery is soft, about 15 minutes; then add the butter sauce and brown sugar paste.
- Mix the sugar and flour together in a bowl. Add enough of the hot soup to make a paste, then stir this into the hot soup and bring to a boil until soup thickens, about 10-15 minutes.
- If the soup is thicker than you prefer, add a little water. Adding the red pepper flakes makes the soup zingier. If too sweet, add a little more salt.
- Pour soup into quart jars and can in a pressure canner for 25 minutes at 10 pounds pressure.
- Yield: 6-7 quarts, depending on size of tomatoes.
MOM'S BEST TOMATO SOUP CANNING RECIPE RECIPE - (4/5)
Provided by CreativeJBean
Number Of Ingredients 7
Steps:
- 1. Chop onions and celery 2. Place in larger kettle with just enough water to keep them from burning. 3. While this simmers cut tomatoes (If not juicing) 4. Place cut tomatoes (or juice) in kettle and cook until tender. 5. Place everything through a Victorio Strainer or Fine Food Mill. 6. Return to kettle. 7. Add Sugar and salt (I let it simmer till the red color deepens nicely) 8. Melt butter in cast iron or other thick bottomed pot. Stir in flour to form a paste and slowly whisk in 2 to 4 cups of liquid to avoid lumps. 9. Add butter/flour mixture to warmed tomato juice. (If the juice is too hot it may form lumps) 10. Stir well 11. Heat until hot and thickened. (doesn't get real thick) 12. Ladle into prepared jars and secure lids. 13. Hot water bath for 30 minutes per pint. May add a little milk to desired consistency prior to serving. NOTE: For better compliance with current USDA preserve standards - Add 1 tbsp of lemon juice concentrate (like real-lemon - not fresh squeezed) to each pint and add the flour/butter thickening agent when preparing to serve rather than prior to processing. I have seen others that have chosen to process in a pressure canner at 10lbs for 30 minutes. NOTE:
Are you curently on diet or you just want to control your food's nutritions, ingredients? We will help you find recipes by cooking method, nutrition, ingredients...
Check it out »
You'll also love