Spring is here and with spring comes an abundance of fruits and vegetables that are just perfect for pickling and preserving. If you are new to canning, I want to share my list of essential canning tools to get you started. I keep all of these items together in one place in the kitchen, so that when I lose my senses and buy ten pounds of asparagus from the farmer’s market or pick ten pounds of strawberries, I have the resources necessary to pickle and preserve. I’ve never regretted preserving; in fact, recently, we made pancakes for breakfast and I realized I still had a jar of lavender strawberry sauce (the recipe is from Food in Jars) stashed in the cupboard. We were still about a month out from fresh local strawberries, so it was wonderful to have strawberries from the prior year that tasted about as fresh as when I picked them. I had a moment of extreme foodie bliss – the strawberry preserves were summer canned in a jar and perfect over my pancakes.
So here are my essential canning tools. With a small investment, you will be preserving and pickling like a pro in no time at all.
Check out my blog post about the must-have books in the home canning library. You can easily get started canning with just one book – my suggestion is to start with either Food in Jars or Canning for a New Generation. Both are excellent resources for how to safely preserve foods.
I only do water bath canning. I’d love a pressure canner, but don’t have the room right now to store one. The one critical piece of equipment for water bath canning is a stockpot large enough to hold at least six pint jars. I don’t can anything in quarts – I did pickles in quart jars my first year canning in Oregon and quickly realized that a) my stockpot could only hold 3 jars without boiling over and b) the odds that hubby and I would eat a quart of pickles in a reasonable time frame were pretty remote – it’s a lot of pickles. Since then, I only use pint, ½ pint and ¼ pint jars. I have two stockpots – a large one and a medium sized one: the large one gets used for the water bath and the medium sized one gets used for larger patch preserves. If I’m in a hurry and only prepping one thing, I might use the medium sized for the water bath canning process. It’s not necessary to have two, especially if you are planning to only do small batch preserving and you have limited space to store kitchen items.
This is my absolute favorite piece of canning equipment – my absolute I can’t live without. Which is why you can enter my giveaway for your very own! (See details at the end of this post). One of the things I discovered about my large stockpot is that it wasn’t quite large enough for a canning rack. In water bath canning, it’s important to get water circulating all around your jars, including underneath them. So – what to do? I started out by using a kitchen hack of putting lids at the bottom of the stockpot and placing jars on top of the lids. This works just fine, but the lids will rust pretty quickly. A friend introduced me to this silicon trivet, and I’ve never looked back. This spreads out so you can give your jars plenty of breathing room and still have them lifted off the bottom of the pot. One tip about working with this – always keep at least one jar in the pot so that the trivet doesn’t retract. It’s no fun having to spread the trivet back out when your water is already boiling.
A jar funnel is a great tool for ensuring that preserves and pickles are neatly canned. It’s really important in canning to ensure that the top of your jar is clean. A jar funnel helps with this by making sure that more of the preserves or brine go into your jar – not on your jar. I also find I use my jar funnel when I use my jars for smoothies, salads, etc. for my lunch.
A jar lifter is the go-to tool for removing very hot jars from the hot water canning bath. Long tongs are wonderful for placing jars into a hot water canning bath, as well as removing them to fill them. They are also great for grabbing canning rings out of hot water. A magnetic lid lifter is a nifty tool for pulling jar lids out of hot water. It’s also a great tool for those times when you drop something small and magnetic on the floor (like a nail) and have to grab it before the dog does. Not that I would know from experience or anything. (Yes – in this entirely hypothetical scenario, I would thoroughly sanitize my lid lifter before using it again to can).
A soup ladle is invaluable for transferring hot liquids into jars. Not to mention, if you don’t have a soup ladle, how do you ladle out your soup? Personally, I adore the Loch Ness Monster soup ladles on the right just because they are cute. I use the more practical soup ladle on the left to can, though.
This one is probably pretty obvious, but to have beautifully canned foods, you definitely need a good supply of jars, rings, and lids. I use Ball products, mostly out of brand loyalty and the fact that they are pretty ubiquitous. I love the quarter pint size jars for really small batches of preserves. I find that the smaller the jar, the easier it is to use up what’s inside the jar, especially in a two-person household. One tip that I find it’s easier to say than do is this: keep your canning jars separate from jars that you use for other purposes. If you’ve read Fix Me a Little Lunch for any amount of time, you know that I often use jars for my lunch. Those jars get a lot of heavy use; they get frozen, they get bashed around in my work bag, and they get dinged with silverware. All of this weakens the jar and can lead to spectacular canning failure when the jar’s bottom bottoms out in the hot water bath. Trust me; this is one way to learn very quickly exactly what my curse word repertoire is. I’ve lost at least two jars of pickled asparagus this way (heartbreaking), some diced tomatoes, and a couple of jars of preserves. In addition to losing the very produce I’m trying to preserve, this kind of failure also means stopping, cleaning out the hot water bath canning set up, and having to start all over again. It’s not fun. So keep your canning jars stored separately from your everyday use jars.
One other note about jars, rings and lids. You can reuse rings, as long as they are rust free. Lids need to be repurposed or recycled. Always use a new lid, as you don’t want to risk your cans not sealing.
Alright – so giveaway time. To jumpstart your canning adventures this spring and summer, I’m giving away a silicon trivet. It’s red, just like mine.
42 comments
I’ve only ever canned sauerkraut and it was with the water bath. I’ve always wanted to make jellies and salsas, thank you for sharing!
I’ve always been afraid to try canning, but your post makes it sound pretty simple. Do you have any canning recipes to share for a beginner?
Hi Michelle,
I don’t have any recipes, but I do have a post about great canning books for beginners: http://fixmealittlelunch.com/must-have-canning-cookbooks/ I would start with these or check out http://www.foodinjars.com – it’s one of the best sites for great canning recipes in small batches and where I learned how to do quite a bit.
This is cool! Love it:)
I do tons of canning important have right tools
Wow- thanks for this post! I’m new to canning and even a little scared of it, but this makes it seem do-able! 🙂
I still haven’t tried canning but I’ve always wanted to. Thanks for sharing!
What a wonderful guide for canning, I love to can but need to start raising a garden again.
We’ve never tried canning but occasionally it will come up in conversation. Maybe some day we’ll give it a go. Thanks for putting together a list of essentials. It’s very helpful. I didn’t realize what all went into it.
I am going to try strawberry preserves
i’M HOPING THAT MY STRAWBERRY CROP WILL HAVE A GREAT TURNOUT THIS SUMMER SO i CAN MAKE SOME HOMEMADE PRESERVES.
I want to can my own tomatoes this year,make sauces and my own ketchup.
I would like to try canning artichoke hearts.
I love make strawberry rhubarb jelly! ❤
We’ve never done canning before but I’ve always been given as gifts. I love pickles and jellies!
I use whatever left over berries to make a quick jam 🙂 I am hoping for a good tomato harvest this year because I love making homemade sauce! Jarred up some soon-to-be rose water and lavender water this morning 🙂
Living in California, I have access to a large quantity of plump, sweet strawberries. Strawberry preserves in on the summer agenda.
Blackberry jelly!
Yummy strawberry jam~~~ I’d love to win this! It’s my birthday this weekend~ 🙂 Thanks for being so generous!
One of the great things about canning is to add the flavors I like.
Yummy strawberry jam~ It’s MY birthday this weekend and I’d LOVE to win ~ Thanks for the chance!
I love sweet n sour pickles and making strawberry & Blackberry preserves! This give away is awesome!!
Must have the proper tools i need to get back to ot
I would like to make dill pickles.
I would love to can some strawberry preserves and green beans.
I hope to can stewed tomatoes, peaches and apricots this year. I’d like to do dill pickles as well but doubt I’ll have time
I am new to canning and would like to try to just make a basic pickle recipe!
I would make strawberry preserves.
Peach perserves
I haven’t tried out yet but would love to try to made my own strawberry preserves
I love canning but never hurts to learn sumthin new
I’m gonna try to make corn relish this summer along with strawberry jam
pear preserve
The only kind of pickles I can get right are bread and butter, and I fail at preserves, jams and jellies. But I can meats, meals, veggies and fruits perfectly.I guess pressure canning is just easier for me.
I’ve never tried canning but I really want to
Bread an butter pickles, apple butter, plums, apricots… I can keep going.. Salsa, yummyyyyyyyy
Picante sauce is my favorite to can.
I would make some sweet pickles like my mom did when I was young!
Plan to do a little bit of canning.. Love doing peach preserves… and may try something new this year….
pickled jalapenos! I grow lots in my garden. Love them!
I would like to try canning and making pickled vegetables
I plan on canning tomatoes this year, we always have so many go to waste.