Foraging and Canning with the Last Pale Americans, August 23, 2020 by James LaFond
In four hours over two days I picked four shopping bags of
berries from the sides of roads in Kamas Valley, Utah, listed in the order of
proportions:
-Choke cherries 87%
-Elderberries 5%
-Oregon grape 2%
-June berries 3%
-Black currants 3%
This filled a bushel and four of us spent 2 hours
sorting and cleaning the berries.
Then three of us spend two hours cooking and rendering the
berries.
Then the next day three of us spent two hours canning the
berries into syrup.
I can’t eat the sugar without returning to the sloth diet.
However, I ate the mash, a pint of it, and it was great. The sugar is being
used as a preservative and as a means to get slaves of the American factor diet
to eat it. I would just can the juice, which I am told is possible
Deb supervised.
I washed jars and lids and dishes.
Bob stirred the berry juice, lemon juice, pectin and sugar
on the stove.
Bob and I then poured the syrup into a pitcher and I poured
it into jars, which Deb wiped off. I then put the lids on the jars and screwed
on the bands and turned the jars upside down to that the hot liquid within
would help seal the jar.
We then cleaned up, labelled and dated and boxed the jars,
having made 30 pints, 4 half pints and one ¼ pint jar of syrup.
I am the picker and helper. Since then we have canned green
beans we picked from the garden and pickles and pickled vegetables from produce
got at the grocery store. We will be canning more recipes and making apple cider
instead of apple pie filling this year with the wealth of apples from the tree in
the yard. Elderberry and Oregon grape will be the next batch of syrup. Rose
hips are two weeks out and my scouting tells me I should get a dry bushel this
year hiking mountain trails and logging roads.
Bob and Deb’s children and grandchildren have done well and
refuse to eat home canned foods. Still, the old folks think that if times get
bad enough that the home survival arts of their parents will once again have a
place.
Canning supplies are increasingly hard to get and prices
rising. The unthinkable is coming into being, that the Collective God of
American Humanity might one day have to worry about feeding, might need to step
down out of retard Olympus to engage in the despised act of survival.
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