Christine, since you're an experienced canner I'd love your opinion. I bought 25 pounds of small-ish round tomatoes from a local amish market. The sign on the tomatoes read, "perfect for canning". When I asked why they were perfect, they told me the size makes them easy to put in jars.
I've never canned before but wanted to try it this year and bought the 25 pound box of tomatoes. I picked up a Granite Ware 9-jar canning pot, a case of 1 qt. ball jars, the Ball canning guide, jar lifter, etc....you get the point, like $100 worth of canning tools.
I did everything I was supposed to and I wound up with...............are you ready?...............5 1/2 freaking jars of tomatoes. I really expected to fill 1/2 my pantry with those tomatoes and was so frustrated with the paucity of jars in the end. I was more upset about the amount of time and planning I put into canning than the money spent. I spent at least 3 hours between washing and sterilizing the jars and prepping the tomatoes.
Is there a learning curve? Did I buy the wrong tomatoes? How many jars will you get from your 20 pounds of Romas?
TIA.....since I'm ready to put my canning pot on a yardsale!!!
I feel your pain. The bread & butter pickle recipe was from the Ball book. We followed it closely, used a bit less onion than it called for. It was supposed to yield 7 pints, and we ended up with 5. My DH looked at me & said "wow, that was an aweful lot of work for 5 little jars." And it was.....but were were preparing the B&B pickles, the relish, and dinner all at the same time.
I am not sure how many jars I will get from my tomatoes. The tomato puree we made was all from tomatoes my neighbors & I grew & I didn't weigh them. It would have been alot more work, but we picked up a machine that actually does it for us, so I think we had all the tomatoes pureed in under an hour. This batch of romas I plan to peel & can whole.
How did you prep your tomatoes? Did you can them whole, just peel them? The easiest way to peel them, and other fruits is to drop them in boiling water for a minute or 2, then submerge them in ice water. The peels slip off easily after that. Then you can leave them whole or chop them & can them.
The pickles were easy as all I had to do was make a brine, wash the cucumbers, load the jars with the cold cukes, pickling spice, dill & garlic, pour in the brine & process. Between my garden & my neighbors' I have made about 10 quarts of pickles for the cost of the brine ingredients (kosher salt, sugar, vinegar, pickling spice, garlic & dill) & lids.
Also, as far as sterilizing jars, do you have a dishwasher? I put my jars in on the "sanitize" cycle & use them straight from there while they are hot. I have never had a problem doing this. I will boil them if they get cold or sit around too long after the dishwasher is done, but otherwise I don't bother, and have never had a problem.
I would say don't give up on it yet. Try a few more recipes for things in season, that you will enjoy, like maybe peaches or pickles. My DH & kids help with canning as well. Do you have someone you can work with to get through it faster & easier?
And since you mentioned garage sales, we purchased over 300 jars from people on craigslist! We saved a lot of money over buying them all new & you have to sterilize them anyway, so keep an eye out for bargains there & garage sales.
Good Luck!!