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Mason Jar Meals: 3 “Fast Food” Canning Recipes for a Home-Cooked Meal ASAP

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Author of Be Ready for Anything [2] and Bloom Where You’re Planted [3] online course

Mason jar meals are healthy, instant gratification meals when you just don’t feel like cooking. (And, invaluable when disaster strikes and you are unable to use your usual methods of preparing a meal.) I’ve mentioned this before, but it bears repeating – canning is the perfect way to provide “fast food” for preppers [4].

Last night we got home after a long day.  We were tired and hungry.  It was so nice to pop a lid off a jar and heat up a tasty, nutritious, and filling meal in less than five minutes, without worrying about all of those nasty additives that a store-bought can of soup would contain.

Soups, stews, and chili [8] can help you quickly produced a well-balanced meal.  Check out my book, The Prepper’s Canning Guide [9] for lots more recipes, including the 3 below.

Some meals need only a quickly boiled carbohydrate like rice or pasta to make a satisfying meal at the drop of a hat. Here are 3  tried-and-true canning recipes to enjoy.  These recipes cannot be water bath canned. They must be pressure canned [10] to be safe. Use quart-sized jars.

Hungarian Goulash

Ingredients

Directions

  1. In a bowl, mix Hungarian paprika, dry mustard, salt, and pepper.
  2. In a large stockpot, heat olive oil and begin to sauté your onions and garlic.
  3. Dip your stewing meat in the spice mixture, then place the meat in the stockpot to brown with the garlic and onions.  Brown lightly – the meat does not have to be thoroughly cooked.
  4. In quart jars, layer your meat and vegetable mixture, carrots, peppers, and potatoes.
  5. Add 6 cups of water, vinegar and the jar of tomato paste to the stockpot and mix with any drippings or spices that remain after browning the meat.  Bring this mixture to a boil.
  6. Ladle hot liquid into sanitized jars [11] over the layered contents.  Use a table knife to remove any air pockets in the jars. If necessary, top up with water, allowing 1 inch of headspace.
  7. Lid the jars and process in your p-canner [12] for 90 minutes at 10 pounds of pressure, based on altitude [13].

SERVING SUGGESTIONS:  When heating your goulash, whisk in 1 tbsp of flour in order to thicken the sauce.  Once it is hot, stir in a half cup of sour cream or yogurt and heat only until the sour cream is warmed through.

Serve your goulash over egg noodles, potatoes, spaetzli or dumplings and don’t forget a side of fresh sourdough bread!

Beef Stroganoff

Ingredients

Directions

  1. In a large stockpot, sauté beef, onions, garlic, and mushrooms in butter until lightly browned.
  2. Stir in Worcestershire sauce and enough water to deglaze the stockpot.  Use a metal utensil to scrape the bottom of the pot to loosen the flavorful pieces there.
  3. Add 1 cup of water and stir well, bringing to a boil.
  4. Ladle the stroganoff into sanitized jars [11], distributing the sauce evenly across the jars.
  5. Lid the jars and process in your p-canner [12] for 90 minutes at 10 pounds of pressure, based on altitude [13].

SERVING SUGGESTIONS:  When you are ready to serve the beef stroganoff, stir 1 cup of sour cream or plain yogurt into the heated sauce.  Serve this over rice or noodles.

Chicken Cacciatore

The rich herbed tomato sauce and the tender chicken will not last long on the pantry shelves – as soon as you serve one jar of it, your family will beg you to make it again!

To make life even simpler, this is a raw-pack recipe.

Ingredients:

Directions:

  1. Layer chicken, peppers, onions, mushroom and garlic in quart jars.
  2. In a large stockpot bring wine, tomatoes, and herbs to a boil.  Ladle hot liquid over the layered ingredients in your sanitized jars [11].
  3. Lid the jars and process in your p-canner [12] for 90 minutes at 10 pounds of pressure, based on altitude [13].

SERVING SUGGESTIONS:  When preparing the cacciatore, stir in a small can of tomato paste when heating to thicken the sauce.  Serve over pasta, with a side of garlic bread.

Let me know what you think.

If you’d like more delicious recipes like this, be sure to check out my book, The Prepper’s Canning Guide. [9]

Have you tried the recipes? Do you have any added serving suggestions? Share your thoughts or questions in the comments below.