Canning Tomato Sauce

   / Canning Tomato Sauce #11  
P.S. If you're concerned about your stovetop, buy a Cajun Cooker (burner only) and do the water bath processing on it. I have a huge pot that I put on my cajun cooker to boil water in to process 12 jars at a time.

http://www.bayouclassicdepot.com/single_propane_burner.htm

Keeps the heat out of the house in late August, too! :thumbsup:
 
   / Canning Tomato Sauce #13  
Actually it is NOT when it comes to botulism..

If you're afraid of botulism in your canned tomato sauce, I suggest that you don't eat any. Botulism spores can only be killed at temps of 250F and above. Water boils at 212F. You can boil those jars all day, no botulism spores will die.

The safety concern with canning high acid foods like tomato puree is NOT botulism, which is why the water bath method can be used.

Back to the OP, if you are adding anything other than tomatoes and spices (such as meat or vegetables), then the water-bath method is not safe enough; you'll need to pressure-can to achieve the temp required for safe sterilization.
 
   / Canning Tomato Sauce #14  
If you're afraid of botulism in your canned tomato sauce, I suggest that you don't eat any. Botulism spores can only be killed at temps of 250F and above. Water boils at 212F. You can boil those jars all day, no botulism spores will die.

The safety concern with canning high acid foods like tomato puree is NOT botulism, which is why the water bath method can be used.

Eh?

Food acidity and processing methods

Whether food should be processed in a pressure canner or boiling-water canner to control botulinum bacteria depends on the acidity of the food. Acidity may be natural, as in most fruits, or added, as in pickled food. Low-acid canned foods are not acidic enough to prevent the growth of these bacteria. Acid foods contain enough acid to block their growth, or destroy them more rapidly when heated. The term "pH" is a measure of acidity; the lower its value, the more acid the food. The acidity level in foods can be increased by adding lemon juice, citric acid, or vinegar.

Low-acid foods have pH values higher than 4.6. They include red meats, seafood, poultry, milk, and all fresh vegetables except for most tomatoes. Most mixtures of low-acid and acid foods also have pH values above 4.6 unless their recipes include enough lemon juice, citric acid, or vinegar to make them acid foods. Acid foods have a pH of 4.6 or lower. They include fruits, pickles, sauerkraut, jams, jellies, marmalades, and fruit butters.

Although tomatoes usually are considered an acid food, some are now known to have pH values slightly above 4.6. Figs also have pH values slightly above 4.6. Therefore, if they are to be canned as acid foods, these products must be acidified to a pH of 4.6 or lower with lemon juice or citric acid. Properly acidified tomatoes and figs are acid foods and can be safely processed in a boiling-water canner.

Botulinum spores are very hard to destroy at boiling-water temperatures; the higher the canner temperature, the more easily they are destroyed. Therefore, all low-acid foods should be sterilized at temperatures of 240ー to 250ーF, attainable with pressure canners operated at 10 to 15 PSIG. PSIG means pounds per square inch of pressure as measured by gauge. The more familiar "PSI" designation is used hereafter in this publication (the Complete Guide to Home Canning). At temperatures of 240ー to 250ーF, the time needed to destroy bacteria in low-acid canned food ranges from 20 to 100 minutes.

The exact time depends on the kind of food being canned, the way it is packed into jars, and the size of jars. The time needed to safely process low-acid foods in a boiling-water canner ranges from 7 to 11 hours; the time needed to process acid foods in boiling water varies from 5 to 85 minutes.

National Center for Home Food Preservation | How Do I? Can
 
   / Canning Tomato Sauce #15  

Yup, read your own post. First sentence, fourth paragraph: "Botulinum spores are very hard to destroy at boiling-water temperatures..."

The OP is NOT killing botulinum spores whether he boils his filled jars or not. It's the acidity of the tomato puree (boosted with additional lemon juice in his case) that prevents them from growing.

The water bath method for tomato sauce and puree, which is the recommended method for canning tomatoes, does NOT kill botulinum spores.

Unless water boils at 240-250F in Wisconsin.
 
   / Canning Tomato Sauce #16  
Yup, read your own post.

Yup, did you? :rolleyes:

Acid foods contain enough acid to block their growth, or destroy them more rapidly when heated.

Back to the OP, if you are adding anything other than tomatoes and spices then the water-bath method is not safe enough; you'll need to pressure-can to achieve the temp required for safe sterilization.

Apparently this isn't the case either.

The time needed to safely process low-acid foods in a boiling-water canner ranges from 7 to 11 hours;

Just sayin'.
 
   / Canning Tomato Sauce #17  
I have a ceramic cooktop and have no trouble with either an old fashioned water bath canner or a pressure canner. Just use a jar lifter to load and unload the canner, rather than trying to pick up the whole canner. Go ahead and water bath. You have done too much work to risk losing jars to spoilage.

They got all a-flutter about botulism, not noticing that you were adding lemon juice to the tomato paste. Just for the fun of it, I'll point out that botulism doesn't grow in sugar either, which is why jellies and jams are safe to hot pack. Botulin toxin is also very volatile, so you can render any suspect food safe to eat just by boiling it vigorously for half an hour.
 
   / Canning Tomato Sauce #18  
...Botulin toxin is also very volatile, so you can render any suspect food safe to eat just by boiling it vigorously for half an hour.

Yes, that's correct. I find that boiling my tomato puree vigorously for a half hour hammers all the fresh flavors out of it and turns it into something similar to stale, supermarket off-brand tomato sauce, so I'd rather just dump a jar that's at all questionable.

There's nothing like cracking open a jar of that stuff in the middle of January and it tastes just like August! :licking:

DSCF0049.jpg
 
   / Canning Tomato Sauce #19  
Yes, that's correct. I find that boiling my tomato puree vigorously for a half hour hammers all the fresh flavors out of it and turns it into something similar to stale, supermarket off-brand tomato sauce, so I'd rather just dump a jar that's at all questionable.

There's nothing like cracking open a jar of that stuff in the middle of January and it tastes just like August! :licking:

So true. Although we uasually end up cooking the tomatoes anyway. Things like applesauce I sure wouldn't want to boil for an half hour.

I guess we should mention that he shouldn't can tomatoes in half gallon jars either. :laughing:
 
   / Canning Tomato Sauce #20  
I cook my sauces for a long time also. But tomato sauce is cooked AFTER CANNING in a water bath canner. 35 minutes for pints, 40 minutes for quarts in a water bath canner. I would never just put hot sauce in a jar and hope it seals, it takes the heat in my opinion and the hot water to heat up the rubber sealer to make a seal and create a vacuum.

I sometimes cook mine outside on one of those burners you use under a turkey fryer, just turn it down.
 

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