Blog Archives

To can or not to can

 

     I can’t believe it.  We’re halfway through our second jar of my Cousins’ homemade jam.  The first jar we finished was his raspberry jam what a heavenly delight!  This one is sour cherry-raspberry and all I can say is wow.  I’m sorely tempted to open all the others to taste them but I will restrain myself and go one at a time.  I’m not certain as to which one we’ll try after this jar is empty.

     We have a number of choices.  There’s the blueberry, the strawberry, the strawberry rhubarb, and sour cherry sitting in the cupboard waiting for us to dive in.  My cousin and his daughter make tons of jams for the family every year.  Another cousin makes a wonderful salsa.

     I’ve also been hoarding a jar of my Aunts’ tomato relish—it’s my last jar. 

     I’m sorry to say that I haven’t done any canning in several years.  I used to make this wonderful tomato pear chutney, a port wine jelly, an apple ginger jelly, and a jalapeño jelly.  Dear Hubby misses the jalapeño jelly most of all.  I quit canning when my dishwasher died, it was a portable, and we never replaced it because it took up too much room.  It had a sterilizing cycle that I used to sterilize all my jars, lids, and rings.  It’s too time consuming and too much work without it.

Life in the fast lane—15 items or less

     I hate to shop.  Usually I wait until our cupboards are almost bare before I go to the grocery store.  However, today I was next door to one to mail a package and decided to run into the store for a few items I knew we needed. 

     When I walked in the door, I suddenly realized I didn’t need to push one of those big carts around.  This store has those small two-tiered carts or the old plastic baskets you can carry over your arm.  I opted for the two-tiered cart.  I’ve never had a large cart that didn’t have some odd quirk like veering to one side or the other or it has a wheel that won’t turn.  The little cart moved along like an air hockey puck it was a dream come true.

     I picked up my few items and started for the checkout line.  The express line had one person while all the others had at least four people lined up all with fully loaded big carts.  A quick glance told me I was under the express line limit.  My heart skipped a beat.  I couldn’t believe my luck.  Then I waited.  I waited some more.  I saw a woman walk past I’d seen in one of the long lines.  I saw another one go by.  No, the person in front of me didn’t have thirty items.  He had fewer things than I did.  Finally, after watching a half dozen people go past with full carts, I paid for my items and headed out the door.

     Why do they put the slowest clerk in the store on the express line?