Skip Navigation
Give Now NCPR relies on
Your Donations

News stories tagged with "canning"

Show             
Story Begins
Heard Up North: more than roots in this cellar
Winnie and Rob Sachno’s root cellar in Pierrepont, NY. (photo: Paula Schechter)
Winnie and Rob Sachno’s root cellar in Pierrepont, NY. (photo: Paula Schechter)
(02/01/12) Root cellars were an essential part of nearly every home a hundred years ago. And along with an increase in the number of people growing their own food is the return to the root cellar. More than a basement, it's the cousin to canning and freezing and another way of preserving the harvest into the winter months. A couple of winters ago, Todd Moe visited Winnie and Rob Sachno's root cellar on their St. Lawrence County farm for a closer look at a simpler way of storing food.

Download audio | (0) Comments |
Story Ends Story Begins
A canning swap to stock up for winter
Flip Fillippi and Matt Kidwell seal a deal
Flip Fillippi and Matt Kidwell seal a deal
The Corse family will live mostly on their canned and preserved harvest this winter.
The Corse family will live mostly on their canned and preserved harvest this winter.
(12/01/11) The harvest seems like a long time ago. But lots of people are still savoring the fruits of the garden with a technique as old as their great-grandparents.

Canning and preserving fruits and vegetables is enjoying a revival, thanks to the burgeoning foodie and locavore movements.

A group of canners got together in Canton recently to barter and diversify their winter larder. As David Sommerstein reports, they make the old-fashioned...cool. more

Download audio | (0) Comments |
Story Ends Story Begins
New and veteran canners bond and learn new tricks at Canton workshop
Cornell Cooperative Extension intern Cassandra Hamilton explains some of the finer points of canning.
Cornell Cooperative Extension intern Cassandra Hamilton explains some of the finer points of canning.
Nutrition Educator Jackie Gates shows off a couple recent successes.
Nutrition Educator Jackie Gates shows off a couple recent successes.
(10/17/11) It might not have felt like it this week, but autumn is officially here--and winter is on its way. For many people saving some of summer's harvest by "putting up" fruits, vegetables, and sauces is an annual tradition. Others are looking to learn.

Canning has become popular among frugal people and foodies alike...and a mix of about a dozen canning veterans and amateurs came out to Coakley Ace hardware in Canton recently for a workshop put on by Cornell Cooperative Extension. No cooking went on, but a lot of recipes--and a lot of enthusiasm--were exchanged. Nora Flaherty has this story: more

Download audio | (0) Comments |
Story Ends Story Begins
A canning swap to stock up for winter
Flip Fillippi and Matt Kidwell seal a deal.
Flip Fillippi and Matt Kidwell seal a deal.
The Corse family will live mostly on their canned and preseved harvest this winter.
The Corse family will live mostly on their canned and preseved harvest this winter.
(01/03/11) The harvest seems like a long time ago. But lots of people are still savoring the fruits of the garden with a technique as old as their great-grandparents.

Canning and preserving fruits and vegetables is enjoying a revival, thanks to the burgeoning foodie and locavore movements.

A group of canners got together in Canton recently to barter and diversify their winter larder. As David Sommerstein reports, they make the old-fashioned...cool. more

Download audio | (0) Comments |
Story Ends Story Begins
More bad news about late blight
Late blight.
Late blight.
(09/15/09) Yesterday, Cooperative Extension horticulturist Amy Ivy delivered more bad news about the tomato late blight that's devastated home and commercial tomato crops this year.

You can't can tomatoes that are showing signs of the disease.

Home-gardeners may be used to cutting out a bad spot or two when putting otherwise healthy tomatoes up for the winter. But late blight? Youve got to throw the whole tomato out. The trouble is, lots of people have already done some preserving and might be tempted to try to salvage the batch in question.

Martha Foley called Anne Lenox Barlow, horticulture educator with the Clinton and Essex County extension office. She just said, "No."

Download audio | (0) Comments |
Story Ends Story Begins
Still more late-blight news
(09/14/09) Martha Foley and horticulturist Amy Ivy share more news on late-blight and tomatoes. Amy urges caution during the canning season.

Download audio | (0) Comments |
Story Ends Story Begins
Preserving the garden harvest
(08/25/08) Martha Foley and horticulturist Amy Ivy talk about some ways to preserve vegetables from the garden - canning or freezing?

Download audio | (0) Comments |
Story Ends

1-7 of 7

Photo of the Day

Photo of the Day: Click to enlarge
Trinity Episcopal Church Hall seen from Ives Park. Photo: Du'Shawn Williams, Potsdam NY.
Caption
Today's Photo: Full size | Submit

National & Global News

NPR Hourly Newscast
This text will be replaced
From 20 to 42 percent of the malaria medicines examined in Southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa were crummy or counterfeit. The poor quality of the medicines threatens people's health and raises the odds for drug-resistant disease.
 
US Airways Flight 787 was headed to Charlotte, N.C., from Paris when it landed in Bangor, Maine, instead. The Transportation Security Administration says there was a report of "suspicious behavior" by a passenger.
 
An online auction of a vial said to contain blood drawn from the president the day he was shot in 1981 is "a craven act and we will use every legal means to stop its sale or purchase," says a spokesman for the Ronald Reagan Presidential...
 
A mile below the sea surface near an oil drill, a robotic camera caught a glimpse of a green-gray blob. The camera operator spun the rig around to catch sight of the glimmering, undulating animal. What was it?
 
In <em>The Right-Hand Shore</em>, Christopher Tilghman returns to the racially charged landscape and the crumbling plantations of his book <em>Mason's Retreat</em>. <em>Fresh Air</em> critic Maureen Corrigan calls...
 
 
Canada Top Stories
World Service


Adirondack News Fund Founding Supporters: Paul Smith's College, The College of the Adirondacks · Wildlife Conservation Society · Adirondack Medical Center Foundation · Adirondack Museum · Niagara Mohawk Foundation · Schumann Foundation · John A. Sellon Charitable Trust · several anonymous individual donors