One YEAR’S Worth of Food | HUGE Pantry/Root Cellar Tour | 1000 Jars

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  • Опубликовано: 4 ноя 2022
  • I am excited to share with you my 2022 pantry tour! This is a video I look forward to making for you all year long. It's a culmination of nearly 12 months' worth of work, and I hope you can find some inspiration and motivation to try canning and storing food yourself. Enjoy!
    Thanks for watching!
    Three Rivers Homestead Pantry Tour
    • Pantry Tour Q&A | Buil...
    Pantry Tour Playlist (including freezers)
    • Freezer and Fridge Tou...
    Canning Recipes
    Bread and Butter Pickles
    • How to Make Bread and ...
    Cole Slaw
    • Huge Preserving Day | ...
    Peach Salsa
    • How to Can Peach Salsa...
    Turkey Stock
    • Canning Stock, Baked O...
    Beef Stew and Canned Beef
    • Ugliest Vegetable, Flo...
    Cranberry Sauce
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Комментарии • 2,8 тыс.

  • @LittleMountainRanch
    @LittleMountainRanch  Год назад +54

    Hi there! We have a new tour pantry tour for 2023! If you'd like to see the updates from this tour, please check it out! ruclips.net/video/HoSw00MPPR8/видео.html
    Thanks so much for watching!
    Warmly,
    Chelsea

    • @the1tigglet
      @the1tigglet 11 месяцев назад

      Have you seen those videos of goods that have meat in them that last 1 year, such as bacon or pork belly, beef, and chicken? They are usually done by foreign accounts (non-American and non-Canadian) these items are cooked in small pieces and then placed in a jar once filled they are filled with salt, 9% vinegar, and sometimes spices such as chili or paprika or garlic depending on the dish.

    • @purpleflowers9387
      @purpleflowers9387 11 месяцев назад +1

      I love your set up. Why don't you like the green beans?

    • @GaiaCarney
      @GaiaCarney 10 месяцев назад

      Congratulations on your abundant, successful garden! I am wholly impressed with your expansive pantry 🤗

    • @cutwagman
      @cutwagman 10 месяцев назад

      Seriously , I also stock a lot of food. Lately I’ve wondered if nuke fallout won’t render it useless.

    • @kangaroofuno
      @kangaroofuno 9 месяцев назад

      I bet you and your family can withstand a long term power outage

  • @Gabe-zz5gw
    @Gabe-zz5gw 4 месяца назад +53

    You see, in my humble opinion, I believe that this version of food managing and production is what was meant to be the standard in a majority of households. I think the world would be better off and people would be happier spending more time doing something as meaningful and purposeful as working hard for food and appreciating the effort required to produce a healthy food supply. The industrial revolution was a crazy thing

    • @CherryJuli
      @CherryJuli 23 дня назад

      I doubt people were happier before the Industrial Revolution. We know from scientific research that humans mostly find happiness through meaningful connections with others and through spending time with those people.

  • @maniacal1870
    @maniacal1870 Год назад +130

    If I had known society stood a very real chance of collapsing somewhere in my 40s, I would have gone into botany and agriculture instead of computer science.

    • @NarasimhaDiyasena
      @NarasimhaDiyasena Месяц назад +6

      I read that 60% of those who got a degree in computer science can’t get a job in it

    • @ingweking8748
      @ingweking8748 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@NarasimhaDiyasena It is true unfortunately

    • @AlexisSaless
      @AlexisSaless 29 дней назад +2

      You can still get into it! There might be a life where tech and agriculture can co-exist.

    • @amstrogaming9109
      @amstrogaming9109 26 дней назад +3

      Never to late to start

    • @violakrone8429
      @violakrone8429 17 дней назад

      You can learn it quick its no science 😉

  • @tinagale7840
    @tinagale7840 8 месяцев назад +42

    Turmeric not only makes the pickles look pretty but the health benefits of turmeric are fantastic!

  • @dothedewinme
    @dothedewinme 8 месяцев назад +86

    my grandmother was a master canner, and gardener. seems like everyone in my family has almost given up this lost art. I worked as a from scratch cook at an italian restaurant in 2010 and have moved onto curing, making aged cheese, beer, cider, wine, fridge pickles, saurkraut, kimchi etc (barrel aged dark beer) pasta, bread, jams/jellies (wine is effing HARD to make well) and I have a large winter and summer garden (zone 9) and making and freezing several gallons of marinara from our home grown romas every year etc. the last realms I have yet to touch is canning and grinding & aging various cured meats. (only ever made prosciutto) but I REALLY want to continue her legacy and learn to can

    • @Doggylver777
      @Doggylver777 7 месяцев назад

      How do you make cheese and what kinds?

    • @pearls1626
      @pearls1626 3 месяца назад +2

      I hope you do keep her legacy

    • @meloniestewart2940
      @meloniestewart2940 Месяц назад +1

      🙏🏼💕🙏🏼

  • @georgeweast18
    @georgeweast18 Год назад +1778

    Excellent pantry tour. My wife and I put up more than we can use every year - I guess we are used to having kids around. Just a note to Dan - I learned from my grandma to fill empty jars with clean water (clean used lid and ring) and return them to the back of the row. It solves several problems like storing empty jars, keeping product to the front looking organized and you never know when some emergency water might be needed.

    • @LittleMountainRanch
      @LittleMountainRanch  Год назад +340

      That is seriously the BEST idea! Thank you so much for the tip.

    • @kimnkruzin
      @kimnkruzin Год назад +121

      This is the best idea I have heard! Especially in this day and age - clean water is hard to get from any city or village.

    • @bonniechase8245
      @bonniechase8245 Год назад +55

      Wow, what a fabulous idea!

    • @cbass2755
      @cbass2755 Год назад +154

      I put up a lot for a single women living alone. But I have 4 people I plan to feed if and when things get tough. I eat from the beginning of my canning year. I’m into October, 2021. It has saved me so much money living on social security. Food is one thing I don’t have to worry about. I can concentrate on heat and lights. I had to add that I too store water in every empty jar I own.

    • @Just-Nikki
      @Just-Nikki Год назад +56

      We started doing this recently and it just makes so much sense that I could kick myself for not thinking of it myself ( I saw a comment like yours a couple of months ago ) it was truly a DUH moment for me!

  • @melkor1225
    @melkor1225 Год назад +260

    Holy smokes. My wife makes about a dozen jars of salsa each year and I thought we were doing great. 😂 Your pantry and canning expertise is next level. Awesome.

    • @angelabyrne154
      @angelabyrne154 Год назад +9

      I’ve only ever pickled onions and made strawberry jam. Salsa is a whole other level to me.

    • @allanstephenson9336
      @allanstephenson9336 Год назад +6

      We love salsa. Last batch made 82 jars. Use it in spaghetti. With pepper and onions. And 1 Jared of garden variety sauce. Omg yummmm

    • @firehorsewoman414
      @firehorsewoman414 11 месяцев назад +2

      12 more than I made so . . .❤

    • @nicolemeomartino9597
      @nicolemeomartino9597 5 месяцев назад

      Same!

  • @user-pu8tn9np7p
    @user-pu8tn9np7p 3 дня назад +1

    Моя русская душа радуется, глядя с одобрением на такие отличные запасы!

  • @shannonthompson8448
    @shannonthompson8448 9 месяцев назад +43

    GIRL!!!
    You HAVE TO try canning quick breads (banana bread, Boston brown bread, zucchini bread, etc) wide mouth pint jars, greased, filled half way with batter, bake @ 350* till done, wipe rims, lids & rings, wait for the pop. Awesome winter breads ready to eat in the summer. I've tried and test a jar a month, over a year and they taste fresh and moist. MUST use wide mouth pint jars, or the breads don't come out of the jars as nice. Tons of RUclips videos on it.

    • @marypat7196
      @marypat7196 7 месяцев назад

      Dangerous…you create an environment for botulism to grow. Please be careful.

    • @thriftylady1170
      @thriftylady1170 Месяц назад

      Thank you!!

    • @Cindy-gj7ge
      @Cindy-gj7ge 17 дней назад +1

      I have a shitton of zucchini I grew that I use for bread...this is a great idea.😊

  • @beverlygiroux2824
    @beverlygiroux2824 Год назад +438

    If you have a barrel, fill it with clean sand, layer your root veggies in it. and they stay nice and firm. I am 79 years old, and clearly remember my grandparents doing this. Carrots, etc.A nice addition to your root cellar.

    • @phaedrabrooks5392
      @phaedrabrooks5392 Год назад +8

      Layer the vegetable on top of each other, or layer them with the sand? Ty

    • @julienjohnston6705
      @julienjohnston6705 Год назад +17

      @@phaedrabrooks5392 Sand

    • @joyannkjb4l250
      @joyannkjb4l250 Год назад +67

      @@phaedrabrooks5392 put a layer of sand, or straw (not hay), or shredded paper (nothing glossy) or wood chips, or saw dust, on the bottom of your crate, then place a layer of potatoes, (not touching each other) then cover them with a layer of sand, then spread another layer of potatoes another layer of sand.... Keep making layers with the sand, potatoes, sand, potatoes.
      **And for carrots, you basically do the same, but you store them
      in dirt. ✔️😉👍

    • @dottiea.2186
      @dottiea.2186 Год назад +4

      We used news paper...

    • @functionalfloridalandscaping
      @functionalfloridalandscaping Год назад +10

      My great grandparents always used to use sawdust.. but they also had an enormous supply of wood product because of acres and acres of forest on their property.

  • @sohinam9738
    @sohinam9738 Год назад +193

    Turmeric is not just good for color, it's a natural antiseptic and also antibacterial. Your pantry looks amazing. You worked really hard for it, thanks for sharing with us.

    • @sandrajohnson9926
      @sandrajohnson9926 Год назад +5

      Put some turmeric, ginger & garlic in a jar of honey.
      Leave it sit a couple of weeks.
      Be sure to burp the jar the first week.
      It makes a great at hand medicine.

    • @yeahman1756
      @yeahman1756 10 месяцев назад +1

      Don't forget fresh LemonGrass it's properities are very beneficial if living out in the colder states like that..

    • @midnightrun2764
      @midnightrun2764 9 месяцев назад +3

      It’s also an anti inflammatory! Use it, you won’t be sorry! 👍🏼

  • @khaosssssss1727
    @khaosssssss1727 Год назад +70

    I'm never going to do this but watching everything that you are doing is so soothing to my soul.
    I'm just so impressed!!
    You're giving so much back, thank you 😊.

  • @papajeff5486
    @papajeff5486 Год назад +69

    This is the most thoughtful, well stocked storage system I’ve ever seen. My grandparents and my parents grew big gardens and canned everything. This, however, is truly great. BIG HIP HIP HURRAY, to you guys. Do we get to see the garden sometime? Thanks for sharing, love this.

    • @LittleMountainRanch
      @LittleMountainRanch  Год назад +11

      I share the garden and putting up all the food all summer long! I'd love for you to stick around. Thank you so much!

  • @boonedog1457
    @boonedog1457 Год назад +27

    One suggestion. Store the vinegar on the bottom shelf, relocating your medical supplies above liquids. We've had plastic bottles leak, causing damage to items below.

  • @angelalovell5669
    @angelalovell5669 Год назад +349

    GOALS! This was like being invited into someone's home after your car breaks down, and being shown the most interesting and fabulous things just to keep you occupied, all out of kindness. I'm so impressed with your preservation and organisation, you two are a great team! I hope I can manage something like this one day.

    • @LittleMountainRanch
      @LittleMountainRanch  Год назад +29

      This may be my favourite comment! I'm so glad you felt that way. ❤️

    • @georgevavoulis4758
      @georgevavoulis4758 Год назад +2

      How do you keep track of things when nothing is labeled 🏷?

    • @avantgardethemighty6724
      @avantgardethemighty6724 Год назад +2

      ​@@georgevavoulis4758 left side/right side, there's almost always a color difference to go by. I'd personally look for some labeling or an info panel but once you're used to it it just flows I suppose?

    • @nicolecarnevale3226
      @nicolecarnevale3226 Год назад +2

      I second that!
      Your food is so creative and delicious looking.

    • @visnuexe
      @visnuexe Год назад +2

      I used to can for the year round on a farm in WV. Fortunately, my husband and brother did most of the gardening and harvesting. We had a good root cellar with plenty of shelf space, bins for potatoes and root crops. I made cheese every other day, and baked bread every week. It got challenging during canning season keeping the bread and cheese production going. So I sympathize with you for abandoning that task. There were quite a few late night marathon canning sessions going through to the fall. It helps to have a few extra hands! You are both to be congratulated for the work that feeds your family! Nice tour!!!

  • @MrStreaty122
    @MrStreaty122 Год назад +59

    My ex’s family makes their own jellies and jams. When they give gifts they usually include a couple jars just to use their inventory. My favorite, i ate several jars on its own, was Apple Grape jam. Stuff was heavenly, used it in PBJ’s instead of normal grape jelly. Absolute game changer
    You know what I also realized? While this pantry is expensive to replicate by todays standards, go back 150~200 years and it’s the holy grail of food

  • @preppermimi7281
    @preppermimi7281 Год назад +42

    Tip: Store your plastic buckets of food on wood planks supported with small bricks underneath. The chemicals in concrete, sealants, and paints can leech into your buckets over time. I really enjoyed the tour of your beautiful pantry💗 Alot of hardwork went into that for sure!

    • @juliejones-fx1sf
      @juliejones-fx1sf 9 месяцев назад +4

      I was also taught the same thing. Plastic buckets can absorb moisture & other things from the concrete.

  • @jpallen719
    @jpallen719 Год назад +166

    My grandmother used to put up 1000 jars or more when I was a kid in Montana. When you say you’re passionate about counting I completely understand that, it is the most satisfying and rewarding process that anyone could be involved in. It is a true craft that not many people are able to do or master well. How very well organized your space is….

    • @judybass4339
      @judybass4339 Год назад +11

      Most people just don't understand the "pure time" involved in the preparation of foods, preparation of the jars, organization of every step....AND...that is not counting the actual canning with the jars in the canner. !!! But if you ever try it and visually see your results, you will be a newbie but you will get to experience "that canner's secret "

    • @ameliashipley6951
      @ameliashipley6951 11 месяцев назад

      rip

  • @bettypearson5570
    @bettypearson5570 Год назад +15

    Glad to see the strips for earthquake protection on the pantry shelves. I get so twitchy watching all these pantries being shown that are so vulnerable even to a large dog or child accidentally knocking a jar or 2 off the shelf. Nice pantry.

  • @schrodingerscat1863
    @schrodingerscat1863 Год назад +16

    Getting dry food off a concrete floor is absolutely critical if you are going to want it to last long term. Concrete holds lots of moisture and anything placed directly onto concrete will always get damp. Those platforms you built from reclaimed timber are going to save you a lot of headaches regardless of flooding.

  • @halimbouchama163
    @halimbouchama163 2 месяца назад +3

    You can easily survive the apocalypse with this

  • @emilyalexander1884
    @emilyalexander1884 Год назад +178

    As soon as you showed all of the jams, jellies and syrups I was overwhelmed with nostalgia of my mother canning chokecherry syrup, Saskatoon berry jam and syrup, apple jelly and sauce, rhubarb and strawberry jam, peach jam, dandelion jelly, etc. when i was just a kid. The smell of the kitchen was always so comforting. Thank you for bringing back memories 💕😊

    • @janw491
      @janw491 Год назад +6

      I picked over a kilo of chokecherries this year. It’s settle in the freezer til I have room on the shelves to jelly it. Never tasted them so this will be another experiment!!

    • @emilyalexander1884
      @emilyalexander1884 Год назад +4

      @@janw491 I wish you luck with that project; it sounds like you have alot to process! 😊

    • @wendytube007
      @wendytube007 Год назад +3

      I grew up in Alberta and description reminds me of my childhood and grandma’s canning up of chokecherries and Saskatoon berries ❤

    • @amenahartford1022
      @amenahartford1022 Год назад +3

      @@janw491 they make a great wine also. My great grandmother always made chokecherry wine. I miss it.

  • @sharynwinters1579
    @sharynwinters1579 Год назад +21

    Hi, I`m 88 yrs. old, canned a lot when my children were all at home. But it never gets out of your blood. You have done a unbelievable job of growing, preserving, in such beautiful order. Feel sorry that I can`t do exactly like you. BUT in my journey through so many DIY`s I have learned a ton of information, and enjoy what we do now. For the first time I dry canned half gallon jars of garbanzo beans, red lentils, jasmine and basmati rice. Have also dry canned four different kinds of pasta, so really proud of those. I live with my daughter and son-in-law, so we share in all of this. And was given a gift of a dyhydrater so have done oregano, lemon thyme, english thyme, sage, parsley, mandarin orange slices, dried mandarin orange skins, tomatoes, and apples. I do have backup food, several kinds of beans, canned tomatoes, meats, oils, dried garlic, dried onions, and a lot more. I am fully convinced that even aside from having a full stock of food for your family, there is coming a time when food is going to be even more sparse than it is now.

  • @karensimmons903
    @karensimmons903 Год назад +22

    For your canned chicken and legs that you say is stringy, you can make chicken stew, chicken and dumplins or chicken salad for sandwiches. Hope this helps, I LOVE YOUR PANTRY and root cellar!

  • @Lougan44
    @Lougan44 8 месяцев назад +7

    Just to help you: my Mother stored carrots in large crock jars in sand she layered sand, (lay carrots sideways)carrots, sand, carrots, till full. It kept the carrots firm and so they didn’t become dry. She stored potatoes I believe the same way in a galvanized horse waterer.

    • @anmnou
      @anmnou 7 месяцев назад

      I have seen a similar technique done with salt...

  • @TraceyMush
    @TraceyMush Год назад +11

    Your husband did a great job of not only organizing things by category, which you probably already did, but by laying them out so the colors are most beautiful. It is truly a beautiful Bountiful pantry.

  • @bevanmudge867
    @bevanmudge867 Год назад +35

    I love the concept of being self reliant and producing my own food growing fruit , vegetables , herbs , raising animals and supplying my own solar electricity and water this has always been a dream of mine . I am the kind of person who finds satisfaction in my hard work and reaping the benefits in the end results and I am working towards moving out to the country and living out my dream . Thank you for showing us the tour of your pantry it is an inspiration to me and encourages me to work all the more harder towards my goal . Cheers from Australia 🇦🇺.

  • @mikebegonia6134
    @mikebegonia6134 8 месяцев назад +4

    Carrots tend to keep better when covered with sand. That's how my grandma always kept them. Love your pantry!

  • @alanbailey1696
    @alanbailey1696 2 месяца назад +1

    Dang, this women is a savage! Amazing job young lady and well done!!

  • @corrinnehoffman3248
    @corrinnehoffman3248 Год назад +107

    My goodness, the pantry has turned out so beautiful and well organized. You can both be real proud of all that hard work!

  • @wrinklesandsprinkles
    @wrinklesandsprinkles Год назад +64

    The pantry is a spectacular work of art! So pleasing to the eye. I’ve always loved your root cellar. It’s like a mysterious secret hidden space. I don’t think many true root cellars exist anymore. Be well and stay safe, Doc❤

    • @SirenaSpades
      @SirenaSpades Год назад +2

      I have one... my house is on the Historic Register.

  • @trueroyalty3342
    @trueroyalty3342 Год назад +18

    All my life as a youth, living in a loathsome concrete jungle, I wondered what it would be like to go outside and pick food from a plant and eat it.

    • @littlelamb6804
      @littlelamb6804 День назад

      It's so gratifying, especially if you grow it yourself! It is the best in quality, taste, and nutrition. The store bought stuff pales in comparison.

  • @ajeenify
    @ajeenify Год назад +3

    I am watching all the way from India and this is soooooo important. Thank you for your good heart .

  • @leannekenyoung
    @leannekenyoung Год назад +74

    Chelsea I think you are an incredible woman!!! All of those canned foods are hours and hours of work and I’m like you when it comes to preserving foods. I absolutely love how well you do it. I also respect your knowledge that you know you aren’t the best cheese maker or the best tincture maker and I think that’s very smart to realize it and to accept it and to know that there is another way of dealing with it. Simply order tinctures from a reputable maker. Besides maybe Dan will be able to try his hand at cheesemaking and perhaps he will be able to show you how to do it?! Why not?! Do you make your own apple cider vinegar?🥰🇨🇦❤️

  • @bdlodahl
    @bdlodahl Год назад +48

    Yours is the most extensive pantry, cold pantry and root celler I've personally visualized. I learned basic canning from my mother and grandmothers who canned a lot, but not in the amounts that you've done! Very informative and impressive tour of being prepared for long-term nutritional needs! This is the first time I've seen your channel. Thank you for sharing your life with us! 👏👏👏👍

  • @angiea9467
    @angiea9467 6 месяцев назад +2

    Wow your husband is a very good organizer bless his heart

  • @snowflakehomestead2233
    @snowflakehomestead2233 Год назад +5

    i love the safety bar for your canned food not to topple off the shelf!!! brilliant!

  • @olgaluna6447
    @olgaluna6447 Год назад +56

    I have made about 1 kilo of wild Fireweed this year in Russia. It's rather popular here and many companies produce Fireweed tea. Also, there are people, especially in the country, who love making Fireweed tea themselves. Rubbing leaves with your hands is a physically hard and long process because you need to break up leaf cells so that they become wet for further fermentation. I use a different method: put the leaves in small plastic bags and then in a freezer for at least 24 hours (can be longer so you can continue the process when you have time, days or weeks later). Freezing allows leaf cells to break up. After that you can either roll the leaves with your hands as usual or, the easier way, to grind them through a meat grinder, and you will have granulated tea in the end. Then you ferment the mass and dry it either in the sun or in a stove. Some people love to fry fermented leaves, the tea comes black.

    • @elizabethflynn8455
      @elizabethflynn8455 Год назад

      Very helpful tip. Thank you.

    • @angelalovell5669
      @angelalovell5669 Год назад +3

      Omg, freezing is a super clever way to break up the cell structure! Nice tip!

    • @user-rh5oe6ck9l
      @user-rh5oe6ck9l 20 дней назад

      Наконец-то комментарии от русских 😊 нам точно есть, что рассказать про консервирование и запасы продуктов

  • @MrRKWRIGHT
    @MrRKWRIGHT Год назад +10

    Good afternoon Little Mountain Ranch. Now that's what I'd call a well stocked pantry. Thanks for sharing and have a great weekend, you wonderful strong, self-sufficient offgrid woman. 😎😉🌹🌻🌼

  • @annvanwesten2488
    @annvanwesten2488 Год назад

    What an amazing pantry. Thank you so much for the tour!!

  • @janetshook8968
    @janetshook8968 Год назад +24

    What to do with the chicken: Chicken Slurp Gravy - chop to size you like or shred; make like a thickish cream of chicken soup; goes well on: fried potatoes; mashed potatoes; baked potatoes; biscuits; just about anything you usually put a good thick gravy on. We get ours from an old recipe my husband's mother used to make for chicken & dumplings. Great pantry!

  • @belieftransformation
    @belieftransformation Год назад +9

    Wonderful progress & great tour with comments of what your family likes! Thanks for sharing! We have a short growing season in Central/west Alberta also. My daughter & her partner bought an acreage with greenhouses & I was gifted many hundreds of tomatoes to can this year! I’m in my 7th decade so it took me several days to do them (first time making canning salsas & spaghetti sauce), so anyone can learn!
    Many blessings to your wonderful family! Great organization of your foods! 🤗❤️

  • @bluecottonbykammy7199
    @bluecottonbykammy7199 Год назад +5

    You can make Brunswick stew with the canned chicken that is stringy. This is a southern favorite and it will not matter if it’s stringy.

  • @philboudreau
    @philboudreau 11 месяцев назад

    I love your pantry! Thank you for the tour!

  • @sylviabradley7355
    @sylviabradley7355 Год назад +29

    You and Dan are great partners. The shelves are absolutely beautiful as are all of the beautiful jars of canned food.💥

  • @shirleygiesbrecht2051
    @shirleygiesbrecht2051 Год назад +10

    If you don’t like the green beans find some ham bones and some summer savory and make the most delicious soup. With ham chunks, onions, potatoes, summer savory and add the canned beans …..makes a great soup! I always add a small amount of cream at the table and fresh homemade buns with butter. Yum

  • @user-wy3ow9zx5w
    @user-wy3ow9zx5w 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you for the inspiration and tips.

  • @jeanniewright2554
    @jeanniewright2554 Год назад

    Thank you for the tour!!

  • @janicecraig2364
    @janicecraig2364 Год назад +10

    The stringy chicken legs would be good in pulled chicken (sorta like pulled pork) using a zingy bbq sauce on homemade buns. Yum. That’s my suggestion to use up those hidden jars. 😂

  • @HannaARTzink
    @HannaARTzink Год назад +9

    I am Canadian retiree landed in the middle of Poland. I started quite successfully veg gardening so all ideas for food preservation are wonderful.
    So far I eas mostly feeding my friends and neighbours and started preserving. Gorgeous pantry, thanks for showing!

  • @eclectic_housewife
    @eclectic_housewife Год назад

    That. Was. Awesome!!!!!

  • @VVtv13
    @VVtv13 Год назад

    Such a beautiful pantry!🤍🤍 truly goals 🤗

  • @alexandra2jerry
    @alexandra2jerry Год назад +4

    I’m left speechless looking at all your hard work. On top of all the cooking and canning you casually mentioned you do 3 loads of laundry every day! 😳 Good Grief! I can only hope your husband treasures you for the incredible housewife you are. 👏👏👏

  • @Sarah.E.Johnson
    @Sarah.E.Johnson Год назад +16

    What an absolutely beautiful bounty that showcases your family’s hard work!!! The canning shelves are particularly impressive.

  • @lorenagardner5601
    @lorenagardner5601 Год назад

    Love this. So amazing!

  • @cositapreciosa8
    @cositapreciosa8 Год назад

    I love your enthusiasm. Thank you for sharing your experience with us 😁🙏🏼

  • @sparkle3000
    @sparkle3000 Год назад +21

    Omg... I remember when you first started and use to sleep on the kitchen floor! lol... Your kids were little. Now they have their own gardens? wow... how time flies.
    You have grown!
    You worked so hard. You deserve it.
    Congratulations!

  • @carolynmoody9460
    @carolynmoody9460 Год назад +17

    All the way through this video I've tried to think of the perfect word to describe how beautiful your pantry is..an all the hard Dan has done to make your dreams come true..the word that keeps coming to mind is BREATHTAKING..🏆❤️❤️ absolutely breathtaking

  • @HumaneEmergencyAnimalRescue911
    @HumaneEmergencyAnimalRescue911 2 месяца назад

    Awesome set up. Thanks for sharing!

  • @jackiemecheri4418
    @jackiemecheri4418 Год назад

    You are AMAZING..great tour thank you x

  • @JustTheTwoOfUsHomestead
    @JustTheTwoOfUsHomestead Год назад +8

    Love your pantry tours! If there were awards for “Pretty Pantries” you’d win hands down😉

  • @judyabernathy80
    @judyabernathy80 Год назад +28

    Chelsea, that was OUTSTANDING!! And, everything is so beautifully organized and displayed. Great job by you, Dan and the kiddo’s. Thanks for letting us see it! ♥️🙏🏼♥️

  • @tamararoberts9307
    @tamararoberts9307 Год назад

    So thankful you share your journey as well as Jessica ❤❤

  • @crunchynuttcornflake
    @crunchynuttcornflake 5 месяцев назад

    Great video. Love hearing all the detail.

  • @China-Clay
    @China-Clay Год назад +14

    This is an amazing tour! Way to go! Before you give up on green beans, if you can grow your own, pick the beans quite young, before the bean inside has much shape, they are like candy, so good and different from the green beans you buy anywhere!

  • @cynthiafisher9907
    @cynthiafisher9907 Год назад +4

    All I can say is, WOW! I stand in awe at both of you.

  • @AKUNZ-
    @AKUNZ- 4 месяца назад

    You both Rock! I love the pantry setup.

  • @rubemkleinjunior237
    @rubemkleinjunior237 2 месяца назад

    thanks for sharing I loved it

  • @wandakelly2173
    @wandakelly2173 Год назад +8

    I feel like food preservation is a hobby for me too 😊 I totally enjoy it!

  • @DirtPeaceAndPurpose
    @DirtPeaceAndPurpose Год назад +65

    Phenomenal job, Chelsea! The pantry looks beautiful!! Don’t you just love being able to display all your hard work in a way you can stand back and admire it? Great job on the shelves, Dan!

  • @anandian
    @anandian Год назад

    this was quite inspiring! thank you for sharing!

  • @brookchisholm4253
    @brookchisholm4253 Год назад

    I loved this video so much, thank you for sharing

  • @chevypreps6417
    @chevypreps6417 Год назад +8

    Very impressive pantry. Knowing how to store and preserve food is mandatory. Thanks for the video.

  • @mori8424
    @mori8424 Год назад +7

    Gophers taught me how to store potatoes for a full year and still be firm, moist and no sprouts. Gophers used one corner of my root cellar one year as a dump site for the soil they dug to make their tunnels. My root cellar walls were dirt on the lower half and the gophers made a 3” diameter hole in the cellar wall. They then brought the dirt from their tunnels and dropped it into my cellar in one corner. There just happened to be a small pile of potatoes in that corner. So the spuds got completely covered with about 5” of moist but not wet soil. I discovered them one full year after placing them in the cellar. I was blown away, they were not mushy and sprouting like spuds get after only six months in my cellar (we live in a zone five garden zone). Instead they were just like the day I dug them, firm and moist. I couldn’t believe it! Also if you put your carrots in damp sand they will store better. You can also just leave them in the ground outside and cover them with straw bales or bags of leaves for non frozen ground to be able to dig them. Stored this way they will also become sweeter. Plant them first part of July (in zone 5) for winter storage. Plant spinach in mid Aug outside and leave it unprotected all winter and in early spring you will have the most delicious, sweet spinach. Plant cabbage in early spring and start harvesting as soon as the heads are softball size but don’t pull out the plant. Leave it growing and it will produce 4 more heads. Thin them leaving only one head and it will grow into another large head. For fall cabbage, transplant mid July. Doing these things will give you 5 months of fresh cabbage plus what you store in the root cellar for the winter.

  • @marvona3531
    @marvona3531 Год назад

    Great organized, thanks for sharing🙏🍀🙏

  • @cherylgann1993
    @cherylgann1993 6 месяцев назад

    😂Love your pantry tour!! Thank you!!

  • @tardismole
    @tardismole Год назад +6

    I thought I'd done something wrong, because I lost my cabbages, too. Finding out that it's not just me is very comforting. So glad I found your video.

  • @jeannereddig5080
    @jeannereddig5080 Год назад +5

    You pantries are beautiful. I love how beautiful the jars of food look on your shelves. I like your root cellar as well. ❤

  • @theglamourplanner
    @theglamourplanner Год назад

    I love your organization ❤ definitely going to check out your canning because I haven’t done it in a long time

  • @davesgirlie382princess9
    @davesgirlie382princess9 Год назад +4

    I’m in absolute awe of your amazing pantry and root cellar. Obviously so much hard work has gone into this. Fabulous job to all involved x

  • @VagabondAnne
    @VagabondAnne Год назад +7

    Chelsea, I think you set the standard for Canning Pantry Tours on RUclips! Three Rivers Homestead, Homesteading Family, and That 1870s Homestead are right up there with you, but with 11 kids, in freezing Canada, you really take the cake!
    My suggestion about canning chicken: cut up whole chickens, freeze the parts, use the carcasses for stock and soup. Canned thighs are a waste of my favorite part, frozen is better. I like using canned drumsticks in a Basque chicken stew whenever I can get good Spanish chorizo, which isn't often, so I usually just pull it off the bones and use it for soup or mushroomy casseroles. Frozen chicken breasts are useful in so many recipes so I like getting them at the whole chicken price for the effort of cutting them up (I spent one day cutting up a dozen chickens and after that I got very fast, same thing with duck!)

  • @kathleensanderson3082
    @kathleensanderson3082 Год назад +21

    I've canned a lot of salmon in quart jars, and in those, the canning time does pretty much dissolve the bones. It looks like you are canning in pint jars, which is probably why your bones aren't dissolving as much as you'd like. Although, they never just disappear entirely. They do get soft enough that they shouldn't be a choking hazard, which is my biggest concern with fish bones.

    • @LittleMountainRanch
      @LittleMountainRanch  Год назад +1

      Good point! I’ll bet that’s why.

    • @desireereynolds577
      @desireereynolds577 Год назад

      So I personally found that I like to can my salmon in half pint jars. Anything bigger and I felt like it dried it out, but in the half pints it's soooooo moist... And tasty

  • @LongislandnativeSanctuary
    @LongislandnativeSanctuary 10 месяцев назад

    wow bless you for sharing!! so inspiring

  • @albertobazansilva7482
    @albertobazansilva7482 Год назад

    I really loved the video! Thank you

  • @sherriekemper1828
    @sherriekemper1828 Год назад +5

    This is a terrific and inspiring video. I dream of having such an organized pantry, but I'm not holding my breath! Thank you.

  • @lynnebrown-hardy1566
    @lynnebrown-hardy1566 Год назад +4

    Your pantry is amazing. I can only imagine what joy it brings to you every time you walk in there.

  • @Christine-ch7iv
    @Christine-ch7iv 20 дней назад

    Incredible thank you for sharing.

  • @lisawilson2018
    @lisawilson2018 6 месяцев назад

    Wow! I love it all!!

  • @cassiareece4310
    @cassiareece4310 Год назад +20

    This was so impressive! I can only dream of having a storage facility like this! Well done!

  • @TrueGritAppalachianWays
    @TrueGritAppalachianWays Год назад +7

    My grandma cans her beats, but if she decides she wants to turn a jar into pickled beats she will pour the water out, and add pickle juice when she finishes a jar of pickles! She keeps them in the fridge and they are great!
    That is AWESOME that you were able to grow corn in 3b!
    I’m a new sub, really enjoyed this tour! I’ve put up approx 500 jars this year and have about 700 all together. I try each year to can more and more.
    I’m intrigued by this pickled Cole slaw as well ☺️

  • @9252LIFE
    @9252LIFE Год назад

    Thanks for the video. Very helpful as we’re building our pantry now.

  • @garyschmidt924
    @garyschmidt924 7 месяцев назад

    Your cellars are awesome!!! Thank you!

  • @candacethompson2521
    @candacethompson2521 Год назад +8

    You should be very proud of your pantry and all the food preservation, you do. Love it

  • @Just-Nikki
    @Just-Nikki Год назад +11

    Spruce tip syrup or infused honey is wonderful in tea during flu season. What a great idea having an epi pen with the herbs. I will be implementing that myself!

  • @lyndaster46
    @lyndaster46 Месяц назад +1

    grind up that chicken for chicken salad sandwiches. chop it small and use in enchiladas, grind for spaghetti, coarse chop for pot pie? grind for tamales. small chop for fajita nachos. rough grind for shepherds pie ( instead of beef) small chop for chicken fried rice. Treat the dog on Christmas :)

  • @patriciaesco6658
    @patriciaesco6658 3 месяца назад +1

    Very Smart Thanks for tips and Info!❤

  • @melissanash6801
    @melissanash6801 Год назад +4

    I canned chicken legs and breasts together in quart jars and it’s also not very
    pretty:) But it is delicious in chicken enchiladas! I would suggest using 1 can of your legs/thighs with 1 can of your chicken breast. Should be delicious and help mask some of the texture you don’t like.

  • @annabelcarter5266
    @annabelcarter5266 Год назад +10

    This was such an entertaining video. Thank you Chelsea and Dan! That pantry is so pretty and full of hard work and love. I think I would be tempted to put a chair in there and take coffee in the pantry to revel in the success!

  • @HarryStucklermendotcom
    @HarryStucklermendotcom 7 месяцев назад +1

    Absolutely Fantastic. I'm watching this to spend a year at sea on a sailboat. Very informative. Many thanks from Thailand.

  • @sbbzjdhejjdndns4843
    @sbbzjdhejjdndns4843 4 месяца назад

    Amazing i love it!!! Thankyou for making this video