Processing Fruits and Vegetables

One dilemma that gardeners face in the fall is how to make the year’s harvest last into the winter – or even year round, if the bounty is large enough. Here, Shawnigan’s Environmental Lead and Horticulturalist, Patricia Hanbidge, covers some popular ways to process fruits and vegetables to extend their shelf lives.
 
Some fruits and vegetables do not have a long shelf life, so to ensure having these products available to you throughout the winter it is important to process these fruits and vegetables in order to store them for any length of time. As with any storage, produce should be carefully picked to ensure that the products are free of nicks, bruises and other damage, so that you are putting away the best quality of food. If there is damage to the fruit and vegetables, then those should be consumed at the dinner table as soon as possible rather than processed and stored for winter. 
 
It is extremely important when harvesting anything to ensure that the field heat is removed from the harvested produce as soon as possible. Also, it is best to pick prior to the heat of the day so that the produce is as cool as possible.
 
During any type of processing, it is important to preserve the colour, flavour, texture and nutrition while also prolonging the shelf life. Fruits and vegetables can be stored, canned, frozen, dried, juiced or fermented. Due to modern lifestyles and diet preferences, we have developed many methods and procedures for preserving our harvest. 
 
Heat treatment and sterilization is one of the most traditional methods of preserving fruits and vegetables. During this process, heat is used to sterilize, pasteurize or blanch the products and then using hermetically sealed packaging that is metal, glass or plastic. After washing the product, we often trim, slice or chop the product and then blanch them using steam or water for a specific amount of time that is dependent on the product. A rapid cooling then occurs, and the product is most often bagged and frozen. Life of the product essentially is ended due to the high heat and thus the produce no longer respires, which does not happen when using a variety of storage options that do not involve processing.  
 
I have fond memories of my mom blanching and freezing huge amounts of vegetables in order to feed the family over the winter months. She would tally up the total number of bags and weights of what she processed which helped to plan for next year’s garden and ensured the family had quality food throughout the year. However, sometimes freezer space is limited, produce is plentiful and needs to be processed appropriately in ways other than freezing.
 
The next most common way of preserving raw vegetables or fruit is to use a pickling process to ensure a long shelf life. Often the produce is again subjected to a heating process, then cooled and placed into jars with a pickling solution (which contains some type of vinegar/acetic acid) which fills the container to the required level thus limiting the amount of oxygen in the jar. The container is sealed to ensure no contamination occurs and the products have a lengthy shelf life. 
 
Last but not least, many fruits and vegetables can be dried using either the sun or other mechanical methods, ensuring that the products are available throughout the winter. 
 
Please click here for more about Shawnigan’s environmental initiatives and experiential learning programs.
 
Patricia Hanbidge is Shawnigan Lake School's Environmental Lead and Horticulturalist. She has worked extensively around the world, helping people develop food sovereignty, enhance food security, and build more sustainable communities.
 
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We acknowledge with respect the Coast Salish Peoples on whose traditional lands and waterways we live, learn and play. We are grateful for the opportunity to share in this beautiful region, and we aspire to healthy and respectful relationships with those who have lived on and cared for these lands for millennia.