Cathy Barrow is the author of the forthcoming book Mrs. Wheelbarrow's Practical Pantry: Recipes and Techniques for Year-Round Preserving. She writes the blog Mrs. Wheelbarrow's Kitchen, and her articles appear in The Washington Post and The New York Times, among other publications. She lives in Washington, D.C.
Q: How did you come up with the idea for your book?
A: My landscaping business went into the dumps in 2008, and
I didn’t know what to do. I thought I would start cooking classes, and a friend
said, Have you heard of [blogging]?
I started a blog. People paid more attention when I talked
about preserving. The Ball book [on canning] has been around for decades, and
there’s growing interest among young bloggers.
I never thought I would do a book, but the more I wrote
about canning, the more interest there was. The New York Times called and asked
would I write about canning.
I found an agent…I played cat and mouse with the proposal
for over a year, until my agent said it’s time to do something with this! I put
together a proposal for a book that’s very different [from the end product].
The things that were the same were the recipes, but the way it’s organized is
totally different.
I’m hoping people will put this book on the shelf with the
other basics.
Q: How did you first get interested in preserving?
A: It’s just something I’ve always done. Not at the level
I’m doing now—now I’m a crazy canner! I always made three things: pickle relish,
my mother’s mango chutney, and raspberry jam. As long as I had those three
things, I was fine.
I started to can tomatoes, and that was a big turning
point…If I could only can one thing, it would be tomatoes.
Q: What do you see as the importance of local eating?
A: Local eating for me is about our community and the whole
economy. It’s so easy to go to the store and buy strawberries.
I started watching the local food movement growing. It
occurred to me that it was awfully easy to say you’re a local eater in the
summer, but in the winter it wasn’t. I started going to more and more farmers’
markets.
I do feel committed to my community and to the farmers I
know personally. By preserving, now there’s [local] food all year.
Q: What are the most important things you’d tell a newcomer about
preserving?
A: There are two things. Preserving, or canning, is one
issue—putting jars into boiling water, knowing they’re safe. The other is
cooking, which is like following any recipe. The two issues are often confused.
I encourage new preservers to use trusted recipes. Start
with simple things: raspberry jelly, dill pickles. Work with the cooking part,
and then go to the canning part. With most current recipes, you make a small
batch, two or three jars, and the first time you make jam, it goes really fast
[before it can even be preserved]! Then you make it again, and learn how to
preserve.
Would you be frightened to put a jar in boiling water and
take it out? The worst thing that would happen is that it would be undercooked
and would be sauce. Or it would be too firm, and then you would dilute it with
water. There’s some nuance in cooking, but very little in canning.
The other thing I hear a lot is, I’m going to poison my
family. Botulism poisoning occurs most often with commercial foods. The good
news is that botulism is evident in foods with low acid, so fruits and pickles
are always going to be OK. That’s good to know.
The things that are dangerous are vegetables that are not
pickled, things with onions, peppers, or garlic. Forget making spaghetti
sauce—just can the tomato and make the sauce later.
Replicate what you can find in the grocery store. I do
pressure canning—beans, chicken stock, tuna fish, salmon. I can make up a very
nice grocery store in the basement. But that’s advanced, graduate school
canning!
Q: How did you pick the recipes in your book?
A: All these recipes are things I cook every year and put on
the shelf. It depends what the food [supply] looked like—this was a bad cherry
year this year. I couldn’t can any cherry recipes this year, so I’m doing a few
more blueberries.
I haven’t purchased a gift in years—people want things from
my pantry! Friends with kids in college—I can send soup, or jams.
Q: How did you work with the photographers who took the
photos for the book?
A: Christopher Hirsheimer and Melissa Hamilton are two
women. Christopher is one of the founders of Saveur magazine, and the aesthetic
to her photography has been appealing to me for a long time.
I had decided I wanted the photos taken [when the food was]
in season. Often they’re taken in January or February, during two weeks in a
studio, and the fruit does not look alive. I explained what I wanted, and she
said that makes a lot of sense. We started shooting last June. I would drive to
the studio in New Jersey with jams and produce.
Many canning books are obsessed with what it looks like in
the jar. I want what’s before, and what happens when it’s out of the jar. When
it’s in a jar, that’s the least interesting part of the process.
They were so wonderful to work with me that way! I would go for
three or four days [at a time] depending on what food was available. It took a
lot of organization, reorganizing [the material in the book] by what was in
season. I would call and say, I can’t find jalapenos, and they’d say they have
it. They were very generous and taught me a lot.
Q: Are you going to write another book?
A: I am. I’ve had long talks with my editor and my agent.
I’m not starting for a while; I’m fiddling around with the proposal. I want to
devote the next year to selling this book. It comes out November 1, and we have
a very busy schedule planned; we’re already booking into 2015. I will settle
down in September 2015 and start working on the next one.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: A lot of people want to know if I grow everything myself.
I had a small community garden last year. I can’t possibly grow enough; I don’t
have the space or time. I have deer, foxes, and raccoons [in the yard]. I have
strawberry plants, and the chipmunks get [most of them]. I wish I had the
space!
But I do have a nice relationship with farmers, and
pick-your-own farms are everywhere. There are ways to do this even if you don’t
grow it yourself.
People ask if it’s cheaper to can than to buy in the grocery
store. I can’t say it’s less expensive, but I can say that I know where the
food comes from, and that there’s nothing questionable. I know I spend a little
more in the summer, and a lot less in winter. In the winter, we can go for over
a week without going to the store.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
Cathy gives everyone the courage to try canning - I used her strawberry jam recipe and found it was easy to do, even without specialized equipment
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