Food Preservation: A Year at a Glance (2024)

This site contains affiliate links to products we recommend. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.

Home » Food Preservation: A Year at a Glance

  • Posted
  • inPreserve

Knowing how much food you’ll put up in a year is wonderful, but life can often throw us curve balls. It’s a smart idea to have your food preservation for the year laid out ahead of time to plan for the unexpected and be prepared for anything the weather or the seasons throw at us.

Food Preservation: A Year at a Glance (2)

Planning Ahead

Knowing what crops will be ready to harvest at different times of the year can really help you get ahead when it comes to being prepared for canning. You can’t simply plant a garden, know the common canning mistakes to avoid, and then be ready to preserve food all year round.

It takes careful thought, taking inventory of supplies, scheduling your calendar wisely, keeping your pantry organized, and knowing how to properly store and build up your long-term food storage supply.

In this post I’ll be breaking down a typical calendar year, sharing the foods I’m preserving. This may look slightly different depending on which region you live in.

We’re in the far north of Idaho, so if you’re not sure when asparagus is typically ready for harvest in your area, then ask around to neighbors and friends who garden.

Food Preservation: A Year at a Glance (3)

Preserving Tips

  • Your harvest windows may be very different than mine, so refer to the season rather than the month to get the most from this blog post.
  • Most people are happy to share the bounty of an apple tree in exchange for a few jars of applesauce. Offer preserved foods in exchange for raw materials (unsprayed).
  • Save beans (dry beans) for canning in the off-season when you’re less busy with garden produce.
  • Wait to preserve meals in jars until the garden is finished for the season.
Food Preservation: A Year at a Glance (4)

Early Spring

April

Prepare for the upcoming canning season! You can never prepare too far ahead of time when it comes to canning season.

Tip: If you have a dial gauge canner, get the gauge calibrated before canning season starts at your local University Extension office. Be sure to know these other common canning mistakes to be sure you avoid making them.

Food Preservation: A Year at a Glance (5)

May-June

In season: Rhubarb, strawberries, peas, greens, baby beets, spring flowers/herbs.

Tip:Use up stored produce…winter squash, potatoes, onions, and garlic. If you started plants indoors, be sure you know when and how to transplant them into the garden for the best success.

  • Rhubarb – freeze, jam, pie, rhubarb breakfast cake
  • Asparagus – can asparagus soup, pickle asparagus
  • Strawberries – jam, syrup, pie, freeze-dried strawberries
  • Peas – can, freeze, pickle snap peas
  • Baby beets – pickle
  • Greens – dry and make homemade Super Greens Powder
  • Flowers/herbs – dandelion jelly, wine; elder-flower tea, tincture, champagne
Food Preservation: A Year at a Glance (6)

Early Summer

July-August

In season: Berries and cherries of all kinds, beets, carrots, cabbage, summer squash, tender herbs, cucumbers, green beans, early onions, garlic, potatoes, medicinal herbs, corn, and some fruit.

Tip:Ferment just enough early cabbage into sauerkraut to get you by until fall cabbages are ready.

  • Berries – jams, jellies, syrups, and fruit leathers
  • Cherries – canned cherries, jam, syrup, pie filling, canned in apple cider
  • Beets, carrots, early cabbage – summer ferments, pickled beets, ginger carrots
  • Summer squash – pickles, shredded and frozen or dehydrated for bread, soups
  • Tender herbs – (home-grown parsley, basil, mint, cilantro) mince and freeze in ice cube trays covered with olive oil or lemon/lime juice; herb salts, dried herbs
  • Cucumbers – canned pickles, quick refrigerator pickles and fermented pickles (kosher dills)
  • Green beans – pickle, pickled fermented pizza beans;pressure can raw pack
  • Early onions, garlic – cure and store, dehydrate for spice powders, store onions for long-term storage
  • Potatoes and corn – harvest new potatoes and early corn as a special treat!
  • Medicinal herbs – make tinctures, infused oils, salves
  • Fruit – canned, canned pie filling; fruit liqueurs
Food Preservation: A Year at a Glance (7)

Late Summer

September

In season:Early apples, stone fruit (plums, apricots, peaches, nectarines), tomatoes, peppers, tomatillos, corn, early winter squash, main crop cabbage, and root vegetables.

Tips: Prepare for root veggie storage if your area has hard winter freezes. Can sweet cider to use as a syrup for canning fruit.

  • Early apples – applesauce, apple butter, sweet cider for canning fruit
  • Stone fruit – canned singly, as juice, jam,plum jelly, syrup, or canned pie filling; dehydrate slices or halves, make fruit leather; fruit wine, or even freeze-dry
  • Pressure can Veggie or Beef Stew
  • Tomatoes, peppers, and tomatillos – salsa (like sweet pepper creamy salsa), salsa verde chicken, marinara sauce, fermented tomatoes, sun-dried tomatoes, homemade tomato soup, fermented hot sauce, and fermented tomato sauce
  • Corn – pressure canned, or freeze dried
  • Early winter squash – cure first to develop sweetness before eating or preserving, or turning into puree (or pumpkin pie!)
  • Cabbage – sauerkraut
  • Root vegetables – store in damp sand in root cellar (real or make-shift)
Food Preservation: A Year at a Glance (8)

Fall

October

In season:Main crop apples, meat, vegetables, and herbs.

Tip:Harvest the last of the garden veggies and herbs.

  • Apples – more canned sweet cider, applesauce; hard cider
  • Meat – pressure canned singly and as convenience meals; render lard
  • Vegetables – end-of-garden pickles, canned soups, mixed ferments, dehydrated vegetables
  • Herbs – dehydrated; tinctures, infused oils, salves, fire cider, herb rubs for meat
Food Preservation: A Year at a Glance (9)

November

In season: Meat, gift making.

Tips:Manage your stores to use things up before they spoil.

  • Make convenience meals
  • Pressure can broth
  • Cure meat – bacon, ham, sausage
  • Make specialty food gifts –pear preserves, crabapple butter, stews and soups for comfort meals

Winter

December

Tip: Manage your stores to catch problems before they cause spoilage and loss.

In season: Gift-giving, time with family, and time off from preserving food. Enjoy your well-earned break!

Food Preservation: A Year at a Glance (11)

January

In season:Household products and personal care products.

Tip:Manage your stores and use up odd bits of food from the pantry and freezer to make space for next season.

  • Finish rendering lard and tallow, make soap and candles
  • Make a year’s worth of household cleaning products, personal and skin care products, maybe some herbal salves from the infused oils you made back in the spring and summer months.

February

In season:Eggs, sewing projects.

Tip:Manage your stores and use things up appropriately.

  • Use cold, dark days for sewing household linens, cloth napkins
  • Preserve eggs bywaterglassing, pickling,making egg noodles, and freezing
Food Preservation: A Year at a Glance (12)

March

In season:Eggs, milk.

Tip:Just do the next thing!This is also a great time to start gearing up for the gardening season. Getting starts started indoors. Spring planning for your garden. Cleaning out the garden, maybe supercharging your garden beds and amendingyour soil (if you can get to it yet!).

  • Eggs – see preserving methods listed in February
  • Dairy – start making homemade butter, cheese to freeze, and freezing milk.
  • Pressure can more convenience meals, beans, and broth

And that wraps up your preserving year! This list just barely scratches the surface of what a gardening year might look like, but we did try to sprinkle in the main steps.

We hope this list is helpful in planning out your preserving year so you can stock those shelves and be more self-sufficient in the years to come.

More Related Posts on Preserving:

  • What to Do if You Can’t Find Canning Supplies
  • Canning Mistakes to Avoid
  • Pressure Canning Mistakes to Avoid
  • How to Get Ready for Canning Season
  • Can you Pressure Can in an Instant Pot?
  • How Long is Canned Food Good For?
  • Can I Reuse Canning Lids?
  • Prepping Your Pantry for Preserving Season
  • Tips for a Busy Preservation Day
  • Harvest Right Freeze Dryer (1 Year Review)

Food Preservation: A Year at a Glance (13)

Welcome to Homesteading Family!

Josh and Carolyn bring you practical knowledge on how to Grow, Cook, Preserve and Thrive on your homestead, whether you are in a city apartment or on 40 acres in the country. If you want to increase your self-sufficiency and health be sure to subscribe for helpful videos on gardening, preserving, herbal medicine, traditional cooking and more.

Sign Up for Updates

Get the latest homesteading tips delivered to your inbox weekly.

Subscribe Now!

Popular Posts

Homemade Dandelion Root Tea Latte

Making Homemade Dairy Products Practical

Growing Perennial Plants on the Homestead

Emergency Preparedness – 9 Tips to be Ready

Read by Category

Grow Explore
Preserve Explore
Thrive Explore
Cook Explore

Healthy Healing at Home

Free 4 video workshop on how to confidently use homemade herbal remedies!

Get Started

More to Explore

Continue Reading

How to Get Rid of Grass in the Garden

We've been battling the grass in our terrace garden for years now and are finally hopeful that we're winning the war. Join us for

Read More

Terrace Garden Walkthrough

Come see what we're growing in our terrace gardens, the systems we're implementing and how we're winning our battle against the grass.

Read More

Building up a well-stocked and functional food storage system is a key skill and resource anyone should be developing, whether you’re a prepper or

Read More

Why You Should Homestead… According to the Kids!

With a family our size, we're often asked if the kids enjoy our homesteading lifestyle. Instead of answering for them, we figured we'd ask

Read More

Ammonia Uses: Versatile Solutions to Protect Your Home

Despite its cleaning benefits, using ammonia requires caution. Use this guide to understand the necessary safety precautions and safer natural cleaning alternatives.

Read More

Adding Another Dairy Cow to the Homestead

Over the past couple of years we've known there needed to be some changes in our dairy system. As Tilly, our milk cow, continued

Read More

Previous

Next

Food Preservation: A Year at a Glance (2024)
Top Articles
Youncensored
Latin & American Family Med
The Tribes and Castes of the Central Provinces of India, Volume 3
craigslist: kenosha-racine jobs, apartments, for sale, services, community, and events
Top Scorers Transfermarkt
Ymca Sammamish Class Schedule
Chase Bank Operating Hours
Tv Guide Bay Area No Cable
Hotels Near 500 W Sunshine St Springfield Mo 65807
Tlc Africa Deaths 2021
Chase Claypool Pfr
Ucf Event Calendar
Craigslist Chautauqua Ny
Babyrainbow Private
Ivegore Machete Mutolation
Hood County Buy Sell And Trade
Jvid Rina Sauce
50 Shades Darker Movie 123Movies
Webcentral Cuny
How To Cancel Goodnotes Subscription
2020 Military Pay Charts – Officer & Enlisted Pay Scales (3.1% Raise)
Odfl4Us Driver Login
Allentown Craigslist Heavy Equipment
Juicy Deal D-Art
Mail.zsthost Change Password
How your diet could help combat climate change in 2019 | CNN
Okc Body Rub
T Mobile Rival Crossword Clue
Ontdek Pearson support voor digitaal testen en scoren
Helpers Needed At Once Bug Fables
Hdmovie2 Sbs
Mikayla Campinos: Unveiling The Truth Behind The Leaked Content
The Menu Showtimes Near Amc Classic Pekin 14
Gas Prices In Henderson Kentucky
Glossytightsglamour
Etowah County Sheriff Dept
Samsung 9C8
Family Fare Ad Allendale Mi
Dmitri Wartranslated
“Los nuevos desafíos socioculturales” Identidad, Educación, Mujeres Científicas, Política y Sustentabilidad
Craigslist Jobs Brownsville Tx
Captain Billy's Whiz Bang, Vol 1, No. 11, August, 1920
America's Magazine of Wit, Humor and Filosophy
Cygenoth
Gvod 6014
Easy Pigs in a Blanket Recipe - Emmandi's Kitchen
Is Ameriprise A Pyramid Scheme
Noh Buddy
2013 Honda Odyssey Serpentine Belt Diagram
Tom Kha Gai Soup Near Me
Minecraft: Piglin Trade List (What Can You Get & How)
Raley Scrubs - Midtown
Buildapc Deals
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Msgr. Benton Quitzon

Last Updated:

Views: 6336

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (43 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Msgr. Benton Quitzon

Birthday: 2001-08-13

Address: 96487 Kris Cliff, Teresiafurt, WI 95201

Phone: +9418513585781

Job: Senior Designer

Hobby: Calligraphy, Rowing, Vacation, Geocaching, Web surfing, Electronics, Electronics

Introduction: My name is Msgr. Benton Quitzon, I am a comfortable, charming, thankful, happy, adventurous, handsome, precious person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.