Just about every family
has an eccentric or even a crazy uncle.
You know – the kind of uncle that is a couple cards short of a full
deck. The uncle you dread appearing at
your Fourth of July cookout with his wild conspiracy theories and fringe politics. The sort of embarrassing uncle you wish would
just stay away. Then there is the
favorite uncle. Most families have a
favorite uncle or two. These are the
elder statesmen, the role models, the guy that you identify-with and look up-to.
Uncle Dick's family and
mine grew-up at opposite ends of the block.
We were close. It was almost like
having additional siblings that lived in a house of their own. Richard was my pop's little brother and my
favorite uncle. He's been gone more than forty
years now and I still think about him from time to time. Especially when making homemade tomato juice.
One of my fondest childhood memories is of my
favorite Uncle Dick making tomato juice.
That's an odd memory for sure isn't it?
Growing-up in the 1960s I think most every family had a Foley Food Mill
for grinding-up all sorts of stuff like apples and tomatoes. A few years ago I discarded the ancestral food mill
that had been languishing in the basement.
It was dented and rusty and the paint was flaking from the wooden
handles – likely lead-based paint too. I
have a newer, stainless model of the Foley mill that I purchased at Fleet
Farm. The home canning aficionado's
all-purpose resource - Fleet Farm has everything you need. But I digress.
About the juice.
There is no written record of Uncle Dick's
tomato juice recipe but since I’ve been making the stuff for as long as I can remember. It’s a simple and fail-safe process that you can do from memory.
I fetched a bunch of jars of canned tomatoes from a couple of years of Covid gardening. The tomatoes had already been peeled and cooked when they were previously canned. Simply pop the lid, dump them into the mill and go about grinding them into juice. The mill can easily handle up to a couple of quarts at a time. It's old-school as far as juicing goes but it works just fine.
Do you have any idea how lip-smacking yummy canned homegrown tomatoes are when you open a jar? WOW! It sends you right back to August and September.
As you process your tomatoes thru the mill all you have to do is periodically remove the residual pulp and seeds for the composter.
Grinding away I filled my largest stainless stock pot.
The canned tomatoes already had salt but I added some additional sea salt along with a generous dash of white pepper and onion powder to taste. Gently raise the heat until just shy of a
boil and fill sterilized quart jars with the hot juice leaving 3/4 inch of headspace. Top with lids and
bands.
Process in the canner for another
thirty minutes, remove and set aside to cool.
When the lids pop they're good to go.
You have a shelf-stable pasteurized juice product. No need to refrigerate unless you wish to chill before serving or you have an opened and unfinished jar.
Fifteen quarts of bottled sunshine.
Thanks for the inspiration Uncle Dick - you're the best!
* A word about the jars and lids. Sterilize your jars by immersing them in boiling water or running them through the dishwasher on the 'sanitize' cycle. Lids are easy - in the microwave heat a Pyrex measuring cup of water to a boil. Drop your lids in the hot water. Fish them out with a sterile tongs.
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