2062 - Food Preparation and Preservation | ||
---|---|---|
2062.9) | 14 |
Number of Food Preservation Workshop participants reporting an increase in food preservation skills |
2062.8) | 21 |
Number of Food Preservation Workshop participants |
2062.1) | 40 |
Number of individuals who reported improved knowledge, opinions, skills, or aspirations regarding the safe storage, handling, preparation and/or preservation of food |
2062.5) | 12 |
Number of pints of vegetables, soups, meats, or other value-added products canned through pressure canning |
2062.7) | 0 |
Number of pints of fruits or vegetables dried |
2062.6) | 0 |
Number of pints of fruits or vegetables frozen |
2062.2) | 32 |
Number of individuals who demonstrated safe handling and preparation and/or preservation of food |
2062.4) | 12 |
Number of pints of fruits, vegetables or fruit/vegetable products canned through water bath canning (e.g. pickles, jams, jellies, sauces) |
2062.3) | 44 |
Number of individuals who reported preparing more healthy home-cooked meals |
Author: Joan Bowling
Major Program: Food Preparation and Preservation
The Center for Disease Control (CDC), states that many cases of food borne botulism occur as a result of people consuming home-canned, preserved, or fermented foods that were contaminated with toxin. Contamination in occurs when food is not processed correctly. The CDC recommends the best way to prevent food borne botulism is by carefully following instructions for safe home canning as directed by the USDA Complete Guide to Home Canning. As interest continues to rise in home gardening so does th