
As I noted back when I first started working with pears, this is the time of year when the Kieffers are dropping all over north Georgia. It has been going on for a few weeks, but the trees I drive by frequently still have a lot of ripe ones on them. Maybe tree-ripened palatability is a possibility...
As before, I used a light syrup mix of 1 cup sugar to 3 cups water. And as before / as always, I failed to get as many pears into each jar as the NCHFP says I should (and as Jill did). I started off with about 18 pounds and cut out about 5 1/2 pounds' worth of bad spots and cores...so I only got about 1.3 pounds of pears in each quart (when counting the net weight, but usually I use the gross [pre-cut] in the figures I cite here, and that's what the NCHFP uses when giving quantities per quart or pint as a general rule). On top of this I needed almost 15 cups of water and 5 cups of sugar. I raw-packed them because the ones I did last time turned out fine. There were some quarters left over; I snacked on some but they weren't enough to make a pint, so didn't can a pint jar on top of the 10 quarts.
I heard some booms in the canner during the first load (my canner holds eight quarts, so I had to do two heat cycles). I wondered if jars were breaking. As it turned out, I just had some lids get creased. This happens sometimes and it indicates the bands were put on too tight. I mentioned last year that I initially (and to some degree still) have trouble getting the right amount of tension on the bands. Too loose and syrup boils out of the jars, causing a mess and leaving empty space behind; too tight and the lids buckle. I have never (as far as I can remember) had a bent lid fail to seal, however. It all works out in the end.
The top picture shows the lids pre-seal, right after coming out of the canner. There were three lids that buckled in the first batch, so I was unusually heavy-handed when tightening. I still got a little syrup overflow. And yes, the jar at the top right does have a reused lid; I noted previously that I periodically reuse lids to test their ability to seal. So far they have performed pretty well. It might be good to know sometime.
The next picture shows the same lids (albeit from a different angle) after they have sealed. And below is a photo from the side post-processing; the pear slices are pretty densely-stacked and still fill the jars. I don't know how I could get any more in them. Side note: some of the jars in the photo below are amber. In recent years, Ball has released a number of color variations--light blue, green, and purple--as commemoratives (there's a purple one at the back right). Now it appears light blue and amber are going to be available going forward. Their price is pretty steep compared to the clear glass versions, almost three times as much, but they are nice(r) and help limit light exposure for the contents.
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