
Preserving Food by Canning — Appert's Heat-and-Seal Method That Fed Armies
In 1810 a French confectioner named Nicolas Appert won a prize from Napoleon's government for solving a problem that had plagued every army and navy in history: how to keep food from spoiling. His answer was deceptively simple — pack food in a sealed container and heat it thoroughly. Food preserved this way kept for months, even years, and the modern canning industry was born.
Appert did not know why it worked; it would take Louis Pasteur, fifty years later, to show that heat kills the microbes that spoil food and the seal keeps new ones out. But the method worked perfectly without that knowledge. Soon glass jars gave way to soldered tin cans — lighter, unbreakable, and ideal for soldiers and sailors — and canned food spread around the world.
Canning sits alongside salting, drying, and smoking as one of humanity's great preservation methods, but it was the first to keep food fresh-tasting and the first born of the industrial age. One caution it shares with all low-acid preserving: ordinary boiling does not destroy the spores of botulism, so low-acid foods must be acidified or pressure-canned — a lesson learned long after Appert.
Consignes
Understand the principle
Understand the principle
Choose and prepare the food
Choose and prepare the food
Matériaux pour cette étape :
Fresh Produce2 kgPrepare the jars
Prepare the jars
Matériaux pour cette étape :
Glass Jar6 piècesPack the jars
Pack the jars
Matériaux pour cette étape :
Table Salt50 gSeal the jars
Seal the jars
Matériaux pour cette étape :
Beeswax100 gHeat in a boiling water bath
Heat in a boiling water bath
Matériaux pour cette étape :
Water8 litresOutils nécessaires :
StockpotTime by the food
Time by the food
Outils nécessaires :
ThermometerCool and check the seal
Cool and check the seal
Outils nécessaires :
Jar TongsReject any failures
Reject any failures
Store cool and dark
Store cool and dark
Move to the tin can
Move to the tin can
Matériaux pour cette étape :
Tin Can6 piècesRespect the botulism rule
Respect the botulism rule
Matériaux
6- 2 kgEspace réservé
- 6 piècesEspace réservé
- 50 gEspace réservé
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