Potatoes can last a long time when stored in a cool, dark location. Sometimes the storage conditions are not ideal. Preserving potatoes by pressure canning makes them shelf stable so they last longer.
Pressure canning potatoes is a great way to preserve an abundant harvest for long-term food storage. The shelf-stable jars of potatoes are handy for quick additions to meals.
Potatoes that are damaged or small won’t last long in root cellar storage either. So if your potato crop yielded a great deal of small tubers, or you managed to damage a lot while digging them up, pressure canning potatoes is a good way to preserve them.
Ways to Use Canned Potatoes
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- Canned potatoes are handy to have for speedy side dishes to meals. Since the potatoes are already precooked, peeled, and cut, they are quicker to prepare.
- Pressure canned potatoes can be used the same way as cooked potatoes, such as fried, mashed, or roasted.
- For mashed potatoes, simply reheat them briefly in boiling water, drain, add butter, chives, sour cream, and mash as you would for regular mashed potatoes.
- You can also use canned potatoes in chowders, soups, and stews. Since they are already pre-cooked, add the potatoes at the end of your cooking time, so they don’t get too soft.
Now I in two stages in our garden each year instead of one large crop. One is my main crop of storage potatoes that is planted in spring, harvested in fall, and stored in our root cellar basement for winter.
The second is a fall planting of red potatoes that are harvested small right before the ground freezes, and canned for food storage. The storage potatoes are used through winter, and the canned potatoes fill the gap until the next harvest.
This canning recipe is from , “Potatoes – White.” A more detailed and printable recipe can be found at the bottom of this article, but these are the general steps for pressure canning potatoes:
How to Can Potatoes for Food Storage
Ingredients
6 pounds white potatoes for pints for pints, see note below for quarts optional for flavor
Instructions
- Prepare your canning jars and lids:
- Clean your jars and lids with warm, soapy water and rinse well. Set aside until you are ready to use them.
- Place the canning rack into the pressure canner, and fill with water per your pressure canner manufacturer’s instructions: Presto is 3 quarts, Mirro is 2 quarts, and All American is 2 to 3 inches.
- Fill the jars halfway with hot water, and then place them on the rack in the canner. Bring the canner to a simmer for 10 minutes (180˚F). Keep hot until you are ready to fill them.
Prepare your potatoes:
- Fill a large pot about half way with cold water.
- Wash, peel the potatoes, and cut into 2-inch pieces. Leave small potatoes whole if they are about 2-inches in diameter. Trim off eyes, bruises, and any green spots.
- As you work, drop the cut potatoes into the pot of cold water. This will help remove some of the surface starch and prevent the potatoes from discoloring from exposure to air.
- Drain, and rinse the potatoes with cold water. Fill the pot, par-boil the potatoes for 10 minutes, reduce the heat, and keep them warm until you are ready to fill the jars.
- While the potatoes are cooking, bring a second large pot of water to a boil over high heat, reduce the heat to a simmer (180˚F), and keep hot until you are ready to can. This is the water you will be using to fill your jars. Do not use the water that the potatoes were cooked in. There is too much starch to can properly.
Can the potatoes:
- Spread a kitchen towel on the counter. Use your jar lifter to remove a jar from the canner. Pour out the water (save it for washing dishes), and place the jar on the towel. Keep the remaining jars in the canner, so they stay hot.
- Use tongs or a slotted spoon to remove the potatoes from the pot and fill the jar while maintaining about a 1 1/2 inch headspace.
- If using salt, add up to 1/2 teaspoon to each pint jar, and up to 1 teaspoon to each quart (salt is optional but adds a lot of flavor).
- Add fresh hot water to the jar, leaving a 1-inch headspace.
- Run your bubble popper through the jar to release any bubbles that may be caught in between the potatoes, and wipe the rim with a damp towel.
- Center a lid on the jar, and screw on band until it is fingertip tight. Use the jar lifter to place the jar back on the rack in the canner, and repeat with the rest of the jars until the canner is filled, or you run out of potatoes.
- Secure the lid, leave the vent open, adjust the heat to medium-high, and bring the canner to a boil. Allow the pressure canner to vent for 10 minutes, then place weight on the vent. Follow the directions for your pressure canner.
- Once the canner has reached the correct pressure (10 pounds of pressure for weighted gauge pressure canner, and 11 pounds for dial gauge canners.), set a timer, and process pints for 35 minutes, and quarts for 40 minutes at altitudes of less than 1,000 ft. Adjust for your altitude if necessary (see note below). Regulate the heat as needed to maintain a steady pressure.
- When processing time is complete, turn off the heat and let the pressure canner cool and depressurize. The time will depend on your brand and should be between 30 to 60 minutes.
- When the pressure canner is depressurized, spread a kitchen towel on the counter, remove the weight from the vent pipe or open the petcock, and wait 10 minutes for the jars to adjust to the change in pressure.
- While wearing pot holders, unlock the cover and remove the lid while tilting it away from you so that steam does not burn your face. Allow another 10 minutes for the jars to adjust to the change in pressure.
- Use a jar lifter to remove the jars from canner and place on the towel. Keep the jars upright, and don’t tighten bands or check the seals yet. The jars will be hot and bubbling. Let the jars sit undisturbed for 12 to 24-hours to cool.
- Wait until the jars have cooled for at least 12-hours, and then check to be sure jar lids have sealed. Test the seal by pushing on the center of the lid. The lid should not pop up. If the lid flexes up and down, it did not seal. Refrigerate the jar and use up within a few days.
- Remove the screw on bands and wash the jars. Label, date, store the jars in a cool, dark place (50 to 70 degrees F). Use within a year for the best quality. Yields 9 pints or 7 quarts.
Notes
Depending on the size of your pieces, you will need about 6 pounds of potatoes for a canner load of 9 pints, or 11 pounds for a canner load full of 7 quarts. Amounts are for 2-inch sized prepared potatoes.