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Some of my favorite Ball jars sit on my Hoosier cabinet and contain sand from memorable vacations.
I am far from denying, so very far from denying that I am addicted. See, I know that I have a problem, I am more than willing to admit my love of the mason jar. Yet it is not the average, “I love me some mason jar crafts” obsession. Even though I am not beyond raiding my canning shelves to use them for crafts, that is not my true passion with them. Take a look in my pantry and you will see I store many items in my mason jars, from chocolate chips to baking soda. It is more elementary than even that though, it’s the true art of canning that has me head over heals and I am here to share it with you. From working my way through the 1902 Ball Jar Blue Book to creating my own recipes I love to put my experiences on the blog for others to try and discuss.
My canning adventures started around four years ago when I was just married, student teaching and using a kitchen that was right around 40 sq. ft. Learning to cook while being tight on a budget and space was a blessing, I learned some valuable lessons in those first months, including canning anything I wanted to last longer than a few days in the fridge. I started with some mason jars, old cook books, and a lot of gumption. There were lots of fails, messes and calls to Mom and Grandma to figure out what the heck I thought I was doing....oh and a very loving, patient husband.
I thought for the first post I would give some mason jar history. The Ball mason style jar is like Kleenex and Crayola, companies that are so dominate in their field that their name are always synced with the product they create. John Mason is the maker of the canning jar that has a lid made out of zinc. The Ball brothers are the ones who brought their bottling and canning company to Muncie, Indiana to produce glass canning jars for the everyday user. Together they have created the jar we know as the mason Ball jar.
Canned chicken stock in mason jars are always in my pantry.
Ball jars in my water bath canner.
The Ball Brothers
Can you spot the Ball logo?
If you need more visuals go check out this video below at Marthastewart.com : http://www.marthastewart.com/article/history-of-ball-jars#ooid=c4cXZlMjr5EqN8yz2DEv6UuzErzjw8vP