Reviewed April 1994
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Pressure canning is the only safe method for canning meat, fish and poultry. It is the only way you can destroy the bacterium that causes food poisoning (clostridium botulinum). Be sure to process canned meats for the correct time at the correct temperature in a pressure canner. Canning low-acid foods, such as meats, in boiling-water canners is absolutely unsafe because the botulinum bacteria can survive this process. If clostridium botulinum survive and grow inside a sealed jar of food, they can produce a poisonous toxin. Even a taste of food containing this toxin can be fatal. Boil foods 10 minutes at altitudes below 1,000 feet to destroy this poison. Boil foods 11 minutes if you live above 1,000 feet.
Caution
Boil canned meat, poultry and fish before you taste it even if it looks
and smells alright -- unless you are sure it was canned according to MU
Extension publications printed after 1989 or according to other USDA-endorsed
publications
All meats, poultry and fish canned according to current MU Extension publications may be eaten without boiling if you are sure you followed correct procedures.
Please refer to MU publications GH1451, Before you Start to Can, Learn the Basics, and GH1452, Steps to Success in Home Canning, for information on correct canning procedures and the steps to follow in pressure canning.
Procedure
Choose freshly killed and dressed, healthy animals. Large chickens are more flavorful
than fryers. Chill dressed chicken for 6 hours to 12 hours before canning. Soak
dressed rabbits 1 hour in salt water (1 tablespoon of salt per quart of water)
and then rinse. Remove excess fat. Cut the chicken or rabbit into suitable sizes
for canning. Can with or without bones.
Hot pack
Boil, steam or bake meat until medium-done (when cut at center, pieces show
almost no pink color). Add 1 teaspoon salt per quart to each jar if desired.
Fill jars with meat pieces and hot broth. Leave 1-1/4-inches headspace.
Raw pack
Add 1 teaspoon salt per quart if desired. Fill jars loosely with raw meat pieces.
Leave 1-1/4-inches headspace. Do not add liquid.
Adjusts lids, and process as directed in Table 1.
Table 1
Recommended processing times for meat, poultry and fish in pressure canners.
| Dial canner gauge pressures | Weighted canner gauge pressures | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type of meat | Style pack | Jar size | Process time | 0-2,000 feet | 0-1,000 feet | Above 1,000 feet |
| Chicken or rabbit without bones | Hot and raw |
Pints Quarts |
75 minutes 90 minutes |
11 pounds 11 pounds |
10 pounds 10 pounds |
15 pounds 15 pounds |
| With bones | Hot and raw |
Pints Quarts |
65 minutes 75 minutes |
11 pounds 11 pounds |
10 pounds 10 pounds |
15 pounds 15 pounds |
| Ground or chopped meat | Hot | Pints Quarts |
75 minutes 90 minutes |
11 pounds 11 pounds |
10 pounds 10 pounds |
15 pounds 15 pounds |
| Strips, cubes or chunks of meat | Hot and raw |
Pints Quarts |
75 minutes 90 minutes |
11 pounds 11 pounds |
10 pounds 10 pounds |
15 pounds 15 pounds |
| Meat stock | Hot | Pints Quarts |
20 minutes 25 minutes |
11 pounds 11 pounds |
10 pounds 10 pounds |
15 pounds 15 pounds |
| Fish | Raw | Pints | 100 minutes | 11 pounds | 10 pounds | 15 pounds |
Ground or chopped meat
Bear, beef, lamb, pork, sausage, veal, venison
Procedure
Choose fresh, high-quality, chilled meat. With venison, add one part high-quality
pork fat to three or four parts venison before grinding.
Use freshly made sausage, seasoned with salt and cayenne pepper (sage may cause a bitter off-flavor). Shape chopped meat into patties or balls. Cut cased sausage into pieces 3 inches to 4 inches long. Cook until lightly browned. Ground meat may be browned without shaping. Drain excess fat. Fill jars with pieces. Add boiling meat broth, tomato juice or water. Leave 1-1/4 inches headspace. Add 2 teaspoons of salt per quart to each jar if desired. Adjust lids and process as directed in Table 1.
Strips, cubes or chunks of meat
Bear, beef, lamb, pork, veal, venison
Procedure
Choose fresh, high-quality, chilled meat. Remove excess fat. Soak strong-flavored
wild meats for 1 hour in salt water (1 tablespoon of salt per quart of water).
Rinse. Remove large bones.
Hot pack
Cook meat until rare by roasting, stewing or browning in a small amount of fat.
Add 2 teaspoons of salt per quart to each jar if desired. Fill jars with pieces
and add boiling broth, meat drippings, water or tomato juice (tomato juice
is especially good to use with wild game). Leave 1-inch headspace.
Raw pack
Add 2 teaspoons of salt per quart to each jar if desired. Fill jars with raw
meat pieces. Leave 1-inch headspace. Do not add liquid. Adjust lids, and process
as directed in Table 1.
Beef
Saw or crack freshly trimmed beef bones to help draw flavor from bones. Rinse
bones and place in a large stockpot or kettle. Cover bones with water, cover
pot and simmer 3 hours to 4 hours. Remove bones and pick off meat. Chill broth,
skim off fat and return meat to broth. Reheat meat and broth to boiling. Fill
jars, leaving 1-inch headspace. Adjust lids, and process.
Chicken or turkey
Place carcass bones in a large stockpot, add enough water to cover bones. Cover
pot and simmer 30 minutes to 45 minutes or until meat can be easily stripped
from bones. Remove bones and meat pieces. Chill broth and skim off fat. Strip
meat, discard excess skin and fat and return meat to broth. Reheat to boiling
and fill jars. Leave 1-inch headspace. Adjust lids and process as directed
in Table 1.
Fish
Blue, mackerel, salmon, steelhead, trout and other fatty fish except tuna
Caution
Immediately after catching fish, remove guts, put on ice and can within
two days
Note
Glass-like crystals sometimes form in canned salmon (these are magnesium ammonium
phosphate). There is no way for the home canner to prevent these crystals from
forming, but they usually dissolve when heated and are safe to eat.
Procedure
Remove head, tail, fins and scales. Wash and remove all blood. Split fish lengthwise
if desired. Cut cleaned fish into pieces 3-1/2-inches long. Fill pint jars,
place skin side next to glass and leave 1-inch headspace. Add 1 teaspoon of
salt per pint if desired. Do not add liquids. Adjust lids and process as directed
in Table 1.
GH1490, reviewed April 1994