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Preserving With A Purpose

Preserving With A Purpose

Tomatoes, green beans, peaches, and so much more: Our great-grandmas knew a thing or two about food preservation, and yet these days few of us can. It’s a time- and labor-intensive practice, sure. But it’s also a self-sufficient life skill.

Whether you grow some or all of your own food or seek out bargains at the store and farmers’ market, canning the season’s bounty means you’ll be eating well all year round. You’ll also be participating in a nearly waste-free practice (no plastic to see here!).

Back to our great-grandmas for a hot minute: They infused love in every jar and so can you. On today’s show author Sarah Thrush invites us to go back to food preservation basics with advice on how to integrate canning into a self-sufficient, money-saving, and sustainable lifestyle.

 

Here’s a preview:

[10:00] Say it loud, say it proud: There’s no self-sufficiency without community!

[15:00] The #1 Rule of canning, plus: why it’s super important to start small

[19:0o] The One Week, One Month, One Year principle: Here’s exactly how Sarah keeps enough food on hand to feed her family for an entire year

[25:00] Troubleshooting the most common canning conundrums

[33:00] Take it outside and make it a party! The benefits to canning outside with your family

 

 

Resources mentioned:

 

Whether you grow some or all of your own food or seek out bargains at the store and farmers' market, canning the season's bounty means you'll be eating well all year round. You'll also be participating in a nearly waste-free practice. On this episode of the Sustainable Minimalists podcast: going back to food preservation basics, with advice on how to integrate canning into a self-sufficient, money-saving, and sustainable lifestyle.

 

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In a world that constantly tells us that new is better, our relentless pursuit of material wealth is costing us money, time and happiness. Worse, when we define ourselves by what we own rather than who we are, we reduce our lives to a single, superficial dimension.

On today’s show, New York Times journalist Eric Athas offers advice for stepping away from the cycle of constant buying, saying no to shallowness, and discovering the right kind of “new” in our lives.

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[8:00] We're wired to become bored the familiar, and other truths to newness

[16:00] Consumption has costs! (In fact, it robs us of our finite attention, dilutes our capacity for genuine enjoyment, and misaligns our pursuit of happiness.)

[26:00] Musings on the ways in which overconsumption leads to superficiality

[37:00] Put down the trinket! Redefining what it means to experience novelty, growth, and freshness without relying on a transaction

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Hello there, I’m Stephanie. I live a crazy, beautiful life as a full-time wife, blogger + mother to two spirited daughters. I’m on a mission to simplify eco-friendly living so as to greater enjoy life’s sweeter moments.

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