Blanching Timetable Chart for Vegetables
Often vegetables need to be blanched before freezing or canning. Here is a quick
and simple guide for blanching common vegetables. Blanching vegetables helps
preserve color and texture.
After blanching vegetables in boiling water immerse immediately into cold water
then drain. I often reuse the same water again and again. A large pasta type pot
works great for blanching. You can submerse the vegetables into the pot already
in the strainer.
Allow approximately a gallon of water for a pound of vegetables. Vegetables will
need to cool for the same time as they are blanched.
Preparing Your Vegetables
Peel, trim and cut vegetables into uniform sizes. Look at the chart below to
find the time needed. Extra large pieces may need to blanch a minute longer than
the table calls for.
Asparagus: Blanch 2 minutes 3 -4 4 minutes for large asparagus
Beans: green- Blanch for 3 minutes.
Beans: lima, butter or pinto - Blanch small beans 2 minutes, medium beans
3 minutes, and large beans 4 minutes.
Beets: small beets 35- 30 minute, medium ones 45 50 minutes. If you
leave the stem on top they wont bleed into the water as bad.
Broccoli: Blanch 3 minutes.
Brussel Sprouts: Blanch small, 3 minutes; medium, 4 minutes; large, 5
minutes
Carrots: Blanch tiny, whole, 5 minutes; diced or strips, 2 minutes
Cauliflower: Blanch 3 minutes.
Corn: Whole small ears for freezing 7 minutes, medium ears 9 minutes
and large size ears 11 minutes. If you are going to take the corn of the cob for
freezing blanch for 4 minutes and remove from cob.
Okra: Blanch small pods 3 minutes and large pods 4 minutes.
Peas: Shelled. Blanch for 1-2 minutes, chill, freeze.
Snap Peas: Blanch 1 1/2minutes
Spinach and other greens: Blanch 2 minutes
Summer squash: Blanch for 3 minutes.
More On This Subject
Canning Guide Boiling Water Bath Method
Basic Canning Supplies: What You Need to Succeed
Canning Recipes-Home Canning Recipes
Recommended

Kuhn Rikon Corn Zipper, Stainless
Freesing Fruits and Vegetables
The Big Book of Preserving the Harvest
by Carol W. Costenbader
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