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Extension warns oven canning is unsafe

Ag/Outdoor

August 19th, 2015 by admin

Oven Canning- UNSAFE!

Preserving food by canning in the oven has been a hot topic this summer. It seems everyone is looking for a shortcut to preserve food at home.

Oven canning is NOT a safe shortcut, Barb Fuller, Nutrition and Wellness Specialist and a Master Food Safety Advisor for Iowa State University Extension and Outreach, says, “Many individuals have shared they have tried, or have heard about, oven canning. Just because a jar is sealed doesn’t mean the food inside is safe to eat. I’ve had people say to me- ‘I haven’t gotten sick from it.’ I tell them they are probably very lucky! Botulism is a big concern.”

Very often, a trusted and well-meaning friend or relative has shared information about canning in the oven as a simple way to can food. Others have found information off the internet promoting it as a “quick and easy” method.
Food “processed” in the oven will not necessarily be heated hot enough or long enough to produce a safe product! Oven regulators may not be very accurate and the hot air in the oven may not circulate efficiently enough to heat the food in the jars. In addition, dry heat penetrates jars very slowly. Canning jars are not designed for dry heating either. Who would want to clean up that mess if they exploded?

In addition, think of the wasted resources when finding out your food may not be safe to eat. Fuller adds, “People spend a great deal of money, time, and energy canning food. It is disheartening to tell someone their (improperly) canned food could make someone they love very sick.”

Do not put your families’ health and the quality of your food at risk for the sake of a shortcut- like oven canning. Be sure to only use research-based methods and tested recipes for SAFE home food preservation. Iowa State University Extension and Outreach is an excellent source of this information. Go to www.store.extension.iastate.edu for publications and recipes. In the Search box (upper right corner), enter the name or number of publication:
• Canning Fruits (PM 1043)
• Canning Vegetables (PM 1044)
• Canning Fruit Spreads (PM 1366)
• Canning Pickled Products (PM 1368)
• Canning and Freezing Tomatoes (PM 638)
• Canning Meats, Poultry, Wild Game, and Fish (PM 3021)
• Freezing Fruits and Vegetables (PM 1045)
• Canning Salsa (HS 0021)

For more information, contact the your County ISU Extension and Outreach Office or Barb Fuller at 641-202-1843or at bfuller@iastate.edu. You can also call ISU Extension and Outreach’s AnswerLine at (800) 262-3804 to talk directly with a Home Economist. AnswerLine hours are Monday-Friday from 9:00 a.m.-noon and from 1:00-4:00 pm.

Suspended Red Oak driver arrested

News

August 19th, 2015 by admin

The Red Oak Police Department reports the arrest Tuesday of a Red Oak woman for Driving While Suspended.  At 11:15pm officers arrested 55-year-old Wilma Maxine Dykes in the 1600 block of Summit Street.  Dykes was taken into custody and held on $300 bond.

Vogelsong, Bumgarner help Giants beat Cardinals 2-0

Sports

August 19th, 2015 by admin

ST. LOUIS (AP) – Ryan Vogelsong pitched six innings of two-hit ball and ace Madison Bumgarner keyed a seventh-inning rally with his first career pinch hit, helping the San Francisco Giants beat the St. Louis Cardinals 2-0 on Tuesday night.

Brandon Crawford doubled leading off the fifth for the Giants’ first hit when left fielder Brandon Moss couldn’t quite hold onto his drive down the line near both walls. He also had a run-scoring groundout in the sixth for the first run.

The Giants have won six of eight and handed the Cardinals, who got a strong bounce-back outing from Lance Lynn, just their 19th home loss compared with 45 wins.

Skyscan Forecast 08-19-2015

Podcasts, Weather

August 19th, 2015 by admin

Skyscan Forecast  Wednesday, August 19th  Dan Hicks

Today: Partly Cloudy to Cloudy. WNW @ 15-30. High 72.

Tonight: Fair to Partly Cloudy. Light and Variable Winds. Low 45.

Thursday: Mostly Sunny. SW @ 10-15.  High 80.

Friday: Partly Cloudy. High 84.

Saturday: Partly Cloudy with Scattered T’storms. High 86.

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Atlantic City Council to discuss City Atty replacement, City/Mayor Compensation and City Hall M.P. room

News

August 18th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic City Council will hold a regularly scheduled session Wednesday at City Hall. The meeting begins at 5:30-p.m., and includes action on a Resolution “Endorsing the use of Regional TAP (Transportation Alternatives Program grant) Funds for the Schildberg Recreation Area Lake #2 Biking Trail.” The resolution states acknowledges the City endorses the trail project, and that with the assistance of the TAP funds, the construction of the multi-use trail will be completed and remain dedicated to public use, and adequately maintained by the City of Atlantic Parks and Recreation Department.

In other business, the Council will hear reports from the Personnel and Finance Committee with regard to their review of options the City can take in finding a replacement for Jamie Arnold, who resigned this month from his position as City Attorney. The committee will also report on changes to the City Council and Mayor’s compensation, noting the Mayor’s salary has not been increased in 18-years, and the Council has not received a raise in 21-years. It’s expected the committee will recommend a Cost Of Living Adjustment (COLA) be made to fairly compensate city leaders for time spent in their respective positions.

And, a Task Force has reviewed the financing, process and details for the proposed use of and/or accessibility improvements for, the second-floor multi-purpose room in the City Hall building, an open house event for which was held August 8th, during AtlanticFest.

TUESDAY, AUGUST 18th

Trading Post

August 18th, 2015 by Jim Field

WANTED:  Looking for a shed in decent shape, for our granddaughters to play in. Would like it to be tall enough for an adult to enter in.  Call 712-435-9254.

FOR SALE: flannel sheet sets – 1 king; 1 queen; 1 twin $20, $15 & $10. Used gently.  Call 712-435-9254.

FOR SALE: Lexmark printer – works fine. $20.  Call 712-435-9254.

FOR SALE: Dehumidifier.  Samsung Model 25.  Good shape and runs well, just don’t have need for it anymore.  Call 712-789-1330.

FOR SALE:  Double-pane, exterior French door. Make an offer. 712-769-2551.

FOR SALE:  Wood rocking chair $60, bed and headboard full size $100, end table $65.  Call 249-7106.  SOLD!

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FOR SALE:  mauve glider rocker $65, blue glider rock $65, floral hide a bed couch $100.  Call 249-7106.  SOLD!

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Backyard and Beyond 08-18-2015

Backyard and Beyond, Podcasts

August 18th, 2015 by admin

Lavon Eblen speaks about cookbooks.

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Details released on I-80 crash Monday

News

August 18th, 2015 by admin

On Monday, August 17th at 4:01 a.m., the Cass County Sheriff’s Office responded to a report of a one-vehicle accident on eastbound I-80 at the 60 mile marker. A 2003 Chevy Impala owned and driven by 20-year-old Conandenon York of Des Moines was eastbound on I-80 when the driver lost control of the vehicle, veering off the interstate and into the south ditch. An 18-year-old passenger in the vehicle Papice Michae Joe of Des Moines was transported to CCMH via Medivac for evaluation. Damage to the vehicle was estimated at $3,000. York was cited for Failure to Maintain Control.

Emerald Ash Borer confirmed in Montgomery County

Ag/Outdoor, News

August 18th, 2015 by admin

DES MOINES – The emerald ash borer (EAB), a destructive and invasive insect of ash trees has been discovered in central rural Montgomery County. Iowa’s growing number of counties with confirmed detection has now reached twenty-seven. Native to Asia, EAB has spread to 25 states since first being identified in Michigan back in 2002. This exotic pest is responsible for the death of tens of millions of ash trees.

EAB is a small, metallic-green beetle that is about ½ inch long. The larvae stage of this wood-boring insect tunnel under the bark of ash trees, disrupting the flow of water and nutrients, ultimately causing the tree to die. EAB infested ash trees include thinning or dying branches in the top of a tree, evidence of woodpecker activity, S-shaped feeding galleries under dead or splitting bark, D-shaped exit holes, and water sprouts (along the trunk and main branches).

“This find marks the westernmost site that we have found EAB in Iowa to date,” said Mike Kintner, Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship EAB and gypsy moth coordinator. “This just reinforces the importance of limiting human-assisted firewood movement to reduce the spread of EAB and other injurious tree pests.”

The Iowa EAB Team provides EAB diagnostic assistance to landowners and includes officials from Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship, Iowa State University Extension and Outreach, the Iowa Department of Natural Resources, USDA Animal Plant Health Inspection Service and the USDA Forest Service.

Since larvae of EAB can unknowingly be transported under the bark of a tree, the Iowa EAB Team strongly cautions Iowans not to transport firewood across county or state lines. The movement of firewood throughout Iowa or to other states poses the greatest threat to quickly spread EAB and other plant pests. A statewide quarantine remains in place, restricting the movement of hardwood firewood, ash logs, wood chips and ash tree nursery stock out of Iowa into non-quarantined areas of other states.

At this calendar date, the treatment window for soil-applied preventive treatment measures (soil injection, soil drench, or granular application) and basal trunk sprays has ended. Trunk injection remains a viable EAB management option for the next two weeks, as this method can be done when the tree has a full canopy of leaves (now through the end of August), provided there is good ground moisture. If a landowner is interested in protecting a valuable and healthy ash tree within 15 miles of a known infestation, he or she should have landscape and tree service companies bid on work, review the bids, and treat during the recommended treatment time.

Please contact Iowa EAB Team members to have suspicious looking trees checked in counties not currently known to be infested. The State of Iowa will continue to track the movement of EAB on a county-by-county basis. Before a county can be officially recognized as infested, proof of a reproducing population is needed and an EAB must be collected and verified by USDA entomologists.

Heartbeat Today 08-18-2015

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

August 18th, 2015 by admin

Jim Field caught up with Republican Presidential Candidates Rick Perry and Carly Fiorina at the Boots and BBQ event in Kimballton Monday night.

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