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AngelDance
01-14-2009, 12:52 PM
I thought I would share my recipe. The family like these MUCH better than Manwich and they are cheap and easy. Put it on homemade buns and man-oh-man!!

Try it soon and enjoy!

Angel's Sloppy Joes

2 lbs ground beef
1 rib celery, finely chopped
1 medium onion, diced
1/2 cup diced sweet pepper
2 eight ounce cans tomato sauce
1/2 cup ketchup
1/2 cup barbecue sauce (homemade or bottled)
2 Tbsp brown sugar, packed
2 tsp ground mustard
2 Tbsp Worcestershire sauce
2 Tbsp apple cider vinegar
hot sauce or ground cayenne, to taste (optional)

Brown the ground beef in a large skillet. Drain fat. Add the other ingredients to the drained ground beef. Simmer, stirring occasionally, until it is thick enough to spoon onto the buns.

Angel

Emily
01-14-2009, 12:58 PM
Sounds wonderful! Thank you - I am looking forward to trying this one.

packyderms_wife
01-14-2009, 01:08 PM
Yum! Manwich makes me sick when I eat it for some reason.

Btw I didn't even know that this subforum was here will have to add some of our own recipes.

Kimberly

Emily
01-14-2009, 01:42 PM
If I were to make this up (without the ground beef) and can it - does anyone know what the processing would be?
Would it be a water bath or pressure canner?

I am thinking pressure canner simply because of the sweet peppers and celery.

AngelDance
01-14-2009, 03:02 PM
If I were to make this up (without the ground beef) and can it - does anyone know what the processing would be?
Would it be a water bath or pressure canner?

I am thinking pressure canner simply because of the sweet peppers and celery.

Emily,

Can without the ground beef in a boiling bath canner: 35 minutes for pints, 45 for quarts. The vinegar acidifies the sauce enough to can it in a boiling bath canner. Make sure to prepare the sauce (omitting the meat) as directed in the recipe and ladle in to the sterile jars hot from the pot. Follow regular boiling bath canning procedures as to lids, rings, etc.

hope this helps,

Angel

Emily
01-14-2009, 04:16 PM
Emily,

Can without the ground beef in a boiling bath canner: 35 minutes for pints, 45 for quarts. The vinegar acidifies the sauce enough to can it in a boiling bath canner. Make sure to prepare the sauce (omitting the meat) as directed in the recipe and ladle in to the sterile jars hot from the pot. Follow regular boiling bath canning procedures as to lids, rings, etc.

hope this helps,

Angel

Yes - that is very helpful. Thank you. Being as it is just me - I couldn't possibly use up a full batch but I thought it I could can it - then I could make it up and store the rest for another day.

Thank you again!

packyderms_wife
01-16-2009, 12:10 AM
Emily if you want to can it with the meat, I just did 30 pints of pulled pork, you will want to PC it for 85 minutes pints and 90 minutes quarts at 10 pounds of pressure for sea level or adjust according to your altitude.

Kimberly

Emily
01-16-2009, 07:10 AM
Emily if you want to can it with the meat, I just did 30 pints of pulled pork, you will want to PC it for 85 minutes pints and 90 minutes quarts at 10 pounds of pressure for sea level or adjust according to your altitude.

Kimberly

Excellent! Thank you.

Kittyknits
03-17-2009, 01:33 PM
AngelDance,


I just tried your Sloppy Joe recipe for the first time today.

It is absolutely delicious. Thank you for posting it.

Zarathustra
03-30-2009, 04:51 PM
Yum! Manwich makes me sick when I eat it for some reason.

Btw I didn't even know that this subforum was here will have to add some of our own recipes.

Kimberly

My daughter loves Manwich but I think it tastes horrible I am making this recipe TODAY! It sounds great (very close to what we made in the Army Mess Hall when I was a cook minus the diced sweet pepper), thank you for sharing.

momof23goats
03-30-2009, 05:16 PM
If I were to make this up (without the ground beef) and can it - does anyone know what the processing would be?
Would it be a water bath or pressure canner?

I am thinking pressure canner simply because of the sweet peppers and celery.
The processing time, would be for the veggie with the longest processing time. and that would be pressure canned. I would just add the meat, and process 70 minutes for pints, and 90 for quarts.
IN fact I do can mine up. great for dinner in a hurry.