You have no idea what you are talking about, pressure cooking kills botulism. You have never canned food before clearly. You are just luck louis pasteur isn’t on this thread.
What my family told me is:
Enough sugar, acidity or long enough heat.
And one can’t be a know-it-all in every profession.
So if you have a reputable source for your claim, I’ll gladly accept it.
Else it’s your word against mine.
You are correct there are multiple ways to preserve foods, and sugar is one, as it’s hyrdroscopic (edit, Hygroscopic I think not hydro-,) it grabs all the water so bacteria can’t use it, same as salt does. Vinegar is another. Pressure cooking, 15 pounds for an hour and a half, does the trick. The older way, tyndallization, which Pasteur (and koch, of germany) popularized, before pressure cookers existed, when they definitively proved germ theory to the legions of dumb motherfuckers believing in spontaneous generation, is to heat something to boiling for an hour or so, covered, let it sit for a day, do it again, then another day and another boil, and it kills any hardy bacteria in it. Not quite as reliably as pressure cookers however.
The best way to pressure cook combines both methods for dry goods, you soak them for a day, letting anything growing in them sprout, boil it for long enough to soak up the water level you want in them, dry it out, then pressure cook the next day.
Not how preserves work.
That is how any food works actually. You don’t need sugar to preserve things.
We’ll see when you catch botulism :)
And you’ll probably not make it 100% sterile.
You have no idea what you are talking about, pressure cooking kills botulism. You have never canned food before clearly. You are just luck louis pasteur isn’t on this thread.
What my family told me is:
Enough sugar, acidity or long enough heat.
And one can’t be a know-it-all in every profession.
So if you have a reputable source for your claim, I’ll gladly accept it.
Else it’s your word against mine.
You are correct there are multiple ways to preserve foods, and sugar is one, as it’s hyrdroscopic (edit, Hygroscopic I think not hydro-,) it grabs all the water so bacteria can’t use it, same as salt does. Vinegar is another. Pressure cooking, 15 pounds for an hour and a half, does the trick. The older way, tyndallization, which Pasteur (and koch, of germany) popularized, before pressure cookers existed, when they definitively proved germ theory to the legions of dumb motherfuckers believing in spontaneous generation, is to heat something to boiling for an hour or so, covered, let it sit for a day, do it again, then another day and another boil, and it kills any hardy bacteria in it. Not quite as reliably as pressure cookers however.
The best way to pressure cook combines both methods for dry goods, you soak them for a day, letting anything growing in them sprout, boil it for long enough to soak up the water level you want in them, dry it out, then pressure cook the next day.
This is a well fleshed out process.