How I Learned to Can Carrots Without Poisoning Anyone (Including Myself)
Turn a pile of garden-fresh carrots into shelf-stable, ready-anytime jarsโwith no fear of botulism and zero wasted veggies.
You grow carrots, you pull them fresh from the dirt, and for a minuteโjust a minuteโyou feel like a champion. But then what?
You eat a few raw, maybe roast some, but they keep piling up. And they donโt wait. They start to wilt, lose their crunch, maybe grow weird roots again in the fridge.
So I started canning. Not the cute Pinterest-y kind, but the โIโve got 20 pounds of carrots and a missionโ kind. Hereโs everything I wish someone had told me before I ever stuck a mason jar in a pressure canner.
Why Water Bath Canning Will Actually Make You Sick
I hate to start with a scare tactic, but here it is:ย you cannot water bath can carrots. Theyโre a low-acid food, and that means botulism is a real risk.
Not imaginary, not overblown. Real. And itโs the kind of toxin that doesn’t make the jar look spoiled. You can’t smell it. You canโt see it.
Botulism spores only die atย 240ยฐF or hotter, which is impossible to hit with boiling water. You need aย pressure canner, the kind that locks tight and builds up real pressure. I held off buying one for too long. Donโt be me.
What Carrots Actually Work (And Which Ones Donโt)
So here’s what I’ve figured out: not all carrots were meant for jars. The ones that grow big and knobby? Too woody. They end up chewy and weird. Go for theย smaller, thinner onesโabout an inch across, tops.
And skip the bagged baby carrots. Theyโre not babies, theyโre just shaped that way. And usually treated with chlorine. Not what you want in a jar for a year.
When I’m planning to can, I figure about 3 pounds of trimmed carrots per quart jar. Trust me, it’s always more than you think.
Prepping Carrots Is… Kind of a Process
Wash the carrots. Then peel them. Then wash โem again. I used to skip peeling (lazy, I know), but the peels give off this earthy, almost dirty taste after theyโve been canned for a while. Plus they can get stringy.
Cut them however you wantโrounds, sticks, chunks. Just not too thin or theyโll turn to mush. I did that once. Whole jar ended up like carrot baby food.
Raw Pack vs. Hot Pack (Both Work, But Hereโs the Catch)
Youโve got two options, and neither is wrong. But they give you different results.
Raw Pack
This oneโs fast. You just shove the raw carrots into hot jars and pour boiling water over them. Leave 1 inch of headspace. Easy, but the downside? The carrots float. Like a lot. Looks weird, and maybe traps air pockets.
If Iโm in a rush or doing 20 jars in one go, Iโll raw pack. Just make sure you really de-bubbleโI run a plastic chopstick around the edge a few times.
Hot Pack
You simmer your carrots in boiling water for 5 minutes first, then jar them with that hot water. Carrots get soft, they pack tighter, and you donโt get the same float.
I use this when I want the jars to look nice on the shelf. Or if Iโm gifting them.
Letโs Pressure Can These Things Already
Here’s how I do it. No frills, just works.
- Start with clean, hot jars (I keep mine warm in the oven).
- Add canning salt if you wantโยฝ tsp for pints, 1 tsp for quarts.
- Pack carrots and pour in hot water or cooking liquid.
- Use a spatula (plastic!) toย remove air bubbles. Itโs a big deal.
- Top up water if needed. Gotta keep that 1 inch of headspace.
- Wipe the rims clean with a damp towel. Any gunk can mess up your seal.
- Pop on lids, screw on bandsย justย until theyโre snugโnot tight.
Set your pressure canner up with 2โ3 inches of water inside. Put in your jars, spaced apart so theyโre not touching. Lock the lid, vent steam for 10 minutes, then bring up pressure.
Pressure Times and What You Need to Know
- Pints: 25 minutes
- Quarts: 30 minutes
Now the pressure depends on your elevation and your canner type:
Weighted gauge:
- 0โ1,000 ft: 10 lbs
- Above 1,000 ft: 15 lbs
Dial gauge:
- 0โ2,000 ft: 11 lbs
- Above that? Gotta adjustโlook it up or call your extension office.
Important: If pressure drops even once, you have to start the timer over. Iโve had to redo a batch because I got distracted chasing my dog. Donโt be me.
After the Canner: What to Do With Your Jars
Let that canner cool on its own. Donโt open the vent early. Donโt move it. Donโt jiggle the lid. Just walk away. Seriously.
Once itโs back to zero pressure:
- Wait another 10 minutes
- Open the lid (tilt it away from your face)
- Lift the jars out and set them on a towel.
Let them sit, undisturbed, 12โ24 hours. Once cool, remove the rings and check the seals. If a lid flexes, that oneโs no good. Put it in the fridge and use it soon.
Label the rest and store in a cool, dark spot. Theyโll keep well for 1โ2 years, though Iโve opened some after 3 with no issues.
What I Use My Canned Carrots For (Spoiler: Not Just Soup)
Okay, so theyโre soft. These arenโt crunchy salad carrots anymore. But theyโre so handy.
Hereโs what I do with โem:
- Warm with butter and cinnamon for a fast side
- Toss straight into stews or soupsโno chopping, no peeling
- Mash for carrot cake or muffins (yes, really)
- Baby food (if you’re into that stage of life)
- Mix with chickpeas and cumin for a killer veggie bowl
Basically, they save me time. And in February, when my gardenโs a frozen memory, they taste like sunshine.
This Was Supposed to Be Harder, But Itโs Not
I always thought canning was complicated or dangerous. But once I got the hang of itโand respected the pressure canner rulesโit became a routine. Itโs just food and heat and timing.
Now, when I look at those jars lined up on the shelf, I donโt just see carrotsโI see one less trip to the store. One more meal I can make in 5 minutes. And a little proof that yeah, I grew that. I made that last.
And heyโif youโre growing carrots, you might as well make them last all year.