National Post

All that sauce, nowhere to go

COVID gardens cause run on jars

- Laura Brehaut

Baker Dawn Woodward packs her glossy, hazelnut- chocolate spread in squat, widemouthe­d canning jars. The 250- millilitre vessels are as essential to the

Nutella-inspired treat as the toasted nuts and cocoa. In a typical year, the use of jars would have been a given. But due to an increase in the number of people gardening and preserving during the pandemic, the focus has shifted from the contents to the container. Canning supplies are now scarce in many parts of the country.

Last week, after fruitlessl­y searching stores and wholesaler­s for 250- millilitre mason jars, Woodward put a call out on social media. Customers of Evelyn’s Crackers, the bakery she co- owns in Toronto, returned two dozen as a result of her Instagram plea, and she’s hoping to get more after mentioning the issue in her newsletter.

“Now the challenge will be to find the lids,” she says, “because there’s a shortage of those too.” ( Flat canning lids are designed to be single-use.)

During COVID-19, Woodward diversifie­d her product offering. While in previous years, she might have made 200 jars of jam, this year she’s on track for roughly 1,000 in varieties like coronation grape with star anise, and Italian plum with bay leaf and ginger. Sales have been great, she says, but when she recently tried to place an order with her supplier for 12 cases of Bernardin jars, there was a hitch.

“Consolidat­ed Bottle (a packaging company with offices in Montreal and Toronto) said, ‘ We’re out until the new year. We have a similar product but you have to order over 4,000 pieces because it’s a special order,’” says Woodward. “We are not built to accommodat­e 4,000 jars, so I was like, OK. Time to use Instagram and see if our customers will return their jars.”

Bernardin, the largest canning jar company in Canada, and Consolidat­ed Bottle have yet to respond to requests for comment on the shortage. A spokespers­on for Home Hardware said the company is seeing “unpreceden­ted consumer demand for all preserving items,” and that its suppliers “have been maximizing product availabili­ty to ensure they get as many jars and lids as possible to consumers during the peak of the canning season in Canada.”

For Rebekka Hutton, pickle maker and owner of Alchemy Pickle Company in Toronto, a lack of jars is also presenting challenges. Seemingly the result of a variety of factors — an 11- day Port of Montreal strike in August, a decrease in the number of drivers from Montreal to Toronto, and virus- related manufactur­ing shutdowns — she’s now experienci­ng shipment delays.

“What used to be a fourday ordering turnaround has turned into potentiall­y four weeks for this particular shipment,” says Hutton, who specialize­s in making kombucha, and fermented vegetables such as sauerkraut and kimchee. “When you have a product that has to be packed into jars when it’s ready, and you don’t have anywhere to put it unless it’s in jars, that creates a serious problem.”

Hutton managed to find enough jars at a local cashand- carry company to see her through this month. In forecastin­g her jar needs for the next six months, though, she identified a potential shortfall of kombucha bottles in November. “I’m trying to work with ( my suppliers) well ahead of time,” she says, “so I can scramble around and try to find something that we can put the kombucha in that works in the interim.”

While for businesses, an undersuppl­y of jars and lids could potentiall­y disrupt production and require significan­t workaround­s, for home canners, it puts a dent in their ability to save the season. More than half ( 51 per cent) of Canadians grew at least one fruit or vegetable this year, according to a study from Dalhousie University’s Agri-food Analytics Lab (AAL). Nearly one in five started growing their own food for the first time, and two- thirds were influenced by COVID-19 to do so.

This boom in gardening, says Sylvain Charlebois, professor of food distributi­on and policy, and senior director of the AAL, has been a major factor in the scarcity of canning supplies over the past several weeks.

“Canning companies weren’t ready for the jump,” says Charlebois. “Montreal has been out for a while, and

the last thing you want is to spoil food you produce.

here (in Halifax) we’re out — it’s happening everywhere. Any gardeners out there will know, the last thing you want is to spoil the food you produce … There’s probably a lot of freezing going on as a result of jar shortages.”

While many new home canners begin by making jam or vinegar pickles, says Batch co- author and Well Preserved co- founder Joel Maccharles, there are other things you can do — such as freezing — that don’t require a cache of mason jars and canning lids.

“It’s an awesome place to start but the first year I started making jam, I made 300 jars of jam. And then I figured out that I had a problem because I didn’t know what to do with 300 jars of jam,” says Maccharles. “If you start looking at other techniques, the lack of jars doesn’t hold you back as much.”

Since he practises various methods of food preservati­on, he wasn’t concerned about a lack of canning lids. And with a stash of 700 mason jars in his basement, he wasn’t worried about running out of vessels either. “If you do any amount of jarring, your problem is too many jars,” says Maccharles, laughing, “not not enough.”

 ?? Gett y ?? Prolonged isolation amid the pandemic has sparked a boom in canning, leading to a scarcity of jars and lids.
Gett y Prolonged isolation amid the pandemic has sparked a boom in canning, leading to a scarcity of jars and lids.

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