Online course teaches methods of safely preserving foods

Strips of salmon are laid out on a wire rack prior to being smoked
Photo by Edwin Remsberg
Learn the fundamentals of food preservation, including how to smoke salmon such as this, in a series of online Cooperative Extension Service workshops this winter.

Learn to safely preserve healthy foods at home in a five-week series of online classes beginning Jan. 7. The classes are available statewide.

Sarah Lewis, a health, home and family development agent with the Â鶹¹ÙÍø Fairbanks Cooperative Extension Service, will teach the Preserving Alaska’s Bounty series.

Students will learn the fundamentals of safe food preservation and the general science of food safety and kitchen sanitation. They will get hands-on lessons on how to pickle and ferment vegetables; can fruits, berries and pickles in a boiling water bath; and preserve meat, fish and vegetables using a pressure canner. Classes also will cover dehydrating fruits and vegetables, making sausage and smoking fish. Other topics include emergency preparedness, how to start a cottage foods business and information about harvesting wild plants.

Live instruction will be offered during a three-hour Zoom session each Sunday at 1 p.m. Students will complete assignments in their kitchens on their own schedules. Assigned readings and other activities will be accessed via the Canvas platform.  

Participants must be 16 or older (unless joining a household adult). The registration deadline is Dec. 31. 

Registration and more class details are available at or by contacting Lewis at sarah.lewis@alaska.edu. A course fee of $150 per household or Zoom connection includes one class textbook, which will be mailed to students. Fee waivers are available if requested. 

Those who wish to become a food preservation educator in their community can complete an exam at the end of the course.  

Accommodation requests related to a disability should be made five business days before the Jan. 7 start to .

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