July 2, 2012


Pectin. No Sugar Pectin. Ball. Certo. SureJel. Pomona. Pectin Jaune. Confusing, right?

Let’s talk pectin. What follows is strictly my opinion and reflects my own experiences with various commercial pectins. I am not endorsing or dismissing any of these products. They are all effective and useful. Choose the pectin, or no pectin, according to your own expectations and desires.

Pectin is necessary to build a gel for preserves, to suspend the fruit in a syrup. All fruit has some pectin, but some fruits have a lot of pectin and others have hardly any. Apples, citrus, gooseberries all have loads of natural pectin, while most stone fruits (cherries, apricots, peaches and plums) do not. Consequently, making apple jam or marmalade that sets up is a relatively easy thing, while cherry jam, strawberry preserves and plum jelly can be difficult.

Here’s a factoid I just learned from Wikipedia “In human digestion, pectin binds to cholesterol in the gastrointestinal tract and slows glucose absorption by trapping carbohydrates. Pectin is thus a soluble dietary fiber.” Eat More Fruit Preserves!

Commercial pectins are made from citrus peels, for the most part, and occasionally from apple cores and peels. Certo and SureJel, the pectins commonly found on your grocer’s shelves, have been around for decades. These are the gelling agents your mother and grandmother turned to when jam was on the stove. These commercial pectins are formulated to work with ratios of fruit to sugar that are high, in many cases a pound for pound equivalency is necessary. That’s a lot of sugar. But it’s also the flavor we grew up tasting. With these pectins, the number of jars of jam produced from a pound of fruit – the yield – is higher than when no pectin is used.

As the public began to demand lower sugar alternatives, the no-sugar version of these commercial pectins became available. These no-sugar, or low-sugar alternatives use fruit juice (generally apple or white grape) to make up for the lower sugar, and in my opinion change the flavor from pure cherry or pure plum to one that has tones of apple or grape. Not a bad thing, just not what I am looking for in my preserves.

Recently, Pomona Pectin began to attract attention. Pomona resembles the pectin most widely used in Europe – Pectin Jaune.   This product can be used with no sugar, low sugar, and sugar substitutes. For many people, particularly diabetics, this pectin is a superb choice. I’ve used it for jellies and jams, but for me, I was disappointed in the often cloudy appearance of the end product.

Ball (the jar company) has recently begun to package their pectins – both traditional and low sugar versions – in small, convenient plastic bottles, available wherever you buy jars. Their website is comprehensive, has answers to many frequently asked questions, and has wonderful tools to respond to questions about pectin use, including a pectin calculator.

If you’ve been reading along here, you know that I’ve made homemade gooseberry and apple pectins. In fact, I’m starting a batch of apple pectin today with fifteen pounds of green, unripe apples brought to me by Susan Behl of Nob Hill Farm. She’s my favorite enabler, growing gorgeous fruits like gooseberries and white, red and black currants; mirabelle plums, a staggering variety of peaches and raspberries, dozens of apple types, and even walnuts! If you’re in DC, you’ll find Susan at the Lafayette Farmers Market and the Palisades Market.

I put up four ounce jars of these homemade pectins to use in recipes using three pounds of fruit and three cups of sugar. Beware, they are less precise than commercial versions. Some years, the pectin is strong and gels right away, other times it takes a few minutes of evaporation and boiling to get the set right, but in all cases, I am able to keep the sugar to fruit ratio consistent, and the flavor of the fruit is what I taste, not gooseberry, not apple, and not sugar.

Remember that some preserves and jellies can take up to a month to fully set up, so don’t rush to any conclusions, and as I often say, if your jam or jelly doesn’t set, just call it syrup and enjoy it over pancakes or stirred into seltzer.

I made a lovely cherry preserves using some of the tart cherries I scrounged this season – they were so hard to find! I have also tried my gooseberry pectin with peaches and with apricots (same ratios) and have had superb luck – recipes coming soon. I hope you’ll give it a try, too, and let me know how you do.

It’s time to celebrate! July 14th is Can-It-Forward day. This is the third year this wonderful celebration of canning will be held. Why not hold a canning party in your home? Teach some of your friends and neighbors about the ancient art of preserving. You’ll find lots of information on the Ball site, and as they’ve partnered with Food52 this year, there’s even more inspiration on my favorite food site and chances to win product and join others canning across the country.

Don’t miss the excellent advice and information at Canvolution’s site, and check the Twitter hashtag #canvolution to see what all the brilliant canners across the country are up to. The Can-A-Rama will be held July 20-22, so if you miss the 14th, there’s another chance to party with your jars one week later.

And to make it all even better, the Ball Jar company has been very generous. They are offering a Home Canning discovery kit, jar lifter, labels, pectins and a free case of jars to one of my lucky readers. And you can bet I’ll send along some treats from my pantry. Leave a comment below and I’ll do a random selection by Friday, July 6th, so you’ll have plenty of time to pick up those jars and plan your canning adventures before July 14th

PS Laura, I hope this clears up some questions! xox

 

straight talk about pectin on Punk Domestics

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Cherry Preserves
Makes 4 half pints

3 lbs. cherries, tart if you can find them
3 cups sugar
Juice of one lemon
4 oz gooseberry or apple pectin

Pit and stem the cherries over a bowl, capturing all the juices.

Collect about 1/2 cup of the pits and rap them with a hammer to crack. Wrap the pits in cheesecloth and tie well.

Add the pits, sugar and lemon juice to the bowl of cherries and stir well.

Allow the mixture to macerate 8-12 hours in the refrigerator, covered.

Set a strainer over a heavy bottomed pot and strain out the fruit. Dispose of the cheesecloth bag of cherry pits.

Bring the collected juices to a full rolling boil, stirring often, until the temperature reaches 220°.

Add the fruit and bring the mixture back to a full rolling boil, then add the pectin.

Bring everything to a good hard boil. The foam should dissipate, but if any remains, add a pinch of butter and stir well.

Turn off the heat and check the set by pushing at the surface of the preserves. If it wrinkles, you’re all ready to put the preserves in jars. Another test for its readiness? The fruit will not be floating, but will be suspended throughout the syrup. If it’s still loose, boil for another two to three minutes and check the set again.

Ladle the hot preserves into warm jars leaving 1/4″ headspace. Process for ten minutes in a waterbath.

 

 

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194 Responses to “cherry preserves, straight talk about pectin and a can-it-forward giveaway”

  1. Laura@MotherWouldKnow

    I’m not sure if I’m the Laura referred to in your PS, Cathy, but if not you are prescient. I have never done home-canning and I am itching to try it. I’ve been buying more farmers market jams and fewer from the store over the past few years. Now I’ve decided that it would be fun to buy the fruit rather than the jam and to try canning myself. After I met several people (beginning with you) who do their own canning, I got my nerve up, so I’m ready to begin. With all the great info in this post and these resources, I can even satisfy my urge to know the reasons behind what I’m doing and alternative methods of setting. Many thanks.

    Reply
    • Cathy

      Actually a different Laura, but happy to inform any Laura! Time to get canning – just give it a try!

      Reply
    • Linda Kenemore

      I just found this article today and found it very informative thanks for all your info. I make several kinds a Jelly and sell them at the farmers market in Grand Prairie Texas. I will be checking your site every so often for more articles I had no idea there was a date for canning forward very interesting thank you

      Reply
  2. Jill Warren Lucas

    Cathy, I really appreciate your views on pectins. I’ve not tried Pomona yet but I’ve heard from people who love it. I’m also trying to move away from pectins to preserve “true” flavors. I’m fairly confident making jams without it but still rely on the little pink box to ensure the set of a jelly. If I win – please, please, send a jar of the caramel apricot. Or will gladly trade anything from my pantry!

    Reply
    • Cathy

      I’m making another batch today, just to test the recipe (and because there is not enough now… not nearly enough….) Recipe coming soon, I promise.

      Reply
  3. jonathan

    is pectin’s function primarily that of setting your preserves? is pectin also required to ensure proper safe preservation?
    I ask because I made some cherry jam, but it ended up pretty loose, even after adding pectin (and cooking down the fruit and sugar for a while.) Even if it didn’t quite set the way it ought to, will it still be safe to put on the shelf and return to months from now?

    Reply
    • Cathy

      Pectin’s sole function is to set the preserves. (and other foods, but that’s another subject….) Stone fruit jams like cherry and apricot are notoriously difficult to set. Generally, the problem most new jammers have is trusting that the jam needs to cook longer! Try to use the wrinkle or cold plate test if you’re still new to the art. Regardless of the set, it’s perfectly safe for a year from the date of canning, as long as the seal is intact.

      Reply
      • sean

        also jam will set @ 220 degrees. you can get a candt thermometer at walmart for about 4 bucks.

        Reply
  4. Amanda H.

    I love your blog and learn so much! I am determined to plant a crab apple tree so that I can make the same crab apple jelly my grandmother used to make. So far from our little bitty garden we’ve made a few jars of pickles (hoping for more), and homemade salsa. One day we hope to be able to be one of those vendors in our town’s farmer’s market!

    Reply
  5. Gillian

    Having made strawberry, raspberry, and blueberry jams, I think I am ready to venture into stone fruits, so thanks for this post. Can I ask why you add the cracked cherry pits to the macerating fruit? Thanks!

    Reply
    • Cathy

      The cherry pits add a very light touch of almondy flavor to the finished jam. If it seems like a pain to crack the pits (it is), just add a touch of almond extract.

      Reply
  6. Earen

    How cool is Can-it-forward day! I am anxious to start canning for the season. Last year there was very little good fruit at my farmer’s market for making jams and preserves, so I made mosting pickles. Time to start stocking up my pantry with homemade goodies.

    Reply
  7. Leslie

    Can it forward day is an awesome idea! I’ll definitely be “celebrating” by teaching my boyfriend how to make blueberry jam. 🙂

    Reply
  8. Lenea

    Thanks for the information on pectin! I’ve just started canning (this will be my 4th season) and I learn something new all the time! I always feel like I’m “cheating” when I use pectin – the “older” ladies at the farmers market always say they don’t use it – they do it the “old fashioned” way. My mom says that they are cooking the flavor out of their fruit and that I should use pectin. Glad to see your article on pectin! I’m now trying to show my son how to can too!

    Reply
    • Cathy

      I agree. The commercial pectins do require an awful lot of cooking and the fruit ends up tasting so much less sprightly.

      Reply
  9. Ginny

    I actually use the Ball Pectin in my Italian dressing recipe. It gives it that viscous texture so it clings to the salad ingredients. I love this stuff!!

    Reply
  10. Rosemeri

    This is very helpful. I am fairly new to canning and have only made a few jams but I am concerned about the amount of sugar in them. I still think it’s way better than store bought with HFC though. Thanks for the post and a chance to win this great give away package.

    Reply
  11. Beth C.

    What wonderful information – who knew pectin was a fiber!? Thank you!

    Reply
  12. Jessica

    I’ve been using the Ball instant pectin this year instead of processing as I usually do and I have been thrilled with it. I haven’t done NO sugar yet but my last batch (strawberry) I only added 2 tablespoons of honey and it still set like a charm. I’ve been able to catch each fruit as it’s coming along and not have to buy huge amounts, too – cherry, blueberry, raspberry, strawberry – all in my fridge in amounts that will actually get eaten. Obviously to have any left over the winter I’m going to have to do some good old fashioned canning but I am def in love with the “fresh” method.

    Reply
  13. Bethesda Kitchen Gardener

    Really great to get all of this good information on pectin. I’ve been making spiced fig preserves with lots of lemon for years, but I’m branching out and finding it hard to discern the right amount of pectin to use. My recent fig/rhubarb preserves using pectin were so thick that I was very nearly tempted to empty the 18 jars, add more liquid, reboil and reprocess. Cooler heads prevailed, luckily! Wondering where other canners acquire interesting labels for their jams and pickles?

    Reply
    • Peggy

      I recent overcooked a small batch of strawberry jam, came up with a few jars of nearly strawberry leather, they were so thick….does it really work to empty the jars, add more liquid, reboil and reprocess? I hadn’t even considered that I could ‘save’ the jam in that way (I’m fairly new to the jamming world)….

      Reply
      • Cathy

        I’ve never had any luck adding more liquid to thick jam. Better to use it as an addition to bbq sauce or filling for cookies or cakes.

        Reply
    • Andrea G in Morgan Hill CA

      In the past I did some preserving using figs – they must be one of the fruits that has a lot of pectin. I think you could probably make pectin out of fig skins that would not have a lot of taste and wouldn’t have the fig seeds either. Just a thought. Someday I may try it!

      Reply
  14. BarbaraC

    Great info, thanks. Do you know a source for converting pectin amounts in recipes? I usually use bulk dry pectin and many recipes call for liquid in packets, without mentioning how much is in the packet. I spent hours sleuthing it on the internet last night and then just ended up guessing. I may have strawberry gelatin by the time it’s done, or it may be syrup! 🙂

    Reply
    • Cathy

      I linked up above to the page on the Ball site that has a pectin calculator. It’s very helpful.

      Reply
  15. candace klatt

    Every year I try to put jam up, but living in the Northwest and in Oregon out back we have very little fruit. WHAT we do have is wild plums. HMMMMM very nice for jam and for wine. But thats another story. Thanks for the info on no and low sugar.
    Candy

    Reply
  16. Peggy

    Every year I put up about two dozen jars of applesauce – I’m thrilled to discover I can use all those cores to make some homemade pectin and not send them directly to the compost!

    Reply
  17. Barbara

    I’m a newbie and very happy to have peaches ripening right now. Yum!

    Reply
  18. Tristin

    It would be so awesome to win this! Our garden is going strong and I have an abundance of produce to deal with! Love this blog!

    Reply
  19. Jackie Jentzsch

    Love your site. I’ve learned a lot about canning. Even though I’m a senior citizen I have just started to can. When I retired we moved to the country. Loving every second of it.

    Reply
  20. elisa m

    I find myself wondering about all the kinds of pectin, so this was super helpful! Thanks so much. Now I am intrigued by the idea of making my own pectin…

    Reply
  21. crystal conway

    I haven’t canned anything before but I really want to try this year. I would love to try rainier cherry perserves!

    Reply
  22. Devon H

    Wonderful post! I have been thinking of trying apple pectin as I would like to get away from commercial pectin. And those tart cherry preserves look divine! I missed them entirely this year since the ripening season is so off kilter. Thankfully I have several quarts of them I froze last summer and forgot about, so I can still make some. 🙂

    Reply
  23. Jonquil

    Neat post & giveaway! I’ve read that one can’t interchange liquid & dry pectins. Is this so?

    Reply
    • Cathy

      Liquid and dry pectins are added to the jam at different times in the cooking process.

      Reply
  24. Heather

    I have been looking for a substitute and haven’t been happy with any that I have tried. I cannot wait to try yours out! Thank you for your post.

    Reply
  25. sarah

    I’ve made fridge pickles, but that’s it! Want to start canning this year, starting with the surplus of tomatoes I’m expecting from the garden.

    Reply
  26. Amber

    Thanks for your giveaway! I’d love a chance to win one of these…I’m starting to teach friends how to can and preserve. 🙂 Blackberry jelly this weekend!

    Reply
  27. carrie s

    I love your post very helpful! Love the recipe will have to try this one!

    Reply
  28. eric jarrell

    i love to can,and recently inherited my grandmothers equipment……lots of vintage gadgets!

    Reply
  29. Joanne Kennedy

    Hi, What wonderful info. While I’ve been canning now for two years, I’ve never used the lower sugar pectin. I’m happy to hear what the difference is. I never knew. I would love to try it!

    Thank you for the chance to win your great giveaway!

    I’m having a giveaway on my blog too if you and your followers would like to enter. It’s for the Ball complete book of home preserving 🙂 Just go to my blog to sign up 🙂

    Reply
  30. debbie d

    always happy to gain more info!! dont have near the time to can that i would like but i do what i can and very much enjoy the act of canning and the end product, (most of the time). have some jalapeno jelly (syrup from the 1st batch) but everyone loves it

    Reply
  31. Michele J.

    Your cherry jam looks fantastic! I have used Pomona’s Pectin for several years with good luck, I find that the cloudiness occurs when you use little to no sugar…the sugar is what gives it that nice shine. I just reduce my sugar to taste when I use it, but I always use SOME sugar.

    Reply
  32. Wendi

    Great post about pectin. I love learning about anything canning! I’m hoping to put up some cherries this summer.

    Reply
  33. Emma

    I just found your blog via Cook.Can.Read and am loving it. I can’t wait to try out the cherry preserves or the raspberry chocolate jam which I am going to make tonight. So excited!

    Reply
    • Cathy

      Congratulations, Emma. You’ve won the giveaway. I’ll be sending you an email to get your mailing address. I hope you will host a Can-It-Forward Day! If you do, post photos on my Mrs. Wheelbarrow’s Kitchen facebook page? I’d be so delighted!! Have fun canning this season, Cathy

      Reply
  34. Richelle

    I have done very little canning. I am always trying to learn as much as I can. Mostly from the grandmothers in my family. Very informational post here. Thanks!

    Reply
  35. Melissa H

    What a wonderful and informative post! Thank you for making canning more approachable for those of us who haven’t done much of it. I want to do more, and love to learn from others……
    Thanks!

    Reply
  36. wendy

    A friend and I started canning last year and we love it! We have already made several batches of strawberry and cherry jams (oh and a batch of raspberry!). Cherry is one of my favorites I will definitely be celebrating can-it-forward this year and handing out some jams!

    Reply
  37. Pamela

    Great post! I use Sure-Jell low sugar pectin and sometimes even no pectin…but I have ben a bit confused by all of the various choices so this was very interesting. Thank you.

    Reply
  38. Pam

    What a great explanation, Cathy! You continually inspire me to get more out of my canning. I’m anxious to try the homemade pectin, but we don’t have gooseberries here. Maybe I can snag some green apples. Cherries are just right here and I love cherry preserves! Thanks again for all your help and ideas 🙂

    Reply
  39. Ardala

    I’ve just started canning and love it. Can’t wait to do more! Made tomato jam this weekend, yummy! I think strawberry rhubarb is next.

    Reply
  40. gg loyd

    great post, thank you! gaining confidence on those stone fruits, would love to gift my new neighbors with some apricot jam…

    Reply
  41. esther

    Thanks for this great post- I just shared it on Facebook and with my other canning friends!

    Reply
  42. Derrina

    After spending winter using a can openner I am ready to capture & can this season’s bounty! I always appreciate a refresher course before starting. Your site is always inspiring & what a great idea of Canning Forward! I love to can with my girlfriends & enjoy the new idea’s & recipes everyone brings with them. I am marking the date on my calendar ! Thank you again.

    Reply
  43. Gail

    Plain and simple. I want to win this, Cathy. You KNOW what a can-a-phobe I am, and this kit could be just the push into the deep end [of the jam pot] that I need!

    Reply
  44. Susan

    I’ve just started getting into making jams and am pretty unclear on the different types of pectins and their fruit to sugar ratios. Thanks for this explanation, it’s quite helpful. I’ll be checking your site regularly from now on!

    Reply
  45. Penny

    As a kid, I didn’t even know what store bought jam tasted like! My mom had two things she preserved every year: apricot jam (we lived in a tract built on a former orchard in San Jose) and dill pickles. With mom in mind, I “put up” at least one batch of jam and a lug of “cukes” each season. I found your blog through Punk Domestics, and the pectin info is great! Thanks.

    Reply
  46. April

    I think for can it forward I will do strawberry since cherries are out of season in my area.

    Reply
  47. Nancy

    treats from your pantry *and* Ball canning goodies?! great giveaway! pick me, please. 🙂

    Reply
  48. Marilla

    Thank you for the helpful information about pectin. It’s good to know there is a type that uses less sugar, and that I can make my own as well.

    Reply
  49. melissa

    thanks for the interesting post. i usually go for no pectin and am happy with a looser jam, but i just tried pomona yesterday. i really want to try making the apple pectin! i love this idea.

    Reply
  50. iHeartQuilting

    Thank you for so much information. I am a beginner canner and was kind of stumped when shopping for pectin! I would love to win the canning things, it would be so helpful.

    Reply
  51. Carolyn

    Love this post! I’ve been meaning to research this very topic and here it is! Thanks so much!

    Reply
  52. sara

    I am very excited to get canning this summer, I feel I am so behind. I definitely did not make enough jam last year and I didn’t use pectin. I’d be interested in trying with pectin this year!! Hope everyone has a wonderful can it forward day!!

    Reply
  53. katy

    i prefer using pectin for berry jams. I just think they lose something the longer they cook. Especially strawberry jam. Recently, I’ve fallen in love with Pomona to do this.

    I’ve got a bunch of apple cores & peels in the fridge that I was going to make pectin…I should get on that…

    Reply
  54. Megan

    Thanks for the info. I love making jams but I really hate adding that much sugar. I can’t wait to try jam with homemade pectin.

    Reply
  55. Barbara

    Just started canning last week! Very excited for the summer fruits and veggies to appear!

    Reply
  56. Julia

    I tried Pomona’s a couple of times unsuccessfully. Making one’s own pectin is quite labor intensive but I would like to make it work.

    Reply
  57. Peggy

    Started with jams, then brandied peaches, salsas now totally hooked! haha It is a practical art so it fits me perfectly. Thanks for having the giveaway.

    Reply
  58. Sue

    Think I’ll invite a couple of people over to make a jam. Most of the people here haven’t done this before and some even want to learn how. Of course, they really appreciate the jams and jellies and pickles I give them as gifts!

    Reply
  59. ashley c

    I never even thought of making my own pectin! Thanks for the great post it was very informative

    Reply
  60. Kimberly

    Thanks for this post. I am just getting into canning. This will be a fun adventure as I follow in my grandmothers footsteps.

    Reply
  61. Leigh

    This post made me reminisce about my childhood- when the jam didn’t set it amazingly became syrup for ice cream! It was delicious either wat!

    Reply
  62. Michelle

    Great explanation of pectin! I have used all but homemade and would love to try it. I have an apple tree that never has enough energy to ripen it’s fruit before they fall and rot. Can I use these? And how unripe? I am hoping to have my first canning party. Thanks again.

    Reply
  63. Debby

    Thank you for the great information. I have never canned before but am planning to try.

    Reply
  64. Ally

    This clears up a lot of questions I had, thanks! Looking forward to trying my hand at making homemade pectin.

    Reply
  65. Crystal B

    I am a newbie canner on my own. I always used to can with my MIL, but this year she hasn’t had as much time to do it with me so I have been on my own. Always love new resources (and less sugar). Thanks for the info.

    Oh, and I hope to teach someone else this year, so I would love to win!

    Reply
  66. kirsty

    i’m a novice canner with high hopes of more. thank you for the advice! would love the ball canning kit. always love canning jars!!!

    Reply
  67. Christine

    So, if I make apple stock, can I can it and use it for pectin later?

    Reply
  68. laura ramey

    I just made apricot jam. Needless to say I love that I did not have to peel. Please pass along your best recipe for doing up plums. Continue to love you.

    Reply
  69. Danny W

    Still waiting for fruit to be totally ripe up here in the PNW… Thanks for the advice as always!

    Reply
  70. joanne

    I have been using Ball’s low sugar pectin but instead of fruit juice I use water (I agree that juice does change the taste of the jam and depending on the fruit, makes it into something else). I also find that if I cut back on the recommended amount of pectin and cook the fruit and water for a bit the mixture thickens up nicely, the set is good, and the flavor is all fruit without too much sugar and without tasting watery. BUT there is definitely a bit of fiddling involved and I do check the set using the cold plate method. I have also read that you can activate the Ball Low sugar in a separate pan of water for those times when you need to macerate the fruit with the sugar for a period of time – but I have not tried this yet. Thanks for the great info.

    Reply
  71. amy g

    Thank you so much for the information and links above! I look forward to learning more! I have started to purchase the jars of pectin and enjoy the flexibility they offer.

    Reply
  72. jocelyn

    I am looking forward to canning fruits and jams this year. I have only pickled in the past and am ready to try my hand with something different. Thanks for the post.

    Reply
  73. A Canadian Foodie

    I have a sour cherry tree in my back yard and only recently posted my sour cherry jam. It takes a lot of tweaking to get actual cherries in the jam, and not just whole lotta syrup, but the flavour of the Evans Cherry is outrageous and so worth every effort.
    🙂
    Valerie

    Reply
  74. Tammy Kimbler

    Thank you for the great review! I just had a canning party last night, hoping for more. Looking for those sour cherries, too.

    Reply
  75. Trish

    Thanks for the great info! I tried some Pomona pectin for the first time and while I can’t speak to the cloudiness, since it was Peach, Thyme and Black Pepper jam, it did set well. The two part process was a little confusing the first time. I’m looking forward to making my own pectin in the fall!

    Reply
  76. Ronda

    Great information. I love to can my own foods!! Getting my veggies and fruits from Bountiful Baskets on Saturday..and this week there will be a box of Washington State Cherries!! I’m looking forward to making some preserves with them. 🙂 Thanks for the great information.

    Reply
  77. Nywoman

    As usual a great post. Have now made Mango Chutney, and Marmalades.
    Perhaps when tomatoes are ready I’ll can some. H Hard to store the jars in an apartment kitchen, though I probably have more storage than most.

    Reply
  78. Reaya

    Thanks for the reminder about Can-It-Forward day. I think a trip to the orchard for peaches and a canning day is in order!

    I too was sad that tart cherries went so quickly this year. I managed to get enough PYO at Rock Hill to make a cobbler, but not much else. This will be 2 years in a row for me with no sour cherry jam. 🙁 I am still using the commercial pectins, but will check back through your archives to see about making my own!

    Reply
  79. Amrei

    love your blog. I’ve been canning since I was a little girl with my grandmother, but there is always more to learn!

    Reply
  80. Jenny

    I would love to win this especially anything that you have made! I’m so into canning…I would have never thought I could do it – and today I’m making blueberry jam!!

    Reply
  81. Tristen Warner

    I love your blog! I went on one internet hunt to find a recipe and instead found your blog and a couple others I’ve started following. I’ve done limited canning but living in the PNW there is so much I could can that my fingers have been itching to try again!

    Reply
  82. Meghan Anderson

    Live your recipes! I pickled some tomolives for the 4th & can’t wait to give them a try. Also, I made ketchup from a recipe you posted & it has been a hit. Thanks! I can’t wait to try some of the preserve recipes this year.

    Reply
  83. Starla Pointer

    We’re very fortunate to have a tart cherry tree in the backyard. The cherries are tiny, but have excellent flavor. Now that I’m a canner (this is my third year) I can make much better use of the cherries from the bottom half of the tree. The birds still get the ones on top, though. 🙂 Thanks for the tips!

    Reply
  84. Linda R

    I just made my first batch of Cherry Jam following Christine Ferber’s recipe. She called for 7 oz.of Green Apple Jelly (which I made earlier). I boiled and boiled and it did not set up as thick as I’d like, but I was afraid of scorching it. I added a tablespoon of Creme de Cassis for good measure;) Although it is a bit on the runny side I found it quite delicious over homemade vanilla ice cream sitting on a slice of Sarabeth’s Orange Cake!
    I was happy to read it may set up more with time.
    Do you think the 7oz of Apple jelly was too much?

    Reply
  85. TheGeek

    Thanks for this! My roommate and I have been looking into canning once the local summer fruit really gets going, and we weren’t sure which pectin to use.

    Reply
  86. Linda

    I love all your canning posts because I, too, love to can. I love all things that are home-canned, from the jellies to the pickles to the chutneys to tomatoes. My cherry tree is full at the moment but the cherries are not ripe yet (too much clouds and rains – I think we’re the only part of the country that is cold and wet). I have some red currants on their way, the plums are still tiny green, and the Bosc pears are plentiful. Oh, and apples! My crab apple provides the best jelly! I also love rose petal jelly but the deer snuck in to my garden and robbed me! Thank you for inspiring me to do some canning this week!

    I have gooseberry jelly which has sugar in it. Do you think I could use it for pectin? I may just try it with my surplus of cherries….

    Reply
    • Cathy

      I’m sure your gooseberry jelly would provide the pectin boost you need for the cherries. Just modify the sugar you add to the cherries a bit, or the end product will be too sweet.

      Reply
  87. Barbara in NC

    Do you think this recipe would work with no pectin at all? I made your cherry-apricot preserves last summer with great success, and was hoping to adapt to cherry only–but don’t have any homemade pectin on hand.

    Reply
  88. Sarah

    Neat-o! Love this. And I might just have to pick up a couple of those kits and invite some friends over for a little canning fun! True story: The other day when I read reference to the idea that freezing tomatoes is a better preservation technique than canning them — my first thought was, “Gosh, I wonder what Cathy would think about that?!”

    Reply
  89. Kristi

    My maiden name is Ball. Learning to can is on my bucket list…maybe this summer? 😉

    Reply
  90. Peggy HUmphries

    I made cherry jam as well this year, so beautiful and tasty! Love all your posts and all your knowledge that you share.

    Thank you!
    Peggy

    Reply
  91. Una Walker

    I’m a fairly new jam maker and have only used pectin with pomegranate other times I’ve just used lemons without excess lemon flavor. I know my Mom has the apple pectin recipe highlighted in her Ball book that I now have! I will have to give it a try. Thanks for the info.

    Reply
  92. Lee

    couldn’ agree more, especially about cloudy results with pomona. thanks for the informative post.

    Reply
  93. Naomi

    My dad has been making tart cherry preserves for the past 25 years… we used to get paid a penny a pit to help with the prep!

    Reply
  94. Miya

    I’m a big Pomona fan myself, though I’ve never tried it for something like a jelly that needed to be perfectly clear. Happy Can It Forward!

    Reply
  95. Molly Pisula

    Wow—pectins. This is one of those posts where you realize you didn’t even know enough to formulate a question prior to reading about it! Learning more, slowly but surely.

    Reply
  96. Dana LMW

    Just saw the Ball low or no sugar pectin in the store yesterday and was wondering about it. I have never really understood pectin and its purpose. Thank you for the timely post!!!!

    Have a safe and great 4th!!!!

    Reply
  97. heidipie

    Howdy!
    Last year I made a batch of cherry lime jam, and I grated a green apple into it. The flavors absolutely overpowered any taste of apple, and the jam actually got too thick. So this year I used only half an apple, and it was pretty much just right. For my white nectarine jam, I used the technique suggested in “Canning for a New Generation”: I peeled and quartered my green apple, and wrapped the peels and core in cheesecloth. Then when I reduced the syrup the fruit and sugar let out, I boiled the apple and peels in there. They gave enough pectin to the mix that I could fish them out and put the whole thing together before I boiled away the lovely pink color. Yay!

    Reply
  98. heidipie

    Another thing about commercial pectin: it is derived from fruit, but by a process using industrial chemicals, and it’s not all that “natural”, even the Pomona. Just sayin’.

    Reply
  99. Theresea Quinto

    At church this year we put in a large garden to help people out that just need a little help and some local food banks. We will be teaching a bread making class and currently trying to set up a canning class. I love to can. Sadly, this past weekends storms leveled my tomato plants but I still plan to enter the fair. These items would be a great help. Thanks for the contest and I will be checking back more often for recipes.

    Reply
  100. Kathie

    Wow what a great give away. I am in a time bank where we share skills & resources. This would go a long way shared with others.

    Reply
  101. Lynn

    I too made and preserved ketchup from your posted recipe, it was fantastic!! Someone then gave me bags of purple plums from their tree and i made plum jam using Pomonas Pectin and low sugar (hubby diabetic). Now I am interested in making Rose Petal Jam. I heard it is magnificent, practically a staple on the Middle Eastern table. Although it doesn’t require pectin (wandered off the path of this article) and it is more of a syrup than a jam, was wondering if you’re familiar or have a recipe and any hints for success. Love your blog

    Reply
  102. Joy

    Very interesting posting. I’d love to cut down the amount of sugar in my jams. My results have been inconsistent; blueberry jam set perfectly but strawberry has been a little too runny. I think I’ll try the new Ball pectins. Thanks!

    Reply
  103. Stephanie Woodbury

    Hi Mrs. Wheelbarrow,
    Just started canning today and I am inspired by your site. I am excited to do some more canning, especially on National Canning Day!!
    Stephanie

    Reply
  104. Deborah

    I learned to can from my French-Canadian mother-in-law. She gave me all of her jars when she decided it was too much work! My great grandfather in St. Louis was in the canning jar business and I still have some of his original glass jars that go under the “Drey” name….he eventually sold out to the Ball company. I would love to receive this gift to put up preserves from berries in my new garden this year! Thanks.

    Reply
  105. rlstults@hotmail.com

    I can’t wait to try making pectin from apple or choke cherries. I just bought five acres on an island in the PNW and am looking forward to planting my orchard this fall. I already have my berried patch planted with raspberries, blueberries and grapes. I love this website. Always great things to learn about food basics.

    Reply
  106. Winn

    Love your website! I’ve made a few things from your site. A recurring recipe I make is your Corny Waffles. I love the crunch!

    Reply
  107. Laurie S Sagerman

    Hi, just peaked at your page and I Love it!! My Daughter Jessica, is a “Second” year canner this year, and as a result I too am back at it. I Love seeing all of the renewed interest and brand new interest in canning, makes my Heart smile!!! I look forward to coming here often….and your Recipe sounds wonderful!!! Thanks, Laurie 🙂

    Reply
  108. Shawna Greenway

    This is my first year of canning and so far I’m loving it! Instead of the hot water bath method, I use the oven method I learned at a jam class a few years ago and so far no one’s gotten sick from eating my jam. I’ve also played around with packaged and natural pectin and prefer the taste of the natural, mainly Meyer lemon rinds. The cherry and blueberry batches I’ve made set well but the strawberry lime jam was loose but not so loose that friends didn’t gobble it up.

    Reply
  109. Rebecca Taormino

    Love the website. So much I want to do, going to make sure to find the time to
    can with my daughters like I did w/ my Mom. so much fun !

    Reply
  110. Nancy N

    Thank you for the chance! I learn something every time I read an entry.

    Reply
  111. Samantha M

    Great information on pectin, thanks! Just diagnosed as a diabetic, so learning about the low sugar/no sugar is helpful.

    Happy 4th of July!

    Reply
  112. Marissa

    You never cease to teach me something new in a blog post, Cathy! I made pickles for the first time last weekend and definitely want to try my hand at some preserves this weekend.

    Reply
  113. Leigh Anna

    I just started canning recently, and really appreciate the information on your site. Thanks for the pectin tutorial!

    Reply
  114. Helen

    Great point about not knowing for sure, for a while, whether your jam has set. I had some a few years ago that I was sure I’d have to re-do, but then like magic, two weeks later, I realized were fine. I might note though that some of the plums and pluots out here on the West Coast have a fair bit of pectin, making them somewhat tricky. One year I had a batch that was ultra stiff, so I made a second batch that was intentionally quite loose. Then I combined the two to find the perfect medium. They were different varieties, and I used a good mix of barely under-ripe, just ripe and almost-over-ripe. The resulting flavor was outstanding. Another tip, which you figured out a long time ago, but which is worth mentioning, is that plum brandy provides a harmonious, unobtrusive background flavor for so many fruit preserves. I’m using it a lot this summer! ;o)

    Reply
  115. Kip

    I just found your blog, I have spent an hour reading back posts and cann’t wait to try some of your recipes. Thanks for the chance at the giveaway.

    Reply
  116. cynthia

    I love your website and can’t wait to start the canner- I am behind.
    Thanks for sharing.

    Reply
  117. gluttonforlife

    Lord, Cathy, I finally had a moment to sit down with this post and I’m the 162nd person to comment! You are one popular lady, and most deservedly so. Thanks for this post, which really clarifies for me that I need to make some green apple pectin (too late for gooseberries already). Also, I bought Christine Ferber’s book, which will have to do until yours comes out! xo

    Reply
  118. Pamela J. Whitman

    I shared my first efforts at canning (strawberry preserves) with friends and received thumbs up!!! This weekend will be peach preserves and I think your 7 day pickle recipe is an absolute must. What fun! Thank you!

    Reply
  119. Melanie

    I just got into canning, and I am so happy to find your site! There is so much that I have to learn…

    Reply
  120. Sara C

    So happy to hear that fact about how our bodies absorb pectin – I definitely have a more compelling reason to eat them now!

    Reply
  121. Melanie

    Hi Cathy,
    Thanks for all the great info–I’ll have to try my own pectin sooner or later. A quick question, did you find that the Pomona’s pectin resulted in a much stiffer gel than the Ball’s? I just tried Pomona’s for the first time in Mango/Lime preserves and Strawberry and found it much firmer than I was used to. (Could be I used too much!)

    Reply
    • Cathy

      In a couple of instances, yes, the pomona was much stiffer than I wanted. It takes finesse, I’m convinced, to use it properly. Two of my students who make quite a lot no-sugar and honey only jams really like using it.

      Reply
  122. dana

    Wonderful information re: pectin. I’m off to buy some sour cherries and get started.
    Thanks for the inspiration!

    Reply
  123. Pam

    I’d love to start learning some canning this summer, and I do also love giveaways…

    Reply
  124. Zora Margolis

    Cathy– I had made jam with many different fruits for years, but hadn’t made sour cherry until I moved to DC in 1996. I was disappointed in my first efforts because despite using Sure-Jell pectin, the jams were syrupy, and I didn’t like the ratio of fruit in the jar. Not enough cherries. I’ve also tried making jam without pectin and found that I didn’t care for the overly dark color and overcooked flavor. I have developed my own method over the years that I have been making sour cherry jam, which results in a very pleasing jam, chock-full of fruit. It’s quite a simple technique–I pit the cherries, chop them lightly and drain them well–they are usually very juicy. Then I reduce the juice by 1/2 to 2/3. That really concentrates the flavor. I don’t like super-sweet jam, so I add sugar in the amount of about 1/2 the volume of fruit. And it doesn’t take a lot of pectin to set it. I add a little bit of almond extract instead of smashed cherry pits.

    By the way, I found powdered apple pectin at Surfas, a gourmet chef/kitchen supply store in Culver City, CA. They do online sales at http://www.surfas.com– it’s a great resource.

    Reply
  125. Susan Sholin

    I started canning about 20 years ago and became obsessed. Jam, fruit, pickles, compotes, whatever. Not quite as fanatic as I once was but just got a ton of cherries so jam is on the horizon. Great article.

    Reply
  126. Bette I

    I made red raspberry jam last week, apricot-pineapple jam yesterday and today it’s cherry jam! My family loves my homemade jam and I love to make it for them. I buy my pectin in bulk pakages at the local Amish store.

    Reply
  127. Karen in Idaho

    I don’t use pectin for any jams (raspberry included). I only use it in my chokeberry jelly, and my savory jams that obviously don’t have natural pectin (horseradish, ginger and roasted garlic). I have a lot of fruit on my property, so it became too expensive to continue the use of pectin. Discovered the Blue Chair Jam Cookbook a couple of years ago; author Rachel Saunders never uses pectin. She uses quite a bit of sugar, but I try to use a bit less, but you do need it in order to thicken the jam.

    Reply
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  130. Carol

    Thank you for this! I only had a dab of local cherries that I’d frozen last year, but wanted to make cherry jam out of it. After reading your article, I threw the cherries, a little water, some white sugar to taste, a splash of bottled lemon juice, and a quartered Granny Smith apple in the pot and cranked the heat up. It didn’t take long for it to get to about 212 before I called it — it was already pretty thickened by then. I put the cherry jam in a half pint jar and into the fridge (it won’t last long enough to water bath it!), and the apple went into another container to eat later tonight.

    When I get time, I’m going to make your apple pectin and freeze it for use this summer as I can jams, preserves and jellies.

    Thanks again!

    Reply
  131. Cindy

    No cherries down here but I found some tart bottled cherry juice. Can I make Jelly from that?

    Reply
  132. Laurie

    Great info! I’ve never tried The liquid pectin but it sounds easier to use! I love the low sugar recipes, it lets more of the natural fruit flavor come through.

    Reply
  133. Megan

    Hello im very new to canning. I made a simple raspberry jam that seemed to set up nicely yesterday. I have a few pounds of tart cherries left over from making wine and found tpur recipe. Only question I have is : What is the purpose of the hammered pits in cheesecloth? I love the scie ce with cooking and this one through me for a loop. Haha thank you for the great pectin knowledge. 🙂

    Reply
  134. Donette R Cabrera

    I’m having a hard time working with the Pomona. Have made the Keto jams with xanthum gum instead of pectin? Real quick to make but I don’t knpw if they are safe to can.

    Reply
  135. Amy

    I have discovered some fruit growing in my yard (volunteer from Hurricane Irma-Fall of 2017) that is a pit fruit and no one can identify it. It looks like a cherry, but tastes like a plum and has a short stem like a plum. The seeds are not like anything I’ve ever seen (8 sharp, flat butterfly shaped pits/seeds). It is apparently, tropical, because it is growing rapidly here in the FL Keys. The fruit starts as light green, then ripens to black/dark red and the size is any where from dime to quarter. The flesh is pale yellow. I plan to make a jelly, but separately these pits is going to take some cheesecloth and patience, I do believe, and lots of pectin. I have pictures of the fruit and seeds if anyone thinks they can identify this fruit, I would appreciate the help. One individual from the Philippines recognizes it and says that it is similar to a Barbados Cherry.

    Reply

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