Make great tasting and inexpensive jams, easily, at home without the preservatives and chemicals you will find in the store-bought brands. 124 Lip-Smacking Good Jam Recipes is full of easy to make recipes for preserves as well as a section covering the basics of jam making. Enjoy these delicious jams on toast, in sandwiches or to top off your favorite ice cream. Just take a look at some of the lip-smacking good recipes you will find inside:
Ambrosial Jam Apple Maple Jam Apple Preserves Apricot Jam Apricot-Raspberry Jam Banana Jam Berry Christmas Jam Blackberry Preserves Blaeberry Jam Blueberry Jam Blueberry Or Huckleberry Jam Blueberry-Cherry Jam Blueberry-Lemon Jam Blueberry-Rhubarb Jam Cherry & Raspberry Jam Cherry And Raspberry Jam Cherry Freezer Jam | Concord Grape Jam Cranberry-Raspberry Preserves Dutch Apple Pie Jam Framboise Raspberry Jam Freezer Strawberry Jam Ginger Peach Jam Gooseberry Jam Honeyed Peach Preserves Hot Pepper & Tomato Jam Instant Raspberry Cordial Jam - Glorious Liqu Island Jam Kiwi Daiquiri Jam Rhubarb Jam Low-Sugar Refrigerator Strawberry Jam Mango Jam Microwave Cherry Preserves Microwave Jam | Microwave Strawberry Jam Mrs. Johnson's Peach Preserves No Cook Blueberry Strawberry Jam No Cook Peachy Orange Jam No Cook Strawberry Kiwi Jam No-Cook Apple Raspberry Jam No-Cook Georgia Peachberry Jam No-Cook Light Bananaberry Jam No-Cook Peach Jam -No-Cook Strawberry Freezer Jam Pineapple Apricot Jam Pumpkin Jam Red Raspberry Jam Rhubarb-Strawberry-Jam Ripe Grape Jam Sweet Banana Jam |
About Jams, Jellies & Preserves
The less sugar you use the greater the flavor impact of the fruit. If honey is used there will be a flavor change and the jellies/jams must be cooked longer. If you use artificial sweeteners use only the
Cyclamate type to avoid bitterness and follow the manufacturer's instructions. Cooked down jellies in which the juice is extracted by the open kettle method contain 60% fruit versus commercial products [pressure cooked to extract more juice but pectin destroying] with only 45% Jelly: has great clarity from dripping the cooked fruit through a cloth before adding sugar and finishing.
Jams, Butter and Pastes: are whole fruit purees of increasing density.
Marmalades, Preserves and Conserves: are bits of fruit in a heavy syrup. High Pectin Fruits: Apples, Crabapples, Quinces, Red Currants, Gooseberries, Plums and Cranberries. These need no additional pectin. If you get syrupy jelly you used too much sugar or did not cook the juice long enough after adding the sugar. Low Pectin Fruits: Strawberries, Blueberries, Peaches, Apricots,
Cherries, Pears, Blackberries, Raspberries, Grapes, Pineapple and Rhubarb. These require combining with high pectin fruits or adding a commercial pectin.
To Test Pectin Content: Put 1 tbl cooled fruit juice in a glass. Add an equal amount of grain alcohol and shake gently. The alcohol will bring the pectin together in a gel. If a large amount of pectin is
present it will appear in a single mass or clot when poured from the glass. Use equal amounts of juice and sugar. If the pectin collects in several small particles use have as much sugar as juice.
To sterilize jelly glasses: fill jars 3/4 full of water and place them in a shallow pan partly filled with water. Simmer 15 min and then keep hot until filled. If the lids are placed on the steaming
jars they will be sterilized simultaneously.
Tips: -Use enamel or stainless steel pots not aluminum or copper. On average, use 3/4 c sugar to 1 c fruit or juice depending on pectin content[see above].
- Very acid fruits can tolerate a whole c of sugar.
- Sterilize jars and seal tightly.
- For fruit that tends to discolor add lemon juice or Ascorbic acid.
- Keep in a cool dark place but do not refrigerate.
Making Jam: is easiest and most economical as it needs only one cooking step and uses the pulp. Measure the fruit. In putting it in the pan, crush the lower layers to provide moisture until more is
drawn out by cooking or add a little water. Simmer the fruit until it is soft. Add sugar and stir until dissolved. Bring to a boil, stirring to avoid sticking. Reduce heat and cook until thickened- up
to 1/2 hr.
Making Preserves and Conserves: Place fruit in a pot with an equal amount of sugar in layers ending with sugar on top and allow to rest overnight. Bring slowly to a boil and simmer until fruit is
translucent. Drain fruit and put in sterile jars. Simmer syrup longer if necessary to thicken it and pour over fruit. Seal and store.
Making juice for jelly: Wash and drain fruit. Prick or crush the fruit. Add water if fruit is not juicy enough eg. apples. Add enough to the kettle that you can see it through the fruit but the fruit is
not floating. Cook uncovered until the fruit is soft and loosing its color. Have ready a jelly bag [several layers of cheese cloth] . Wet it, wring it out and line a strainer with it. Let the juice drip
through without squeezing it as this muddies and flavors the jelly.This juice can be kept up to 6 months before proceeding by freezing or canning it.
Making jelly: Measure the strained juice and put it in an enamel or stainless steel pan. Simmer 5 min. Skim off froth. Measure and warm sugar in a pan in the oven and add it. Stir until dissolved. Cook at a gentle simmer until the point of jelling. To test, place a small amount of jelly on a spoon, cool it slightly and let it drop back into the pot from the side of the spoon. As the syrup thickens, 2
large drops will form along the edge of the spoon. when these two drops run together and fall as a single drop the "sheeting" stage has been reached- 220 to 222 deg F and the jelly will be firm when
cooled. It can take anywhere from 10 to 30 min for jelly to reach this stage depending on the fruit and the amount of sugar. Take the jars from the sterilizing bath and invert on a cake cooler. They
should be hot but dry when filled. Fill to 1/4" from the top. Cover with melted paraffin 1/8" deep.
This product was added to our catalog on Thursday 15 April, 2010.