Raspberry Jam
Great with red or golden raspberries.
Fresh or frozen raspberries work fine. When we harvest raspberries, we give them a quick cleaning, throw them in a zip lock, and freeze them. By doing that, we can make jam at our leisure. Fresh raspberries diminish in quality quickly and we seldom get enough from a single picking to make jam.
I use a ratio of 1 pound of raspberries to 3/4 pound of sugar. I usually process 2 pounds of berries at a time. I like to use smaller jars for canning, like 4 ounce or 8 ounce jars, but pints (16 oz) are fine too. An advantage of the small jars is that you can have a few on hand to give to friends who will want to take some home after tasting it.
Raspberry Jam
Ingredients
- 2 pounds raspberries
- 1 ½ pounds granulated sugar
Instructions
- Put a couple of light colored plates in the freezer.
- Using a large pot, add the raspberries and heat them until they simmer. As they come to a simmer, crush them with a potato masher.
- Let the raspberries simmer for about 15 or 20 minutes. This will help get rid of extra liquid.
- Add the sugar to the raspberries. Stir to dissolve the sugar.
- Bring the mixture to a rapid boil.
- Continue to cook the mixture while occasionally stirring it until it reaches 220 °F. For higher altitudes, 8 °F above the temperature that water boils is often used for a rule of thumb.
- You can check for the jellying point using the plates from the freezer in addition to (or instead of) measuring the temperature. Take a plate from the freezer (from step 1) and spoon some of the jam onto the plate, when you tilt the plate you should see a slow decent. If it is runny then it is not ready. You can also push your finger into the jam and if it is at the jellying point you will see ridges form in the jam.
- Let the mixture cool. Skim off any foam. Transfer the jam into hot, sterilized jars. Seal and process using a hot water bath. If you plan on using the jam in a few weeks and don't process them then seal the jars, cool, and refrigerate.
A Note About Equipment
Canning Funnel
The canning funnel is a surprisingly useful tool not just for filling hot canning jars with jam, but for lots of every day chores when you need to transfer hot liquids. These are designed to fit both wide-mouth and regular-mouth jars.
Large Pot
We like to use our 5.5 quart enameled cast iron dutch oven from Le Creuset for making jam. The enameled surface is nonreactive to any acids in the fruit and the cast iron is great for maintaining heat.
Canning Tongs
Also called “canning jar lifters”, these are pretty much a necessity when processing jars of jams and preserves. You risk scalding yourself with ad-hoc substitutes.