When I went to buy jars for jam, I found this little packet of fun. Ball Freezer Jell - No Cooking. I bought it, thinking I'll check some reviews on the internet and maybe try it. The reviews were good, so today, I washed up my strawberries and had at it.
Here are the instructions:
NO-COOK Freezer Jam
1. Measure 1 1/2 cups of sugar into a bowl. ADD contents of 1 pouch of Ball Fruit Jell Freezer Jam Pectin, stirring to evenly blend.
2. CRUSH fruit. ADD 4 cups crushed fruit to pectin mixture (for peaches and apricots, reduce measure to 3 1/2 cups). STIR 3 minutes.
3. LADLE freezer jam into clean freezer jars leaving 1/2 -inch headspace; apply lids. Let stand until thickened (about 30 minutes). SERVE immediately, REFRIGERATE up to three weeks or FREEZE up to 1 year.
Yield: 5 8-ounce jars
1. Measure 1 1/2 cups of sugar into a bowl. ADD contents of 1 pouch of Ball Fruit Jell Freezer Jam Pectin, stirring to evenly blend.
2. CRUSH fruit. ADD 4 cups crushed fruit to pectin mixture (for peaches and apricots, reduce measure to 3 1/2 cups). STIR 3 minutes.
3. LADLE freezer jam into clean freezer jars leaving 1/2 -inch headspace; apply lids. Let stand until thickened (about 30 minutes). SERVE immediately, REFRIGERATE up to three weeks or FREEZE up to 1 year.
Yield: 5 8-ounce jars
I washed a quart of strawberries, thinking that would be enough.
The instructions call for 4 cups of crushed fruit. I didn't have enough
I used almost 2 quarts plus some from the freezer.
My nice clean pint jars (8oz).
Here is the packet.
And, my finished product.
The jam is sweet and a bit too chunky. I should have pulsed the berries in the food processor. I used a pastry blender (I don't have a potato masher) and it didn't quite cut it - literally. I kept on jar in the fridge and froze the other 5. I will buy more strawberries this week at the market and try cooking my jam and maybe processing it. This sounds scary, but I have to try it!
1 comment:
Good job. It looks delicious!
Post a Comment