Cooked Strawberry Jam
Cooked strawberry jam recipe uses fresh berries, dry pectin, lemon juice, and sugar for shelf-stable jars. Classic 4-minute rolling boil method, no fail.
YIELD
10 servingsPREP
60 minCOOK
25 minREADY
90 minThis is the workhorse strawberry jam recipe every home canner should know. Dry pectin and a hard four-minute rolling boil give you reliable set every time, without the guesswork of cooking down fruit until it gels on its own.
The quarter-teaspoon of butter is the sleeper ingredient. It breaks the surface tension and prevents the relentless foaming that otherwise builds up during the boil. Skim what’s left at the end and you get clear, jewel-toned jars instead of cloudy ones.
Measure the crushed berries exactly. Pectin chemistry is unforgiving: too much fruit and the jam stays loose, too much sugar and it turns into rubber. The 5¾ cup measurement is locked in for a reason.
A full rolling boil means one that doesn’t stop when you stir, not just bubbling. Start the four-minute timer only at that point, and don’t let up on the stirring or you’ll scorch sugar to the bottom of the kettle.
Pro Tips
- Crush berries one layer at a time as the recipe says. Smashing all at once turns the bottom layer to liquid before the top is touched.
- Use fresh-squeezed lemon juice. Bottled is fine, but fresh juice gives a brighter finish.
- Sterilize jars in simmering water while the jam cooks so they’re hot when you ladle in. Cold jars can crack from thermal shock.
- Test the seal after 24 hours by pressing the lid center. It should not flex. If it does, refrigerate and use within three weeks.
Variations
- Add a tablespoon of balsamic vinegar at the end of the boil for a sophisticated savory edge.
- Stir in a vanilla bean (split and scraped) while the jam cooks for floral depth.
- Sub a third of the strawberries for raspberries or rhubarb for a mixed-fruit version.
Ingredients
Directions
Wash, hull and halve berries. Crush one layer at a time and measure 5 ¾ cup into a 6-quart kettle.
Stir in lemon juice. Add package of pectin and stir thoroughly to dissolve.
This will take several minutes.
Stir down sides of pan and crush any remaining lumps of pectin.
Place pan on high heat. Bring to a boil, stirring constantly to prevent scorching.
Add sugar gradually, then butter, mixing well. Continue stirring and bring to a full rolling boil (a boil that cannot be stirred down).
Boil hard exactly 4 minutes, stirring constantly to prevent scorching.
Remove jam from heat. Skim foam from top.
Pour into hot, sterilized jars, wipe top and threads of jar.
Apply hot lid and screw band.
Twist screw band down tight.
Process in boiling water bath 5 minutes to seal jars.
Start counting time when water comes to a boil.
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