Making Jams and Jellies
Blackberry Jelly with liquid pectin
- 4 cups blackberry juice (about 3 quart boxes berries)
- 7½ cups sugar
- 2 pouches liquid pectin
Yield: About 8 or 9 half-pint jars
Please read Using Boiling Water Canners before beginning. If this is your first time canning, it is recommended that you read Principles of Home Canning.
Procedure: Sterilize canning jars and prepare two-piece
canning lids according to manufacturer's directions.
To prepare juice. Sort and wash fully ripe berries; remove any stems or caps. Crush berries and extract juice.
To make jelly. Measure juice into a kettle. Stir in sugar. Place on high heat and, stirring
constantly, bring quickly to a full rolling boil that cannot be stirred down. Add pectin and heat again to a
full rolling boil. Boil hard for 1 minute. Remove from heat; skim off foam quickly.
Pour hot jelly immediately into hot, sterile jars, leaving ¼ inch headspace. Wipe rims of jars with a
dampened clean paper towel; adjust two-piece metal canning lids. Process in a Boiling Water Canner.
Table 1. Recommended
process time for Blackberry Jelly in a boiling water
canner. |
|
Process Time at Altitudes of |
Style of Pack |
Jar Size |
0 - 1,000 ft |
1,001 - 6,000 ft |
Above 6,000 ft |
Hot |
Half-pints or Pints |
5 min |
10 |
15 |
This document was adapted from "How to Make Jellies, Jams and Preserves at Home." Home and Garden Bulletin No. 56.
Extension Service, United States Department of Agriculture. 1982 reprint. National Center for Home Food Preservation,
June 2005.
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