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06.30.2008 :: 180. Toast some bread, it's jam talk

3 jams: Left to right, strawberry freezer, kiwi traditional and strawberry kiwi traditional.
Knitty Otter wanted to know my preferred method. Let me say here and now that I am not a jam expert but I will play one on this blog. And as I've said, I have a jam guru which helps.
I have previously always made freezer jam which could not be easier. I use my food processor (even though the pectin insert specifically tells me NOT to) because we only like small bits of strawberries in our jam but this is a personal preference. Plus as a bonus, it takes a minute and no effort. I put them in a large bowl and add sugar (tons of it too) and the pectin. Mix well for 3 minutes and put into clean, boiled jars. (Insert does not say anything about boiling the jars but I do it as a nod to the germs that I am avoiding) (it's a thing, what can I say). Cap them and put most in the freezer and a couple in the fridge. The next day, toast some bread and plenty of it. You will need it to make believe you have a reason to eat spoonfuls of jam.
Now, previous to yesterday, I had never made traditional jam that is processed. I had let myself be intimidated, like Terry by all the equipment and stuff needed. But it dawned on me that all I need is a tall pot to cover the jars by 2 inches (guru) and something to handle them with: in my case big salad tongs. They worked.
With that fear avoided, I went ahead. I put kiwis in the food processor and then into the pan, added a ton and a half of sugar (for some reason the cooked jam takes more sugar than the freezer kind), the pectin and the juice of one lemon, sans seeds. Boil for a minute, skimming off foam. I noticed that the green kiwi color boiled entirely out of the jam so I added a drop (or so I intended) or three of green food coloring which honestly made the jam an electric green color that is not natural in nature. But it works for us. Into hot, boiled jars, caps on and set aside while I make the strawberry kiwi in the same manner.
All this time I have my huge stockpot (the one that Andy started his beer brewing in long ago until we kicked him out of the house because of the smell of the brewing beer. He now uses a huger pot on a propane burner outside) trying to come to a boil on the stove.
I placed the jars in the pot, boiled them for 10 minutes and then took them out. The most fun part of the jamming? (besides the eating? ) is listening for the popping of the caps as they vacuum seal. That made me ridiculously happy. More happy than caps should ever make and adult woman but there you go.
This morning, the freezer jam was ready to go. It has been consumed. By spoon and on some toast. The other jams have not set yet. I am thinking that it is because I halved the recipes and should not have. Perhaps I did not have the exact ratio of fruit to pectin. One in the fridge has thickened a little bit but it is still too liquidy to spread on toast. But? It would be some GREAT ice cream topping.
However, in a tasting of the freezer vs. traditional jam I tend to prefer the freezer kind. It has a fresh fruit taste and frankly? Much, much less sweet. For some reason. Well, the obvious reason is that the freezer jam has less sugar. Duh. But that fact makes the jam better on my taste buds.
Not that I am dissing the traditional kind.
I will try kiwi jam again with the freezer method and I think we will be very happy toast eaters.
I'm thinking: english muffins, fresh biscuits, wheat toast, white toast, oatmeal toast. Well, you get the picture.

And that's all I have to say about that.
(any questions?)
Posted by Sandy on 06.30.2008 AT 08:05 PM
Comments
Oh you are so fabulous!!
I must try this. I think I will start with the freezer type since you prefer that one at the moment. Oh and the syrupy jams that didn't set make fabulous pancake syrup besides ice cream topping. You can also make a plain vanilla cake poke holes in it and pour that over it with the ice cream. One summer as a kid my mother tried to make Blackberry Jam. She made them in 2 quart jars. We had a TON of blackberry bushes and she must have made 50 jars of the stuff. Not a bit set and for the next several years we had that as pancake topping and anything else we could think of. I don't think we even made a dent in that before she started pitching them because the seals were wearing off. (I suspect my oldest brother was prying at the lids with a screwdriver because he was sick of the stuff.) Oh and if you like a sweet fruity black tea you can make a strong black tea and add a spoonful or so to it.
Now that we have method understood, can you tell us what recipe for freezer strawberry jam you like best? As in quantities,exact ingredients & tools needed. I don't think I've seen a package of pectin since I was a kid. Is there a brand you recommend? Also is the pectin for freezer vs traditional different? (Stacey's comment has me wondering if there are two different types.)
Thanks for posting about your Jam. Is quite fascinating. :D
*OtterHuggles*
Posted by: KnittyOtter on 07.01.2008 AT 01:08 PM
Fun post, Sandy. I love the photos of the jam in jars. Jewels!
Posted by: Angie on 07.01.2008 AT 10:38 AM
May I come live with you. (for the summer only and only if it's not too humid... a desert rat can't take the humidity anymore) :D
I can't find the freezer pectin. /sigh
I have the jars, I have the fruit...but none of the special stuff.
Oh great and powerful jam whisperer, do you need the special freezer pectin or can you use regular for freezer jam?
Posted by: Stacey (aka get-well whisperer) on 07.01.2008 AT 08:42 AM
People are so funny. Letting fears stop them from doing things (referring to some of the comments -- "won't the jars break?!" etc.)
Easy. Jam-making is dead easy. However, if yours is not thick enough yet, it won't be ever. It's probably more to do with the amount of time you boiled. And you know what? I NEVER process my jars after, and neither does anyone in my family -- in fact, I never heard of it before -- only with canning other produce, but maybe I'm behind in the times or something. The jam is so hot the jars seal on their own as it cools. You hear that little pop, and all is well with the world.
Posted by: norma on 07.01.2008 AT 08:27 AM
I've never made freezer jam but I've made loads of grape jelly. I love the sound of those lids popping into place, too!
Posted by: Carole on 07.01.2008 AT 07:55 AM
Very pretty! I'll bet it's good.
Posted by: margene on 07.01.2008 AT 07:52 AM
I've made freezer jam. You're right ... it's easy and the results are yummy. My mother used to make the cooked kind. As I remember, she used equal number of cups of sugar to cups of fruit. Then she cooked it on top of the stove. I got involved in the stirring. I don't remember how she processed the jars other than scalding them.
Posted by: Charlotte on 07.01.2008 AT 01:10 AM
Coveting your jam, even -- especially -- the bright green kiwi jam. Does it taste like strawberries like fresh kiwis do?
Posted by: Diane T on 07.01.2008 AT 12:05 AM
Use less sugar for the next batch of cooked jam, honey.
Oh, and botulism was the hobgoblin of my childhood. No, we never had it, but you would have sworn the commies were going to get us with it if my mother was to believed.
Explains a lot, doesn't it? ;^)
xo
Posted by: Cookie on 06.30.2008 AT 10:11 PM
I just canned my first jam last week after a monster haul of strawberry picking. I was also astonished with how easy it turned out to be, and how darned *neat* it was hearing those jars pop shut.
Yay for homemade jam!
Posted by: Jenn C. on 06.30.2008 AT 09:59 PM
But . . . . but. . . . if you put jars of jam into the freezer, don't the glass jars break???
And. ... and. . . .
It *has* to be harder than that!!!!
Posted by: inky on 06.30.2008 AT 09:54 PM
Gosh, those just look so yummy! I've really got to try jam one of these days.
Oh, and I don't like chunks in my strawberry jam, either. Why does your food processer say not to do that?
Posted by: --Deb on 06.30.2008 AT 09:10 PM
I make strawberry jam every June. When the kids were little I sometimes made grape jelly, from Welch's grape juice and pectin (because then it's Welch's grape jelly, and that cracked up the kids). There is nothing sweeter than sipping lemonade and nursing burns (I always get little spatter burns, I need a longer spoon) while listening to the popping lids of cooling jam.
Posted by: Tee on 07.01.2008 AT 05:56 PM