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Can you water bath a cooked then cooled jam recipe?

Seasoned Advice Asked on July 31, 2021

I tried a peach jam recipe that is cooked then cooled to thicken without pectin (6+ hour cool time). The recipe says you can freeze it or can it. What would be the safest method to can it? I have always used the water bath method while the jam was still hot. Would you put the cooled jam in sanitized jars, seal and band them, then place in a ‘cool’ water bath bringing it up to boiling? Would you then process for 10 minutes like usual?
BTW…the jam is the perfect consistency. Would heating it change that? Thanks!

One Answer

Yes, you may can it, but you will need to bring it to a boil again.

From The University of Georgia for the National Center for Home Food Preservation

Because we are interested in recommending jam and jelly making procedures that offer the highest quality, the least health and safety risks, and the lowest chance of losing product, all Extension recommendations for jams and jellies include a boiling water canning process for room temperature storage of sealed jars. Standard canning jars used with self-sealing lids and ring bands, pre-sterilization of clean canning jars, hot filling of product into the jars, and processing for 5 minutes in a boiling water canner are recommended for highest quality and to prevent mold growth.

Emphasis mine.

The consistency may change, but I don't think it would be drastically different.

Answered by Debbie M. on July 31, 2021

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