Recipe – Blackberry Jam with Shredded Apple

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You’ve just started your blackberry jam and you open the cupboard to discover you’ve run out of pectin.  The stores are closed, the kids are in bed, you’ve already taken off your bra – no way you’re going to the store!  No worries, grab a few apples and you can finish that tasty batch of blackberry jam with this shredded apple pectin replacement.

Low and High Pectin Fruits

Blackberries, like most fruit, fluctuate between a high and a medium pectin fruit.  You can read this really clear breakdown of high and low pectin fruits at Pick Your Own for more information on other fruits, too.  This article also gives a good overview of how pectin works.

When I go to make blackberry jam or any other low pectin fruit jam for that matter, I look quickly at my chart to see if I can reasonably mix in any high pectin fruits. Mixed fruit jams are great for the end of season harvests when you have a bunch of random produce leftover.  However, it’s also handy to mix in a high pectin fruit for a better set to jams and jellies.

Another way to mix high and low pectin fruit is to pick slightly under-ripe fruit along with the ripe ones.  In the case of blackberries, you can pick some slightly under-ripe berries along with the smooshy, sweet ripe ones to mix into your blackberry jam for a firmer set.

Substitute for Pectin

Running out of commercial pectin doesn’t have to be a crisis when you’re making blackberry jam.  In fact, some people regularly make their own pectin.  You can even can your homemade pectin to use later.

Read the following posts to learn how to make your own pectin.  Pay attention to canning instructions and suggestions on how to determine the quantity of homemade pectin you should use in something like blackberry jam.

  • How to Make Pectin from Apples from A Farm Girl in the Making.
  • Homemade Citrus Pectin from Spruce Eats.

If you want to do some extracurricular reading on pH and Water Bath Canning just read this post from Food in Jars.  If you want to do even more reading on pH meters and testing acidity in your home-canned foods, click here.  Most of the time, if you follow tested recipes and are careful about adding enough sugar and pectin, citric acid or lemon juice as called for, your jams will be safe.

Blackberry Jam Recipe for Canning with Substitute Pectin

The following is a recipe for blackberry jam made with under-ripe shredded apples as a substitute for pectin.  If you have ripe Granny Smith apples, those would work, too.  As a general rule, remember that the riper the fruit, the less pectin it will contain.

If you’re canning with kids in your kitchen, please be sure to read this post on keeping them safe and you sane.

Blackberry Jam with Shredded Apple (as a pectin substitute)

This is a simple blackberry jam recipe that includes shredded apples instead of commercial pectin.  This recipe can be cut in half, if necessary.

  • 8 Cups Blackberries washed
  • 2 Cups Raw sugar
  • 1 Tbsp. Lemon juice, pasteurized (not fresh)
  • 1-3 Under-ripe or tart apples, grated (If small, use three; if large, use one)
  1. Place a metal spoon in your freezer.
  2. Wash blackberries and apples.  Core apples, but do NOT peel.
  3. Combine apples, blackberries and lemon juice in a large, heavy-bottomed pot.  Cook until soft.
  4. Add sugar and stir to dissolve.  Cook on medium-high heat until boiling, stirring constantly.  Cook until mixture is reduced by at least a third, possibly a half.  Don’t forget to stir to prevent scorching!
  5. After the mixture has reduced, remove the spoon from the freezer and scoop a bit of jam onto it.  Do “the spoon test” as per the instruction in the “Notes” section.
  6. Bottle quickly into pint jars, remove air bubbles with a knife down the inside of the jar, wipe rims and place seals on top.  Process in a water bath canner for ten minutes, adjusting for your altitude.

To conduct “the spoon test” to test for jam set, do the following.

  • Place some jam on your frozen spoon.
  • Watch to see if the jam sets up on the spoon after about a minute.
  • Dump the fruit part back into the jam in the pot and run your finger down the spoon in the syrupy stuff left behind.
  • Does your finger leave a trail?  Is the syrup holding its position?  If so, your jam is ready to be bottled and canned.
  • If not, you can add a 1/2 cup more sugar if you’d like and/or continue cooking and stirring until set has been achieved.

Other Seasonal Jams

Dark Cherry Mulberry Jam

Elderberry Jam

Onion Jam Recipe

Rhubarb Mint Jam

These home-canned treats make excellent gifts for the coming holiday (or any!) season, FYI.

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With more than 10.000 recipes under her belt, no wonder Nancy is the content manager of The Prepper's Daily Food topic. She embarked long ago on a mission to learn everything there is to know about cooking. She discovered her passion for cooking while spending the summer's over at her grandparents. Their ways fascinated Nancy and cooking something out of nothing, like her granny use to say, became one of her daily routines. After 21 years of culinary experience, she decided to drop her fancy chef career life. The price her family had to pay was too big. Nancy is now taking advantage of the internet and works from home, helping and teaching common people like us to cook for ourselves with as little we have. Just like she learned from her grandparents. I want those who cannot afford to eat out not even once a week, to feel they don't need to. Because they can make one of my quick recipes and feel better about their lives, even if only for some hours. From simple recipes to ancient remedies based on plants, from the garden to the kitchen table, canning and storing, Nancy covers it all.

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