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Jellies generally use the whole fruit, including the peel and core which contain a lot of pectin, the natural sugar within a fruit to make it jell. With some fruits, the extracted juice will contain all of the necessary ingredients without supplement, like tart apples, blackberries, and grapes. With others, such as apricots, peaches, and raspberries, you will have to add either acid, pectin, or both. Additional pectin must be added to these types of fruits to make them jell properly.
No pectin?
Jellies generally use the whole fruit, including the peel and core which contain a lot of pectin, the natural sugar within a fruit to make it jell. With some fruits, the extracted juice will contain all of the necessary ingredients without supplement, like tart apples, blackberries, and grapes. With others, such as apricots, peaches, and raspberries, you will have to add either acid, pectin, or both. Additional pectin must be added to these types of fruits to make them jell properly.
I too can only see in step 4 heating the grape juice then adding sugar. Nothing about a double boiler or heating the sugar.
Hi, Sylvia. We recently updated the majority of our canning, preserving, and pickling recipes to adhere to food safety guidelines. This was one of the recipes. But if you would like to use the double boiler, here are the previous instructions:
Measure out 4 cups of juice. Heat the sugar in a double boiler; for 4 cups of juice, you鈥檒l use 3 cups of sugar. Bring the juice to a full rolling boil, then add the heated sugar and bring the mixture back to a full rolling boil.
Not once in your article do you say heat the sugar in a double boiler. Where'd. I miss that one.
Hi, Lisa. You’ll find the instructions for the sugar in step 4.
Do you still do the water bath with grape jelly the same as you do for jams? Or do you turn the jar over for a certain amount of time then flip back over and wait for them to seal on their own. How long will grape Jelly stay preserved in the pantry? My grandmother always put paraffin over her jellies before sealing them. Is that necessary?
No pectin?
Jellies generally use the whole fruit, including the peel and core which contain a lot of pectin, the natural sugar within a fruit to make it jell. With some fruits, the extracted juice will contain all of the necessary ingredients without supplement, like tart apples, blackberries, and grapes. With others, such as apricots, peaches, and raspberries, you will have to add either acid, pectin, or both. Additional pectin must be added to these types of fruits to make them jell properly.