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Recipe Moment: Summer Jam

Spokane Public Radio

Small Batch Summer Jam

Grow, u-pick, forage, or trade: use combinations of whatever seasonal fruit comes your way.

  1. Wash your jars and lids in hot soapy water.
  2. Place a small saucer and two or three teaspoons in the freezer.
  3. Prepare your fruit: pit, peel, chop, remove stems and spiders, etc.
  4. Measure the prepared fruit; depending on the tartness, I use about ¾ cup of sugar per pint of fruit. Add more to taste, if you like; or replace up to ¼ of the sugar with honey for a softer jam. The French method calls for adding the sugar to the fruit and macerating for a few hours or overnight before cooking. If you have the time, this makes a lovely, syrupy jam.
  5. Juice a lemon, lime, or other acidic citrus; in a pinch, a couple of splashes of dry white wine or rosé, or a tablespoon of balsamic vinegar will do.
  6. Cook on medium in a non-reactive pot (stainless steel or enamelware) with sides at least twice as high as the level of fruit.
  7. As everything comes to a boil, it will create a beautiful, witchy foam. Stir and scrape down the sides every so often. If it threatens to boil over, gently blow on the bubbles and reduce the heat.
  8. As the foam dissipates and the juices become thicker, the back of your wooden spoon or spatula will become coated with syrup.
  9. Pull a frozen spoon from the freezer and scoop a sample of the jam. Put it back in the freezer on the saucer for a minute or two, then remove and check the consistency. If the jam is still too thin, continue to cook, and try again in a few minutes with another cold spoon. When it's your preferred consistency, turn off the heat and carefully ladle the jam into clean jars, wipe any drips from the rim with a cold, wet towel, and top with clean lids. Allow to cool at room temperature.
  10. When cool, label and refrigerate. The jam will keep for a few weeks—just like any jar from the store.  (If you want to store your jam in the pantry, follow the directions for sterilizing and water bath canning.)

Chris Maccini previously worked at SPR as Morning Edition host and producing arts and special programming such as The Bookshelf, Poetry Moment, Northwest Arts Review, special features and more.