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When we restructured our house ten years ago we planted many fruit trees, among them a sweet cherry tree. It grew and grew but gave us no fruit. Then four years ago we had five cherries – great excitement! The next year we had fifteen. The year after that there were more than we could count, but we were able to eat them all in one sitting. And this year – ta dah!

More than we could count AND more than we could eat.
Clearly it was cherry jam time.
Jam is much easier to make than jelly – none of that time-consuming drip, drip, drip to get a clear jelly. For anyone who likes instant gratification in their preserves, jam is the way to go.

Here are the ingredients: the cherries, sugar, and a pectin product made from apples, among other things. Apples, guavas, quince, plums, gooseberries, oranges and other citrus fruits, contain large amounts of pectin, while soft fruits like cherries, grapes and strawberries contain small amounts of pectin, according to Wikipedia. Pectin is what puts the ‘jel’ in jams and jellies, so if you’re working with a low-pectin fruit you want to add some to make a good jam. I once made cherry ‘jam’ without adding pectin, and ended up with a lovely cherry sauce. In the good old days people simply boiled their fruit and sugar mixture until it was reduced to a jelly or jam. I’ve tried this and have ended up with a sort of sticky goo. For me adding pectin produces a better result. Sure-Jell, Ball and Certo are some of the name-brands of Pectin in the U.S., and many grocery chains sell it under their own label. I’ve read complaints about liquid pectin; some people have trouble getting it to set.
The Fruttapec above is called 2:1 because the recipe calls for only 1/2 kilo of sugar to a kilo of fruit. Many jam recipes call for equal weights. I know! It’s a great way to take something healthy like a cherry and turn it into something a lot less healthy. So, even though 2:1 jam is still full of sugar, you can feel very virtuous because you’ve reduced your intake by half.
All you have to do is mix the pectin with the sugar, then add the room-temperature prepared fruit (cleaned, and in the case of cherries, pitted). On that subject, here is the best purchase of the year:

Made by a German company, it is marketed as an olive-pitter, but it works just fine for cherries. You put the cherry in, squeeze the handle and the pit (and only the pit!) pops out the bottom. It’s fun, and a great time saver. The first day I made jam it took me an hour and a half to pit the fruit with a manicure tool, a wee spatula-like thing. With the new tool the next day it took less than half an hour.

You put the mixture on high heat, and at the same time boil up a pot of jam jars, lids and any other tools you will use. In addition to the pitter I use a jar-lifter, barely visible on the bottom right of the photo, and a wide-bottomed funnel for getting hot jam into the jars.
You bring the jam mix to a full roiling boil stirring all the while:

Once you’ve achieved boil, set a timer for three minutes. Then remove the pan from the heat and stir for a minute; then get as much of the foamy scum off the top as you can – it’s easier for some fruits than others (for cherries it’s difficult). Add three TBL of lemon juice, put back on the high fire, and boil for one more minute. Then it’s jar time.

Remove a jar from the pot of boiling water, fill it with hot fruit mix, remove a lid from the boiling water and screw it on, not too tightly. Then set the jar on a folded tea towel to cool. You’ve made jam!
Make sure your vacuum jars have sealed. If they haven’t, either re-do the process, or simply eat the jam right away.
Here’s your reward:
Oddly enough, cherry jam does not seem to be prevalent in Italy. The jars I’ve given Italian friends have produced more curiosity than delighted recognition. One taste has been sufficient to turn them into believers, so maybe one day soon the grocery shelves will be groaning under jars of cherry jam. But I’m not going to hold my breath; instead I’m going to hope for another banner crop next year.

This year the cherry crop was amazing! My inlaws had more than they could eat so I stole some and made some cherry pie – the first in a long long time! I would love to make some cherry jam – it’s my favourite, after strawberry and blueberry – maybe next year I’ll steal some cherries and give your recipe a try!!
Oh I hope you do (make some jam, that is). Cherry jam is awfully good! Isn’t cherry pie great? Do you put almond extract in yours? I made a half-sized pie which we ate up in no time, and L put the last of the cherries in alcohol to preserve them. I tasted one today – it tasted like alcohol and nothing like cherry. hmmmm.
I do put almond extract in mine 🙂 I put the recipe on my blog, and I also use tapioca – it somehow adds a little something to the texture. My opinion – cherries are a waste in alcohol – much better as jam, or pie, or even frozen for use in muffins…or maybe in syrup?
I think I agree with you about cherries in alcohol – I’m hoping it will all become smoother over time. Vediamo. Don’t you find a little almond extract goes a long way with the cherries? I put some in my cherry pielet, and all I could taste was the almond flavor, though the Captain liked it well enough. Tapioca is something that just isn’t on my cooking radar – I will check out your recipe, and then try to learn to use tapioca. I just remember hating the pudding as a child…
You’re right, you don’t see cherry jam here. I guess that’s because they prefer amarena? Your jam looks absolutely beautiful!
Don’t you think jam made with amarena would be heavenly? I haven’t seen that, either (maybe I just haven’t looked in the right places?). We’re so hoping for some amarene soon – but the tree has been in for only 2 years. So hard to be patient!
Looks and sounds divine! We will be away for the narrow window on sour cherries around here — the window opens and closes in two days, then it’s on to the much-larger sweet cherry crop — so I am already plotting plum jam in early July. And for an idea of what to do with un-jammed cherry “sauce,” check out Jammy Bread Pudding on Baking Family. I managed to use almost two jars of failed jam in testing that recipe!
This jam is made with sweet cherries (probably better with sour, called amarena here) – but our sour tree is young and had no fruit. Plum jam – I’m purple with envy – we have no plums this year, no apricots. But the cherries made up for it! Somehow I missed Jammy Bread Pudding, though I check in with Baking Family often – oops! Will trot on over there now (in spite of not having any failed jam this year – ta-dah!). I assume the plums and cherries are not in, um, Norfolk…
That looks delicious. It would be good on gelato or on coffee cake, or on roasted pork loin or……
yes, yes, yes and….. yes!
Now what plagiarist went and reposted my blog entry word for word? The nerve!
The very question I was asking myself… just who is ‘Anonymous’???
Ah – your wonderful pictures and descriptions bring back so vividly all those summer days of Jeff doing his canning magic at the Albatross! We had all kinds of pickles, relishes, tomato juice, sauce, ketchup, an inspired spaghetti sauce that helped us survive the long winter, and of course jams and jellies. As we had no cherry trees, we relied mostly on wild grapes and pick-them-yourself strawberry fields. To be sure, canning the stuff you’ve grown yourself is by far the most satisfying. Congratulations on your enormous crop, and complimenti to Louis for his industrious picking – good help is so hard to find! And isn’t it lovely to find a tool that someone who knows exactly what you need has invented for you?
Ah – your wonderful pictures and descriptions bring back so vividly all those summer days of Jeff doing his canning magic at the Albatross! We had all kinds of pickles, relishes, tomato juice, sauce, ketchup, an inspired spaghetti sauce that helped us survive the long winter, and of course jams and jellies. As we had no cherry trees, we relied mostly on wild grapes and pick-them-yourself strawberry fields. To be sure, canning the stuff you’ve grown yourself is by far the most satisfying. Congratulations on your enormous crop, and complimenti to Louis for his industrious picking – good help is so hard to find! And isn’t it lovely to find a tool that someone who knows exactly what you need has invented for you?
The wild grapes make a superb jam. It doesn’t really matter where the fruit comes from (well, it does – but as long as it’s fresh and clean) – it’s the making of the food that is so satisfying. Did Jeff really make jelly? Oh, the patient man! I can’t tell you how thrilled I was to find that tool. Can’t wait to try it on an olive… but will have to wait a number of months as the trees are just in flower now.
I do so love cherry jam, a poor man’s cherry pie. Have you tested any uses for the froth like flavoring some glace or something?
Weren’t you famous for baking a pie once? 🙂 I love cherry pie too, and we had enough fruit for 14 jars of jam (varying sizes), a half-size pie, and a bottle of fruit in alcohol. Now I can hardly wait for next year. We have only 3 apricots this year, so there will be no apricot jam. 😦
Cherry heaven at your place. I love cherry jam, maybe you can convert some of the Italians and hit it rich. Happy Sunday.
It’s been great. We’ve consumed all the fresh ones now. L. read an article that suggested cherries were ripening at the same time up and down the boot instead of from south to north in an orderly way. Strange. Have a great week.