blurose
Garden Ornament
- Joined
- May 25, 2008
- Messages
- 313
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- 94
I did a recipe of apicot jam the other day that called for only 50% of the normal amount of sugar. It didn't require or even suggest processing in the waterbath canner. Today I did a batch of no-sugar strawberry jam and it called for being processed in the canner for 10 minutes. However, my question is concerning the fact that while I was filling my other jars, and before I could start the processing of the jars, the first jars I filled sealed the lids with a "pop." I processed them anyways, because I figured there wasn't sugar in them to keep them fresh without it, but was it really necessary to process an already sealed jar of jam. I mean, did it do any good is what I want to know? Does the processing method allow the already sealed jars to vent out anything its supposed to?
I have never *heard* of spoilage that is not overtly dectable *in jellies/jams/preserves in particular* (b/c their sugar content is too high for botulism), but I would not go so far as to assume it can't happen; and even if you just notice the spoilage and chuck the jar it's an annoying waste. Whereas 10 minutes in the boiling water bath is pretty easy and IME it is basically 100% effective as long as your seals are good.