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-   -   Can you make jam in a slow cooker? (https://www.quiltingboard.com/recipes-f8/can-you-make-jam-slow-cooker-t125881.html)

kellen46 05-26-2011 10:34 AM

There are tons of fruit trees around my house, apple, pear, plum, not to mention the berry vines, black Berry, huckleberry, salmon berry....so since I don't need a lot of jam, and I can freeze it as needed can I make small batches of jam in my slow cooker...how about grapefruit marmalade or orange/pineapple jam? Is there a slow cooker jam cookbook out there?

Maggiemay 05-26-2011 11:01 AM

I just went to this site & looked but didn't see any recipes for jam. That is a great site though. I love my crockpot!

http://crockpot365.blogspot.com/

This site had some Chutney's & compotes & apple butters so I bet you could get some ideas there.

http://www.crock-pot.com/Recipe.aspx?rid=461

sewwhat85 05-26-2011 11:11 AM

ohhh that sounds yummy

MinnieKat 05-26-2011 02:39 PM

I made Apple Butter in the slow cooker once ... Can't really remember the details though.

Pinkiris 05-26-2011 04:36 PM

Freezer jams are so easy and quick to make. I wouldn't want to dirty my crockpot and have to wait hours for jam to cook if it was possible.

Sue

kso 05-26-2011 07:43 PM

I made some apricot butter in my CP that was to die for!

plainpat 05-27-2011 03:19 AM

These might help

http://crockpot365.blogspot.com/2008...am-recipe.html

http://busycooks.about.com/od/condim...papricotpreser

http://allrecipes.com/Recipe/slow-co...er/Detail.aspx

kellen46 05-27-2011 06:21 AM

Thanks everyone for all the recipe info....I will definately be making myself some jams and butters this summer. Firtst the Chrerries, then the plums and pears, blackberries and lastly the apples...what fun.

Ramona Byrd 05-27-2011 06:59 AM

I made some yummy apple butter. And with a lot of fruits and berries, you could mix and match.

Since you have a lot available, try lots of different things. Just because it hasn't been done before, or you can't find a recipe, doesn't mean it can't be done.

What I would suggest is to find the oldest farm woman (or man) you can, and ask HER (or him) what she had done with these fruits and berries that most people do NOT. Might surprise you.

Ramona Byrd 05-27-2011 07:05 AM

You can also dry a lot of the fruits and veggies. One of my best memories is going up into the attic and getting a paper bag of dried green beans. Seems that when Grandma hung them up on strings she'd sewed through them, she called them leather britches. They got hung out of the weather on the porch, and since most porches then were in the front, you could always tell if a housewife was thrifty and hard working by the curtain of drying beans.


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