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4.99 from 79 votes (37 ratings without comment)

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144 Comments

  1. Jill Johnson says:

    5 stars
    I made this recipe with fresh cherries that I was given and had put in the freezer. I used my candy thermometer and it took the guess work out of it. SO Good and SO easy!!

    1. Yes the thermometer definitely helps take the guesswork out, Jill. Thanks for the lovely feedback.

  2. Angela Garland says:

    5 stars
    This week, I used your recipes to make cherry, fig, and blueberry jams using your no pectin recipe. Easy. So easy and delicious!
    Thank you so much!

  3. Would I be able to use brown sugar in this recipe?

    1. Yes, you can use brown sugar, the color of the jam with be deeper with a slight flavor of molasses.

  4. Jason Peterson says:

    I find the cleanest wayto pit big cherries is to run a sharp paring knife precisely around the middle of it, then rotаte and slightly squeeze the halves. Hopefully both sides will get loosened. If not, cut the remaining side again. Use a fingernail to pry out the pit. I have a pitter that is too small for modern farmed cherries. Pricking the fruit with a tool squirts and loses more juice. The tool may slide past the pit and not remove it.

    The fingers will hurt and get brown. I would not use use gloves, as they will almost certainly get cut. I finished pitting 9 kg of cherries.

  5. Nancy Kulp says:

    I wrote to you the other day about me making freezer jam with my sour cherries. I told you that before I put on in the my freezer and one in the refrigerator, it was still juicy. Well, the next day, I checked and the freezer ones were well frozen and my refrigerator one had thickened quite a bit, but was still not like the store bought ones. But, it’s so delicious and I put it in my yogurt, and I loved it. I will certainly make your recipe again next year. It was not too sweet, which I am watching my sugars. Thank you for sharing your recipes!

  6. Dawn York says:

    I did make this, taste great but i simmered even longer and still didnt set properly. Can I reprocess or do i need to redo the whole process agani?

    1. Sorry to hear that, Dawn. Sounds like the heat was too low when the jam was simmering? Remember the sugar still needs to cook and thicken, the sugar syrup when combined with the fruit will create that pectin/gellling substance. Yes, you can still try to cook it some more. It may not have the same shelflife as regular jam so best not to can this batch.

  7. Sheila Cole says:

    I did not see how much salt to add in the recipe but in the instructions, it calls for salt. So how much salt do you add?

  8. I have made many jams and your recipe for cherriy jam impressed me. however, even though the finished product was wonderful, the freezer test was okay, and the jam still turned out runny.
    sighhhhhh

    1. Sorry to hear that, Theadore. You can place the jam back on the heat and cook it for longer. Perhaps you may like to try using a thermometer alongside so you can see what the freezer test should look like. Thanks for the feedback.

  9. Hugo Alejandro Biggemann says:

    I’ve made this today and I think the amount of sugar listed in the recipe is way off.
    The only thing I tasted was the sugar, it is very sugary.
    I’ve used 2lb of cherries and 1lb=almost 2cups of sugar?? Crazy

    1. Hugo. Sounds like you did not read the recipe properly This has less, not more sugar. It says 2 lbs cherries with 1 lb sugar or 2 kgs cherries with 1 kgs sugar.

  10. Can I use frozen cherries for this? Do I need to change any instructions?

    1. Yes, you can use frozen cherries for this. Keep everything the same. If there is too much water in the cherries it will take a bit longer to evaporate but just cook it a few minutes longer