Get Started with Canning the EASY Way with these Recipes (2024)

I’ve run into so many people lately–both in real life and online—who want to learn to tackle home canning. These beginner canning recipes are a good place for novices to start.

Or you could dive into fermentation with these recipes!!

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Easy Canning Recipes

The recipes below can all be safely preserved using a water bath canning method. This method is easy. If you can chop and mix and cook food on the stove top, you will find it easy to take it to the next step, which simply requires putting food into jars and boiling them for a specified amount of time.

Preserving your own food for the pantry, especially if it’s produce from your own garden, can really help cut your family’s grocery budget. Having a pantry full of food offers a little peace of mind, too.

Shortage at the grocery store? Unexpected shortfall in your income? Pulling jars of homemade tomato sauce, dill pickles, or pie fillings can help to add flavor to meals.

Believe me when I tell you that home food preservation is really very easy. There are two canning methods to be aware of: water bath canning and pressure canning. Each requires a different set of equipment.

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You just need to keep this one very important thing in mind: Low acid foods like meat and veggies must be processed in a pressure canner. This method of processing jars requires a special piece of equipment. (Note that a pressure cooker is not a safe substitute for a pressure canner.)

High-acid foods, though? Those are safe to preserve in a boiling water bath. Leave the pressure canning to experienced canners for a minute!

A water bath process—basically, immersing full jars in a deep pot of boiling water for a specified period of time—is a great way to preserve a lot of garden fresh produce. You don’t need a special canner for this; head over here to learn how a regular kitchen pot can stand in for a canner.

Items that can be safely processed using a water-bath canning process include jams and jellies, pickles, fruits, and acidified tomato products.

🍅 Safety First!

Canning is an excellent way to preserve food for the pantry, but there are some important safety considerations to keep in mind. The recipes on this site have been made following safe canning procedures by a certified Master Food Preserver.

  • Know the difference between water bath canning and pressure canning. Low acid items must be pressure canned for safety.
  • Altering ingredients may change the recipe’s pH, posing a safety issue. I highly recommend investing in pH paper to test your products for acidity level when canning. Note: For safe water bath canning, the Hawaii Master Food Preserverssuggest a pH of 4.2 or lower in the tropics. In other regions, the recommended pH is 4.6 or lower.
  • Use the proper jars and lids. Never reuse lids, with the exception of the Tattler or Harvest Right hard plastic lids that are intended for such a purpose.
  • For more on canning equipment, please go here.
  • Want to learn more? The National Center for Home Food Preservation is the go-to resource for safe canning information.

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Acidifying Recipes

You’ll notice that some canning recipes call for the addition of lemon juice, citric acid, or vinegar. This assures that the product within the glass jars have a pH level below 4.6, which is considered by the National Center for Home Food Preservation to be safe for water bath canning. Botulism simply cannot grow in those low acid conditions.

Tomatoes are a borderline ingredient, so the addition of acid — especially in making salsas and other recipes that incorporate low acid ingredients — is important.

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Getting Started with Water Bath Canning

Jam and jelly is one of my favorite suggestions for beginners since they’re easy and usually only need 10 or so minutes in the canner.

All of the recipes below are easy enough for beginners though.

Foods can be hot packed or raw packed. Cooked recipes call for ladling hot food into the jars. Raw packing calls for packing fruit pieces and vegetables for pickles into the jars. Once packed, the produce is topped off with a sugar syrup (in the case of fruit) or a vinegar solution (for pickles).

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Get Started with Canning the EASY Way with these Recipes (5)

Planning on doing lots of canning this year? Grab a FREE download of these cute printable canning labels — complete with a gentle reminder to return the jar, in case you’re giving some as gifts!

Always follow the instructions as written in safe canning recipes.

The recipes included below all use a water bath method for transforming produce into a delicious shelf stable product. Go here for a detailed look at water bath canning.

The Handcrafted Pantry

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Ready to DIY your pantry with more wholesome ingredients? Check out my ebook, The Handcrafted Pantry! Filled with delicious recipes for some of your favorite condiments, snacks, and toppings, it’s the guide you need to start skipping packaged products and embrace homemade.

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Water Bath Canning Recipes

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Raspberry Puree

This homemade raspberry puree is a delicious sauce spooned over desserts or a stack of breakfast pancakes. Use it right away, freeze it, or process in a water bath canner for a shelf stable product.

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Easy Pear Butter Recipe for Canning

This spiced pear butter captures the flavor of autumn in a jar. Process the jars in a boiling water bath to make them shelf stable, or simply refrigerate the fruit spread and use it up - or give it as a gift - within a couple of weeks.

Get Started with Canning the EASY Way with these Recipes (10)

Strawberry Puree

This homemade strawberry puree is a perfect sauce for spooning over desserts or a stack of breakfast pancakes. Use it right away or process in a water bath canner for a shelf stable product.

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Homemade Nectarine Jam Recipe

This fruit-forward nectarine jam is an excellent addition to your pantry! Tasting the flavor of summertime in mid-winter? Winning!

Get Started with Canning the EASY Way with these Recipes (12)

Blueberry Pie Filling Recipe for Canning

This easy recipe is a fun way to save the summertime flavor of juicy blueberries. Use it for pie, scoop some onto yogurt, or spoon some over brie cheese for an easy but elegant appetizer.

Get Started with Canning the EASY Way with these Recipes (13)

Easy Pickled Banana Peppers (Quick Pickled or Canned)

Pickling banana peppers maintains their crispness and adds the tangy bite of vinegar, making them a great condiment to have on hand for a variety of recipes and meals.

Get Started with Canning the EASY Way with these Recipes (14)

Rhubarb Jam

This lightly spiced rhubarb jam has a hint of ginger and cardamom for a little something different on your morning toast!

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How to Can Grapes

If you've got an abundance of late summer grapes, consider canning them! It's an easy way to preserve them for adding to fruit or chicken salads all year long.

Get Started with Canning the EASY Way with these Recipes (16)

Easy Orange Jelly for Canning

This sunny and bright orange jelly is a great addition to the pantry. Serve it on toast or use it to baste grilled chicken for a pop of flavor.

Get Started with Canning the EASY Way with these Recipes (17)

Raspberry Jam with Apricots

This homemade raspberry jam has a lower sugar content than some recipes. The addition of fresh apricots gives the finished product a fresh, sunny flavor.

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Easy Pickled Peppers Canning Recipe

These easy pickled peppers are a great addition to a well-stocked pantry. They're sweet and tangy and delicious!

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Lemon Marmalade

This easy marmalade recipe can be used like any of your favorite jam recipes as a topping for toast. But this delicious recipe is also great as a glaze for grilled meats or stirred into marinades.

Candied Jalapenos

This recipe for candied jalapeno peppers calls for water bath canning to make a shelf stable product. Alternatively, you can just pop them in the fridge for adding to recipes.

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Loquat Jam

It's not likely you'll find this delicious jam at grocery stores! Making loquat jam at home allows you to turn this unique fruit into a flavorful fruit spread.

Get Started with Canning the EASY Way with these Recipes (22)

Persimmon Jam

This easy jam recipe turns persimmons into a delicious spiced spread with the flavors of fall. This lower sugar recipe means the flavor of the fruit will shine through!

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Peach Preserve Recipe

Delicious homemade peach preserves is easy to make for the pantry and it's much less expensive than store-bought jam or preserves.

Get Started with Canning the EASY Way with these Recipes (24)

Old Fashioned Pear Preserves for Canning

Making ginger pear preserves is a delicious way to capture the flavor of fall in a jar. Keep some in your pantry and wrap some jars for gift giving.

Get Started with Canning the EASY Way with these Recipes (25)

Homemade Applesauce Recipe

This homemade applesauce recipe doesn't require any measuring at all. Eat it fresh or try canning applesauce to stock your pantry. It's like pie in a jar!

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Strawberry Rhubarb Jam

The flavor of this easy strawberry rhubarb jam far exceeds what you can pick up in grocery stores. In fact, this particular flavor is hard to find commercially! Consider making a few batches so you can give jars of jam as gifts.

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Easy Plum Jam

The old-fashioned flavor of plum jam is one that is hard to find in stores. Making your own is EASY and a great way to preserve the harvest!

Get Started with Canning the EASY Way with these Recipes (28)

Easy Pickled Green Beans

These pickled green beans are a great way to preserve a summer harvest for the winter pantry. They’re crisp, delicious, and perfect for snacking.

Get Started with Canning the EASY Way with these Recipes (29)

Salsa Recipe for Canning

This salsa recipe for canning is a great way for me to preserve not only the tomatoes, but peppers and onions from the garden, too. I use canned salsa to cap off taco night and as a homegrown ingredient for my chili.

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Easy Homemade Grape Jelly

Even if you don’t have ripe grapes on hand, you can whip up a batch of jelly. This grape jelly recipe can be made even in the winter with this little trick.

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Homemade Strawberry Jam

This homemade strawberry jam recipe is easy for beginners, sweetened with honey, and you'll be able to savor the goodness of garden fresh berries all year long!

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Easy Homemade Peach Butter Recipe

If you're lucky enough to have an abundance of fresh peaches, set some aside to make a batch of peach butter. You can opt to preserve this for the pantry, or simply store in the fridge for topping your breakfast toast, pancakes, or ice cream.

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Zucchini Relish Recipe

This zucchini relish recipe is a favorite around here. It's good on burgers, but excellent for mixing into potato salad or egg salad, too.

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Sugar-Free Apple Butter

Making this apple butter recipe in the slow cooker is an easy shortcut. Assemble the ingredients and let it cook overnight, and you’ll be ready to start canning first thing in the morning.

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This is a fairly new addition to my canning recipes repertoire, but it’s become a must! Tomatoes, peppers, and spices blend to make a zingy topping.

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Green Tomato Relish

Save those end-of-season green tomatoes to make chow chow. Yes, it's a funny name, but it's delicious and gives a tangy zip to sandwiches and is great for stirring into egg salad.

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Mango Chutney

Mangoes are something I can forage for here. No mangoes? No reason you can’t substitute peaches.

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Watermelon Rind Relish

This watermelon rind relish recipe is a great way to use watermelon rinds for a knock-off old fashioned hamburger relish! A no-waste recipe for good food!

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Passion Fruit Jelly

Otherwise known as passion fruit, liliko‘i is Mother Nature’s answer to a SweeTart. The first sour bite of a liliko‘i will jangle all the way back to your jawbone.

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Chai Spiced Peaches

Preserve the flavors of summer with this recipe for canned peaches; the addition of chai spices makes these a little extra special.

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Blueberry Ginger Nectarines

Canning nectarines with fresh ginger and blueberries gives them a flavorful pop! It's an easy way to preserve the flavor of summertime nectarines.

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Ketchup

This ketchup recipe for canning starts with tamarillos (aka tree tomatoes), which are often abundant in warmer regions, but you can also use tomatoes.

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Originally published in April 2014; this post has been updated.

Get Started with Canning the EASY Way with these Recipes (2024)

FAQs

What is the easiest thing to can for beginners? ›

High-acid foods include fruits, pickles, tomatoes, sauerkraut, relishes, jams, jellies, salsas, marmalades, and fruit butters. It's the acidity of these foods—in addition to time in a boiling water bath—which helps preserve them safely without the use of high pressure.

What are the 5 methods of canning? ›

Preserve your food safely by using research-based preserving methods. There are five safe methods for preserving food safely at home: water bath canning, pressure canning, steam canning, freezing and dehydrating.

What items make canning easier? ›

2) Canning Tools/Utensils
  • A plastic or stainless steel canning funnel.
  • A stainless steel ladle.
  • A canning jar lifter with rubber grips.
  • A good pair of kitchen tongs.
  • Magnetic lid lifter and bubble remover.

How long do canned foods last? ›

Most shelf-stable foods are safe indefinitely. In fact, canned goods will last for years, as long as the can itself is in good condition (no rust, dents, or swelling). Packaged foods (cereal, pasta, cookies) will be safe past the 'best by' date, although they may eventually become stale or develop an off flavor.

What are the best foods for canning? ›

This canning method is recommended for produce and canning recipes including:
  • Fruits and fruit juices.
  • Jams and jellies.
  • Salsas.
  • Tomatoes.
  • Pickles and relishes.
  • Chutneys, sauces, pie fillings.
  • Vinegars.
  • Condiments.

What foods cannot be canned? ›

Fats / Dairy

Also any recipe that use one or more of these ingredients, such as mayonnaise, caramel, pudding, cream soups, cream vegetables, refried beans, nut butter (all kinds), pesto, chocolate (all kinds) etc. WHY: These will go rancid if not refrigerated, developing harmful bacteria.

What is the safest method of canning? ›

The safe methods of canning food at home are boiling water bath canning, atmospheric steam canning, and pressure canning. Whether a food is high acid or low acid indicates what type of processing method should be used (Table 1).

What do I need to start canning food at home? ›

Setting up a Food Canning Operation at Home
  1. Glass jars with two-piece lids (a flat lid and a screw band)
  2. A large pot with a lid and a rack, or a dedicated water bath canner.
  3. Jar lifter or tongs to safely handle hot jars.
  4. A funnel, ladle, and non-metallic spatula or bubble remover tool.
  5. Clean towels and a timer.
Mar 24, 2023

What method is not recommended for canning? ›

Open-kettle canning and the processing of freshly filled jars in conventional ovens, microwave ovens, and dishwashers are not recommended, because these practices do not prevent all risks of spoilage.

What is the new method of canning? ›

Atmospheric steam canning is the latest method approved for home food preservation. Research conducted by the University of Wisconsin shows that steam in an atmospheric steam canner reaches the temperature of boiling water (212°F) and is safe for processing high acid foods the same as boiling water.

What is dry canning? ›

In dry canning vegetables, the vegetables are placed in the jar (hot or raw) with no added liquid and then processed in a pressure canner according to the processing times and pressure from a recipe that calls for added liquid.

What is the best canning for beginners? ›

I recommend you start with the basic water bath canner set-up as a beginner. Water bath canners are giant pots filled with water that sit on a regular stove top. You put the filled jars of product in this pot and bring the water to a boil for a certain amount of time.

What is amish canning? ›

The Amish use several canning methods depending on the type of food, including the following: Boiling water bath: This method is best for highly acidic foods such as tomatoes. It involves submerging jars of food in boiling water, which kills bacteria and seals the lid.

What are the do's and don'ts of canning? ›

  • DOs & DON'Ts FOR SUCCESSFUL HOME CANNING.
  • DOs.
  • • DO use standard canning jars, lids and. screwbands.
  • • DO use jars free of nicks, cracks or dips on the. sealing surface. • DO inspect lids for dents, scratches or narrow. or incomplete ring of sealant. • DO prepare lids by placing them in a pan and.

What is the best pressure canner for beginners? ›

  • Best Overall: All American 915 Pressure Cooker Canner at Amazon ($380) Jump to Review.
  • Best for Beginners: Zavor Pressure Cooker & Canner at Amazon ($220) ...
  • Best Value: Presto 16-Quart Aluminum Pressure Canner and Cooker at Amazon ($136) ...
  • Best Large: All American 921 21.5 Quart Pressure Cooker Canner at Amazon ($500)

What can you can without a pressure canner? ›

High Acid Foods For Water Bath Canning

All acidic foods—fruits, pickled vegetables, sugar preserves, and tomatoes with a little added acidity (lemon juice, vinegar, or citric acid)—may be safely processed in a boiling water bath.

Is it hard to learn to can? ›

While it might sound daunting to a newbie, it's easier to can than you might imagine. We'll walk you through water bath canning — a popular way to preserve many kinds of foods for long-term storage.

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