I have officially got the canning bug! Today I felt inspired to try a couple of new recipe ideas - thanks to the mint, lavender and rose jelly I bought my mom for christmas (and porked out on after stockings were opened). Here are the recipes:
I used the Certo box recipe for the apple jelly - note that two cheesecloth layers are enough if making a bag. Somehow the jelly clears up as you cook it. I don’t get it.
First, make a bunch of apple juice by:
- cutting up apples in quarters, removing the stem and blossom end, and then cooking them (with water to cover).

- Let ‘em simma for about 30 mins and then mash ‘em up with a potato masher.
- Stick the mush in a jelly bag (or make one from cheesecloth) Then hang it precariously from a stick going across the gap between the counters. I left it all day.(This is pretty sketchy. My mom’s cherry bag broke once and they went everywhere - that stains.) I enjoy risk. (not botulism risk though…)
- Then, the stuff you have at the end - strain it through a clean dish towel, and you’ve got juice!
For Basic Apple Jelly:
- For Bring 7 cups of juice, 2 TBSP lemon and 1 pack certo crystals to a boil.
- When boiling, add 9 C sugar and bring to a rolling boil for one minute ( make sure your pot is way bigger than your liquid, because the bubbles WILL boil over. They will expand like an alien species on a new planet and over take whatever pot they are in. Heck - don’t even bother trying to prevent it, just be ready with a spoon to eat it up cloth to clean it up.)
- As it is doing this, try and get the fine white frost off as fast as you can. After a minute, turn off the heat and scrape the rest of the foam off. Should be a clear brown colour.
- At this point, proceed with all botulism prevention methods of canning jelly (hot jars, hot lids, hot screw tops - pour in to 1/4″, wipe rim, screw top, place on towel to set)
If you want to add some flavour, try lavender or mint. For lavender I used between a 1/4 and a 1/2 C of fresh lavender flowers, crammed them in my big tea ball and put it in with step 2. Keep it in until after the 1 minute boil-overflow-thing.
For mint take 2 C of fresh mint leaves (from your garden!), wash them and put them in a bowl. Then pour 1 C of boiling water on them, cover with a plate and leave it for an hour or more. When ready, squeeze the leaves out and put 2 tbsp per cup of juice (that would be 14 tbsp in this recipe) in with the ingredients of step 2.
ENJOY~!