Pectin-Free Strawberry Jam Canning Recipe
Maybe your like
This pectin-free strawberry jam canning recipe utilizes the natural pectin in strawberries to create a homemade jam that tastes just like summer in a jar. Plus, the optional addition of vanilla makes this classic strawberry jam taste just like a strawberry sundae!
* * *
Nothing says summer like the taste of fresh strawberries picked and eaten right out of the garden or field. Being the first fruit of the season to appear in most places, strawberries are a symbol of the abundance that lies ahead. And for homesteaders and home canners everywhere, they also mark the official beginning of canning and jam-making season
Of course, we live in a time when you can pretty much get strawberries year-round at the grocery store. But anybody who’s ever tasted a fresh, local, organic strawberry in season knows there’s just no comparison to the store-bought variety for sale in plastic clamshells in mid-January.
Personally I try to eat and feed my family as seasonally, locally and organic as possible, all year round. In the summer we grow a large organic garden of our own and do our best to supplement with produce from other nearby organic farms. But since most fruits and veggies don’t grow locally year-round, I try to also preserve as much as possible to get us through the year until things are in season again.
Now, I’m not perfect, and we do still rely heavily on the grocery store in the off-season especially. But there are certain items I try extra hard to preserve and put up in season so that I can avoid buying them from the grocery store, and strawberries top the list.
For one, strawberries are on the dirty dozen list, meaning that non-organic strawberries are one of the most heavily sprayed crops when it comes to pesticides. So when I do buy them from the store, I always make sure to buy organic.
But we also grow some pretty damn good strawberries where here on Vancouver Island, and I would rather buy local and support our local farmers, as well as keep pesticides out of our food and save money by buying in season, and reduce our waste and carbon footprint by purchasing local and bringing our own basket (no more plastic clamshells!), so I tend to load up on strawberries when they’re in season and preserve as many as possible for eating throughout the year.
Watch: How to Make (and Can!) Pectin-Free Strawberry Jam
If you can’t grow your own, why not pick your own?
Now, you’ll notice I mentioned that we buy our strawberries from local farmers, and that’s because, as much as we strive to grow more and more of our own food each year, strawberries are just not a crop we’ve been able to devote a lot of time or space to establishing yet.
I do have dreams for a cascading strawberry “pyramid” in the middle of our garden one day in the not so distant future. But for now, we have a few small pots around our homestead that hardly produce enough for us to eat fresh. So we are still reliant on local farms for our strawberries each year.
But that’s okay, because we’ve made a fun tradition of going strawberry-picking in June when most varieties are ready for harvest. And I’m all about these type of seasonal family traditions.

Just like we visit the pumpkin patch on Thanksgiving weekend (in Canada Thanksgiving is in early October, before Halloween), or go cut down our own Christmas tree at a Christmas tree farm in December, strawberry-picking has become our early summer family tradition, and although I would love to grow enough of our own strawberries to take us through the year, I don’t half mind packing up the family and heading to a U-Pick farm with our baskets in hand:)

Eat seasonally and preserve the rest.
This year we took home just under 25 pounds of strawberries, in addition to the 10 pounds I’d ordered earlier from another local farm in order to restock our freezer and make a couple strawberry rhubarb pies to kick off summer pie season (which just so happens to coincide with summer canning season;).
We froze a few freezer bags full (because I love having frozen strawberries on hand for smoothies and baking throughout the year), I used some to flavour my latest batch of kombucha, turned some into homemade fruit leather and last but most certainly not least, I canned up 18 jars of strawberry jam with the rest. In fact, if I’m being honest, I made sure to get my 18 jars of jam first, and then I preserved the rest by freezing, dehydrating and fermenting. But the jam… The strawberry jam is an absolute must-have every year.
While I do make a few different types of jam throughout the summer, strawberry jam is by far our family favourite, and it’s the kind we go through the quickest. And since we also make all of our own jam and don’t purchase any from the store, I always make sure to make a big batch right after we go strawberry picking in June.
This year I canned up 18 jars so that we have enough to get us through the year, as well as a few extra jars on hand to give as gifts throughout the year. Because you really can’t go wrong gifting somebody a jar of homemade strawberry jam. In fact, I’ve already given two jars away as hostess gifts!
I always use the same recipe, which I’ve adapted from the Ball Complete Book of Home Preserving (referred to often throughout this blog as my “canning bible”).
I also like to add a little bit of vanilla to my recipe because it gives this classic strawberry jam recipe a bit of a “strawberry sundae” twist which really sets it apart from other strawberry jams.

Pectin-free strawberry jam with a vanilla twist
The recipe calls for eight cups of fresh, whole, hulled strawberries, six cups of sugar, an optional tablespoon of vanilla extract (or a vanilla bean) and no added pectin. Since strawberries have their own natural pectin, it’s not necessary to add store-bought pectin.
I like to keep things as simple and natural as possible, as often as possible:)
I must admit, the sugar content is still a bit high, and I’m going to try experimenting with more low-sugar jam and jelly recipes this summer. But this particular recipe is just so good that I can’t help but stick to the same recipe year after year. It really is a treat for us, and since we tend to gift a lot of it too, I want it to be a treat for our loved ones as well. So I’ve stuck with a tried and true classic strawberry jam recipe here, with that optional hint of vanilla, of course;)
We tend to go through about one jar of jam every month for our family of three because we do try to keep our jam for special weekend breakfasts and treats like pancakes, waffles and even over vanilla ice cream. But I still think it goes best spread over a slice of warm homemade bread fresh out of the oven.
Or straight out of the jar with a spoon;)

However you like to enjoy your jam, this pectin-free strawberry jam canning recipe will never let you down.
Oh, and if you’re more of a visual learner and would appreciate a video tutorial on making and canning this strawberry jam recipe, be sure to check out the following video on my new (again) Youtube channel (and subscribe while you’re at it!!)
Or, as always, scroll to the bottom for your printable pectin-free strawberry jam canning recipe.
Happy canning:)
Continue to ContentIngredients
- 8 cups strawberries, hulled and washed
- 6 cups sugar
- 1 vanilla bean or 1 Tbsp vanilla extract (optional)
Instructions
- Prepare jars and lids.
- Mash strawberries until they form a soupy liquid, but keep some nice big chunks of strawberry. I find it easiest to do this with my bare hands! Just make sure they're nice and clean;)
- Pour mashed strawberries into a large, stainless steal pot (be sure to use stainless steal as other metals (such as copper, aluminum or cast iron) are reactive and can give jam a weird flavour.
- Pour sugar into pot and stir well to combine.
- Add vanilla/vanilla bean, if using. If using a vanilla bean, cut it down the centre to expose the vanilla inside and toss the whole thing into the pot.
- Boil on medium-high, stirring consistently until the mixture begins to thicken up (25-30 minutes on average).
- Do a sheet test to make sure jam is thick enough (a sheet test is when you put a spoon in ice cold water and then dip it in your hot jam/jelly mixture quickly, then turn the spoon on its side to see how quickly the jam slides off. The slower, the thicker. If it all comes off in one sheet instead of individual drips, it is definitely the thickness of jam).
- When jam is ready, skim the foam off the top and then fill each hot jar to the top, leaving ¼-inch headspace.
- Using a knife, skim around the inside of the jar to release any trapped air bubbles. Adjust headspace if necessary.
- Wipe jar rims, place lids on top and screw bands on.
- Process in boiling water for 10 minutes, then turn heat off, take lid off and leave jars in canner for an extra 5 minutes.
- Using jar lifters, take jars out of canner and let them cool completely on your counter. Then store in a cool, dark place and enjoy all year long!
Wishing you homemade, homegrown, homestead happiness 🙂

SaveSave
Tag » How To Can Strawberry Jam
-
How To Can Strawberry Jam - Wyse Guide
-
Strawberry Jam For Canning - Simply Recipes
-
How To Can Strawberry Jam - Mrs. Wages
-
Canned Strawberry Jam - Lord Byron's Kitchen
-
Strawberry Jam Recipe | Ree Drummond - Food Network
-
How To Make And Can Strawberry Jam - Loaves And Dishes
-
How To Can Strawberry Jam - YouTube
-
Strawberry Jam Recipe | Allrecipes
-
Strawberry Jam Recipe For Canning {Best Jam Ever!!}
-
Because You Can: Classic 'Easy' Strawberry Jam - Bernardin
-
Strawberry Jam Recipe | BBC Good Food
-
Small Batch Strawberry Jam (no Pectin Required) - Kylee Cooks
-
Classic Strawberry Jam Canning Recipe | Ball® Mason Jars
-
Easy Strawberry Jam Recipe With No Pectin