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Preserving (rec.food.preserving) Devoted to the discussion of recipes, equipment, and techniques of food preservation. Techniques that should be discussed in this forum include canning, freezing, dehydration, pickling, smoking, salting, and distilling. |
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Could someone tell me what the shelf life is for homemade jams and jellies?
I had peach jam for 2 years that became darker in color. Is it still safe to eat? Thanks |
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dizzi wrote:
> Could someone tell me what the shelf life is for homemade jams and jellies? > I had peach jam for 2 years that became darker in color. Is it still safe > to eat? > It's probably safe for 10 years (or more), but if the color is fading it might not have much taste left. I have some spicy tomato jam from 2000 that is still good, but it was very strong-flavored and kind of dark to begin with. Try it and see. The worst that will happen is it will just be sweet with no aroma and little fruitiness left. Bob |
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In article >, "dizzi"
> wrote: > Could someone tell me what the shelf life is for homemade jams and > jellies? I had peach jam for 2 years that became darker in color. Is > it still safe to eat? > Thanks Recommended use is within a year. Practical use is much longer than that. I chuck stuff after three years if I can't give it to someone who'll eat it soon. :-) The color change isn't an indication of safety as long as you've got tight seals on the lids. Red jams (especially the low-sugar or fruit-only spreads) tend to go to an unappealing brown - makes them a pain in the neck for the commercial producers of same. One of the things sugar does is help preserve the color, too. If you pop a lid and find mold (not likely), I'd chuck it. Otherwise, a small taste will tell you if you want to keep eating it. You're not going to get botulism poisoning from jam or jelly. -- -Barb, <www.jamlady.eboard.com> An update on 7/22/04. |
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So much information in your answers....thank you both!!
"dizzi" > wrote in message ... > Could someone tell me what the shelf life is for homemade jams and jellies? > I had peach jam for 2 years that became darker in color. Is it still safe > to eat? > > > Thanks > > |
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dizzi wrote:
> So much information in your answers....thank you both!! Right now I'm exhausted from an extremely busy and unproductive day. If someone doesn't write by tomorrow the signs of spoilage to look for (raised lids, etc.) I'll try. B/ |
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dizzi wrote:
> So much information in your answers....thank you both!! Right now I'm exhausted from an extremely busy and unproductive day. If someone doesn't write by tomorrow the signs of spoilage to look for (raised lids, etc.) I'll try. B/ |
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So much information in your answers....thank you both!!
"dizzi" > wrote in message ... > Could someone tell me what the shelf life is for homemade jams and jellies? > I had peach jam for 2 years that became darker in color. Is it still safe > to eat? > > > Thanks > > |
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