I was offered the chance to try making jelly out of R.W. Knudsen’s black currant juice, and of course I jumped at the chance. The Knudsen juices are 100% juice. No added sugar. No artificial sweeteners. Nothing extra. Nada, zip, zero! Therefore, when you drink them straight, a juice like this one will pucker your mouth so fast it’s funny! But my oh my, the jelly you can make from this juice.Many of us don’t make jellies or jams ourselves because of the laborious process of picking, cleaning, and cutting the fruit, and then there’s the water-bath process. More time. Did you know that you can make freezer jellies and jams instead, and eliminate the water-bath? And if you start with pure fruit juice, you’ll save even more time.
R.W. Knudsen Family’s Just Juices work great – jelly-making in less than an hour. Just Juice Black Currant creates a tart fruit flavor – paired with clotted crème and a fresh scone it’s a holiday win. Here is the recipe provided by the Knudsen company, along with my variation:

Black Currant Jelly
1 32 ounce bottle of R.W. Knudsen Family’s Just Black Currant (4 cups juice)
1 1.75 ounce no sugar needed pectin
2 ½ cups sugar
Pour juice into 6-quart pan.
Gradually stir in pectin.
Bring mixture to full rolling boil over high heat, stirring constantly.
Stir in sugar and return to full rolling boil.
Boil hard for 1 minute, stirring constantly.
Remove from heat. Skim as necessary.
Fill, seal, and water-bath process according to instructions included with pectin.
Yields 5-6 8 ounce jars.
Images: R.W. Knudsen, Cyndi Lavin
4 comments:
Thanks! I'd like to try this.
Super easy, and a good first jelly project with kids! :-)
This sounds so easy (and tasty too). I especially like the freezer version. If I can find the Black Currant Juice at my local supermarket, I'll try this. Thanks!
-Holly
Hi Holly! If you can't find that exact juice, I'm pretty sure that most 100% juices would work, although you might have to alter the amount of pectin added. :-)
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