We have a few jars of home canned jellies, mostly
citrus that are older than we want to use and I was wondering if anyone has
ever used such to start a batch of alcohol. Thinking of watering back down,
maybe bringing to a boil ?, cooling down, adding yeast and waiting. Anyone have any suggestions ?Thank You
for your consideration, Larry
recycling sugar from home canned jellies
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Re: recycling sugar from home canned jellies
Hypothetical math problem with variables not considered. Not sure about how much sugar you would retrieve but I did a bit of research and on average there is 10.76 grams of sugar in a tbspoon of jelly. If 453.59 grams equal a pound then it would take approx. 42 tblspoons to get a pound of sugar. 1 pint equals 32 tablespoons thus you would get a little over a pound of sugar out of each jar if none is lost. I am sure there is a flaw to this thinking but I thought it was an interesting problem to calculate.
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Re: recycling sugar from home canned jellies
Get a pack of certo and read the recipes for the type of fruit you have. That should give you a ball park figure of the amount of sugar.
When I make jelly from grapes, its 7 cups of sugar to 4 cups of juice. Lots of pectin in jelly... I would probably water it down, boil it, let it cool, and add some pectic enzyme to break down the pectin binding the stuff together. You could always check it with a hydrometer to see what your potential alcohol might be. If you only have a few jars you're going to need more ingredients (sugar/grape juice) if you hope to get much out of it. 7 cups of sugar and 4 cups of juice is only around 3-4 pounds of sugar spread out over four pint jars. I know, because I can make two batches of jelly from a 10 pound bag of sugar, and still have sugar left in the bag when I'm done.
When I make jelly from grapes, its 7 cups of sugar to 4 cups of juice. Lots of pectin in jelly... I would probably water it down, boil it, let it cool, and add some pectic enzyme to break down the pectin binding the stuff together. You could always check it with a hydrometer to see what your potential alcohol might be. If you only have a few jars you're going to need more ingredients (sugar/grape juice) if you hope to get much out of it. 7 cups of sugar and 4 cups of juice is only around 3-4 pounds of sugar spread out over four pint jars. I know, because I can make two batches of jelly from a 10 pound bag of sugar, and still have sugar left in the bag when I'm done.
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Re: recycling sugar from home canned jellies
Seems like I remember a member saying that whenever they needed more jars they just bought jelly and fermented it all. Said it was cheaper than mason jars plus you get a wash out of it.
I don't remember how he fermented, I'm thinking someone else might remember the thread...may help you out some.
I don't remember how he fermented, I'm thinking someone else might remember the thread...may help you out some.
But what the heck do I know.....I am still learning.
- bearriver
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Re: recycling sugar from home canned jellies
Same deal with Costco peaches, which come in standard mason jars.StillLearning1 wrote:Said it was cheaper than mason jars plus you get a wash out of it.

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Re: recycling sugar from home canned jellies
Yup. I've made 'Marmalade vodka' before - more like a citrus schnapps really.
Boiling water to melt and dilute to a sensible SG (based on 50% by weight of the marmalade).
Some vit B and a tsb of DAP for nutes and it came out well once double distilled.
Boiling water to melt and dilute to a sensible SG (based on 50% by weight of the marmalade).
Some vit B and a tsb of DAP for nutes and it came out well once double distilled.
Where has all the rum gone? . . .
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