Holiday Giving: Gifts for Jar Lovers

December 6, 2012(updated on October 3, 2018)

Weck Jars

Last week, I wrote about some of my favorite canning tools and the reasons they might just make good holiday gifts for the canners in your lives. This week I want to feature some of the odds and ends that aren’t canning necessities  but make a jar-filled life a little bit prettier and more fun (of course, I intended to get this posted on Monday, but that knock-out flu I had has put me behind in my posting. So sorry!).

First on the list is Weck Jars. They’re good for canning, for dry goods storage, and if you spring for a set of snap-on plastic lids, they make fantastic leftover containers. Because they’re a bit pricier than your average box of jars, they’re an indulgence, but isn’t that what the holiday season is all about? Once hard to find, they’re now available for online order from the U.S. distributor, Kaufmann Mercantile and Mighty Nest, and in Williams-Sonoma and Crate & Barrel stores.

Enamel ladle

For someone who has all their jar needs met, what about a pretty ladle? It’s good for filling your jars, scooping up servings of soup and chili and it looks fab sticking out of a crock of utensils. Available from Kaufmann Mercantile, it costs $32 and would be fun tucked in a stocking.

stainless steel funnel

I love my stainless steel funnel. The one I have is made by RSVP and I use it all the time. Not only is it useful during the canning process, but it’s also great for filling jars with dried goods and helping pour leftover soup into storage jars. I even take it to Whole Foods with me when I use my own container for bulk foods, because it allows me to funnel the food into my jars cleanly.

If I didn’t already have a stainless steel funnel, I might opt for this one, because it has a strainer that can fit into the base should you need it. That would be an awesome helper for those moments when you find yourself pouring stock into jars and want to do a final strain.

jar drink toppers

Drink toppers are another fun gift for jar lovers. I’ve written about these a lot lately, so I won’t go into crazy depth about them, but they’re great. There’s Cuppow, EcoJarz, and a lid specifically for iced coffee from the Mason Bar Company (they’ll also sell you a straw if you want a plastic one. I like these stainless steel babies better).

jar cozy!

Once you turn your mason jar into a drinking cup, you need something to absorb the moisture and heat. That’s where a jar cozy or sleeve comes in. There are so many different Etsy shops making these. Here are a few of my favorites:

  • Mason Bar Company (cute hand-crocheted cozies from the folks who sell the drink lids mentioned above).
  • Greyslater (sleek waxed canvas sleeves).
  • Fine + Dandy Knits (hand-knit cozies made from organic cotton, pattern is available).
  • One Robin Road (charming cozies made from recycled sweaters. No two are alike).
  • Cadron Creations (hand-crocheted cozies made to fit a variety of sizes, including the newly reissued pint &  half jars).
  • Two Tired Bike (mason jar sleeves made from recycled bike inner tubes. Great for jar lovers who adore their two wheeled transportation).
  • Hide and True (hand-stitched leather sleeves. Spendy, but gorgeous).
  • The Stowe (another leather sleeve, this time with a built-in handle).

lunch tote

Finally, the ultimate gift for jar loves is the Jars to Go tote from A Tiny Forest. Since I first wrote about the original two-jar bag, Kim has expanded the offerings in her shop to include a four-jar bag and single sleeves that fasten up over the top of the jar (perfect for packaging up super-special gift jars).

And since no gift guide is complete without a giveaway, here’s what I have for you today. There are two giveaway packs and we’ll have two winners. The first is from Kaufmann Mercantile and consists of a six-pack of 1/4 L straight-side Weck Jars and that lovely white enamel ladle pictured above. The second is a four-jar Jars to Go tote from A Tiny Forest in Kim’s signature blue-striped fabric (like this one).

Here’s how to get in on the giveaway:

  1. Leave a comment on this post and tell me about your favorite edible or culinary stocking stuffer (my favorite edible stocking stuffer is Pocky and my favorite culinary stocking stuffer is this little microplane nutmeg grater).
  2. Comments will close at 11:59 pm on Saturday, December 8, 2012. Winners will be chosen at random and will be posted to the blog on Sunday.
  3. Giveaway open US residents only.
  4. One comment per person, please. Entries must be left via the comment form on the blog at the bottom of this post. I cannot accept submissions via email.
Disclosure: Kaufmann Mercantile sent me the ladle seen above for photography purposes. Kaufmann Mercantile and A Tiny Forest have both provided the giveaway items at no cost to me. No vendor mentioned above paid for placement. 

Sharing is caring!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

724 thoughts on "Holiday Giving: Gifts for Jar Lovers"

  • My favorite edible stocking stuffers are oranges. We grew up getting huge ones in the bottom of our stockings and have tried to carry that tradition on with our kids. I love anything unusual for the kitchen. I bought my own stocking stuff for this year already… a marble mortar and pestle!! Been wanting one forever!!

    1. Our stockings always have those little French bonbon in the mental containers. It would not be Christmas without them!

  • I love oranges as stocking stuffers. Old school, but nice. Even better if I have time to stuff them full of cloves.

  • I find a good strawberry huller comes in handy when doing large strawberry jam batches or a mandolin for pickling thin sliced carrot or cucumber 🙂 I love helpful gadgets!!

  • My favorite stocking stuffer has to be a garlic press. Garlic is so sticky to peel. Use sooo much garlic around here 🙂

  • Clementines — nothing fancy, but they are such a fun juicy treat to cut the coffee and coffee cake sweetness that usually accompanies stocking unwrapping!

  • My favorite stocking stuffer is small jars of exotic mustard. I’m the only mustard fan at our house, so little jars of the best condiment on the planet are just right for me.

  • I’m a traditionalist when it comes to edible stocking fillerw. A satsuma fills up the toe and brings back memories of when they were so rare to eat. I think they were banned for a few years when I was a kid.

  • My favorite edible stocking stuff is good quality handmade dark chocolates. Can’t hang those by the fire for too long!

  • Our favorite culinary stocking stuffers are chocolate, fine tuned to individual likes: milk, dark, with almonds or with caramel. We always include socks!

  • I love getting a really good tiny bottle of Balsamic vinegar, the kind where you only need a couple of drops! I always get those chocolate oranges that are in sections when you open them up. So fun! Would love to find a good slicing mandoline in my stocking this year!

  • My favorite edible stocking stuffer is an orange, for tradition. It fits nicely right in the toe of the stocking. My 3 year old will be receiving his first culinary implement this year in his stocking: a crinkle cutter for chopping veggies.

  • I love fruit slices in my stocking. And I love to get the more expensive spices that I wouldn’t normally buy myself!

  • Favorite stocking stuffer… navel orange and Toblerone. I’ve gotten them in my stocking every single year for the past 40 years. 🙂 Our boys get their own jar of Nutella every single year… non-food… postage stamps! Yes i love to send and receive “snail” mail! 🙂

  • Great giveaways–thank you! Our favorite “foodie” stocking stuffers include crispy nuts (of all kinds) and a beautiful kitchen helper such as a handmade wooden spoon.

  • As holiday candy goes, I inhale Williams-Sonoma peppermint bark (I guess it comes in a tin that’s really too big for a stocking, but as a Jew, I’ve never actually had a Christmas stocking, so I can kind of do what ever I want in that regard). And culinary would have to be mini spatulas – so handy when trying to get that last little bit of something out of the jar.

  • I just discovered one of my new favorites this year – the tiny little tins of maldon salt that you can buy online. The perfect stocking stuffer for a food lover!

  • My favorite edible stocking stuffer to give is Chocolate Covered Cherries to my dad. And as for a culinary stocking stuffer, I’d have to go with new pot holders.

  • My family’s traditional stocking stuffers are always Gold Chocolate Coins (Trader Joe’s has them!), tic tacs (a family joke: when we were little & complaining that we were hungry my Mom would offer us a tic tac). Kitchen related: pop up sponges are a fav.

  • Each year I get my husband almond Christmas stollen for his stocking and some nice coffee. We always enjoy a slice of stollen as part of out Christmas morning breakfast. I usually get him some little jars of spicy mustard or pepper relish, just something to liven up winter cooking.

  • Oh, I haven’t done stocking in ages! My boyfriend looooooooves jam (eats it with a spoon), so I think that would be a good stocking stuffer for him 🙂

  • I love to make Cranberry vodka and gift it in bottles big enough for someone to have two cocktails (or one to share with another person)!

  • This year I have tons of homemade jam & preserves & chutney for stocking stuffers, which feels super exciting. As for store-bought edible stocking stuffers, I love clementines and fancy hot chocolate mix.

  • Im old fashioned i like candy canes in my stocking! That said, my mom used to put little cloth napkins filled with homemade pecan sandies in our stockings, and chocolate chip cookies set atop some plastic on the lawn Christmas morning. She always told us the “reindeer left them”!

  • Caramels and fudge is a favorite of mine. I have also requested many culinary items this year. My list includes but is not limited to a new large glass measuring cup, a food processor, and new glass bowls. Oh, and remember when I mentioned “not limited to…”? I really love those Weck Jars sooo much. 🙂

  • We always got a clementine tucked in to the toe of the stocking every Christmas when I was a kid. We do the same thing now with our own kids…. but they seem far less impressed.

  • Hmm, we always got an orange, a peppermint and a tube of toothpaste (I figured out, as a mom, that the toothpaste fills up a stocking nicely). For my Soviet-born kids, I always include a packet of “vaffli” — creme-filled waffle wafer cookies. One likes chocolate or orange, the other loves vanilla. And a clementine, for tradition’s sake.

  • My favourite food item would be good white chocolate, not the vegetable fat kind that has never even shared the room with a cocoa bean, but the real kind. Non-food item, it would be a set of silicone tipped tongs.

  • My favorite edible stocking stuffer is a small package of Almond Roca. My favorite culinary stuffer is the microplane grater that was in my stocking last Christmas.

  • My favorite edible stocking stuffer has always been the Reese’s Christmas trees that we have received since being a kid.

  • My favorite edible stocking stuffer are those lifesaver storybooks. It’s been a tradition in my family since we were kids and I just adore them! Decorated tea towels are my favorite culinary gift I’d say…

  • My favorite is Terry’s All Gold Orange and I thought I had died and gone to heaven when I saw an all white chocolate version a while back. I haven’t been able to find the white chocolate version since.

  • Favorite stuffer is definitely a chocolate orange. Not at all fancy but a once a year treat that I always look forward to. Favorite culinary stocking stuffer would be something like cinnamon sticks or vanilla beans that I wouldn’t usually get myself.

  • There’s this store in Austin called Mi Casa, and every year around Christmas they sell molded Mexican chocolate hats and Santas. I got them for everyone last year as stocking stuffers, and I’m doing it again this year! A great stocking stuffer for me would be vanilla beans.