The Food in Jars Cookbook + Giveaway

May 24, 2012(updated on December 16, 2023)

So often over the life of this blog, I’ve written about beautiful cookbooks. These posts are fun for me to write because I love any excuse to sit awhile with a new cookery volume and explore what it has to offer. Many of you take the time to write me an email or leave a comment, to tell me how useful you find these cookbook pieces, because they give you a chance to peek inside a book in a way that’s different from the experience on Amazon.

rear cover

Today’s cookbook feature is a particularly unique joy, because this time, I’m sharing my own book. Now, I realize that I’ve been talking about this book for many, many weeks now. Thing is, for all that excited chatter, I haven’t taken much of a chance to tell you what you’ll find when you open the cover and why it might be a good canning book for you.

dedication

To my mind, the book is a tangible embodiment of this website. It brings together the most popular recipes from the archives as well as a number of new recipes you’ve never seen before. All the previously-published recipes were retested and rewritten before being included in the manuscript to ensure that they were the best versions of themselves. Many were also scaled down to yield just three or four pints, to keep with the small batch theme.

canning intro

It includes detailed canning instructions (with helpful instructional pictures!), tips on how to determine whether your jam has reached its set point, a guide for adjusting processing time for altitude and all the best safety practices.

blueberry butter

The recipes are sorted by genre, so that all the pickles are in one chapter, jellies in another and so on. Within each section, the recipes are arranged by season, so that each spring, you can start at the beginning of the jam chapter and then work your way through to the end.

boozy peaches

The book is also full of really gorgeous images. Truly, my jars have never looked better. The photography was done by Steve Legato, at his Philadelphia studio, and it was such a pleasure to watch him work. Also, I made all the canned goods pictured, so you can trust that your finished products should look pretty darn close to what you see.

cinnamon vanilla butter

Another way I tried to keep the book tied closely to this site is that it’s not just about canning. Towards the back of the book, you’ll find sections devoted to nut butters, granolas, bread and scone mixes in jars and even flavored salts. There’s also information about how to best freeze different fruits and vegetables, and some details on pressure canning low acid foods.

rhubarb syrup

Finally, the reason I think so many of you will like the book is that it’s me. It’s my voice, the same one you read here day after day. I’m always working to write about food preservation in a way that conveys the fact that it’s a joy, not a chore. That feeling ribbons throughout the book. I love joining so many of you in your kitchens through this blog and I hope I’ll get to do the same through the book.

Thanks to my kind publicist at Running Press, I have three copies of the Food in Jars (the cookbook) to give away to Food in Jars (the blog) readers. Here’s what to do:

  1. To enter the giveaway, leave a comment on this post and share your favorite kind of food in jars. Jam? Jelly? Pickles? Chutney? Canned peaches? Granola? Iced coffee? There is no wrong answer.
  2. Comments will close at 11:59 pm eastern time on Sunday, May 27, 2012. Winner will be chosen at random (using random.org) and will be posted to the blog on Monday, May 28, 2012.
  3. Giveaway is open to U.S. and Canadian readers.
  4. One entry/comment per person, please.

If you can’t bear to wait and see if you win the giveaway, you can always order a copy by clicking here: Food in Jars: Preserving in Small Batches Year-Round.

Disclosure: I wrote this book. Running Press is providing three copies at no cost to me for this giveaway. 

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1,407 thoughts on "The Food in Jars Cookbook + Giveaway"

  • I love to have a meal in a jar, like my delicious soups, that warm the tummy and the soul and soothe the aches of a winter day as nothing else can.

  • Plum fig chutney & bread & butter pickles with hot peppers. Yummy!! Oh my goodness, and dilly beans too (Anna K’s comment spurred my memory!). Congrats on your new book~

  • My favorite food in jars is yogurt! I make them in 8oz jars, a quart at a time, and pasteurize and culture the milk all in the same jar. Virtually no clean-up and no risk of attracting rogue bacteria from transferring back and forth :] Marmalade is a close runner-up though :B

  • I’m OBSESSED with making pickles right now. But would you know, I’ve never pickled a cucumber! I think the summer squash and zucchini spears were my faves. Oh, and obviously dilly beans. Yes, dilly beans.

  • I’m an Aussie stuck in Texas so I have to say by far the best food ever put in a jar is vegemite!

  • I love canning different jellies & jams (blackberry/blueberry jam…yum). But my husband bought me a pressure canner for Christmas so I’ve been into canning soups and chicken stock lately.
    I’m looking forward to canning salsa and tomato sauce this summer!

    Hope I win!

  • Apricot jam for me. Looking forward to a trip to the Okanagan, BC this summer to bring back home a basket full of fresh apricots for a nice batch of home-made jam.

  • Hmmm…I have to pick just one?! Either strawberry jam, cilantro salsa, or pickled onions, I guess. I’ve already bought Food in Jars, but I’d love to gift a copy to my BFF who just started canning. Thanks for the opportunity!

  • We just polished off our last jar of homemade salsa a couple weeks ago (my tomato crop last year wasn’t so great, so I didn’t get to make nearly as much as I wished) — I felt like observing a moment of silence when I pulled out that last jar of it. The storebought stuff just doesn’t compare.

    Oooh, and jam. Made from my own raspberries. Pure, unadulterated heaven. Pluot jam is also a hit at our house. (My in-laws have a pluot tree — a delicious combination of apricot and plum).

    I’m new to your blog (I found it through the link on Ashley English’s Small Measure blog) — I’m so excited to find it. Your book looks lovely. If I don’t win a copy, I’m going to be purchasing one soon.

  • Hi Marisa…

    I can’t remember if this is the correct way to leave a comment or not, but if not, please redirect my words!! I purchased one of your books and give it to my youngest daughter-in-law, a lovely young woman who I “introduced” to canning two hers ago…she reports that it is amazing…!! I thought of you on Tuesday as I attempted to “cobble together” a recipe for, of all things, RHUBARB BUTTER…!!!!!! After trying regular rhubarb jam recipes and finding them so sweet that the actual FLAVOR of the rhubarb is lost, I thought…if apple butter is nothing more than apple pulp, sugar (adjusted to taste) and spices, simmered down to the desired consistency, why could I NOT do the same thing with rhubarb…?!?!? Well, I did it, and the result was favorable, though not spectacular…big smile! The result was tangy because of the smaller amount of sugar that I used, but even after simmering the concoction for 45 minutes, it was still not as thick as I wold have liked…I will go “back to the drawing board” at some point, for we are rhubarb FANATICS in this house…! Know that I wish you great success with your book…!

    Sincerely yours,
    Corinne Schillinger

  • I just recently starting getting into tasty things in jars after my boyfriend gave me some boozy marmalade – I’d love to try a sweet jalepeno jelly like the ones they sell back home in Arizona. I can never find the right balance in big-batch ones.

  • My favorite food in jars to make is jam. I’ve tried my hand at it every few years since college when there was a u-pick strawberry field not TOO far from school. I followed the instructions in the pectin box and didn’t water bath can (it sounded like SUCH a much harder step!). However, your blog inspired me to try marmalade and different flavor combinations – and it perfected a jelly I tried last summer. Thank you for taking the mystery of set point out of the process! And for inspiring so many other foods in jars that are now flowing regularly from my kitchen!

  • Jams, jelly, marmalade, beets, pickles – I love them all! This year beets are on the top of my list.

  • I already have my copy. Would love to give this to my daughter! I make pickled wild mushrooms and chutneys and salsas.

  • My favorite food in jars is whatever I come home from the market with. Grains and beans and any other dry ingredients get dumped in their own jars and stored on the shelf; liquids from the market typically come in big jugs for the fridge; spices are divided into their own small jars — and then whenever anything is used, leftovers go straight to a jar as well!

    Your book is beautiful. Can’t wait to own a copy, whether it through this giveaway or my own purchase.

    Thanks!

  • The book is beautiful!! The recipes sound delicious too! I really love chutneys and hot sauces from my jars.

  • I was excited about this book before; now that I’ve had a peek inside, I can’t wait to get my hands on it. I’d say my favorite thing to make in jars is either peach salsa or blueberry pie filling.

  • I love all kinds of food in jars…. really good apricot jam is right up there though. Also cold brewed iced coffee.

    Thank you for doing this giveaway!

  • I hope I win, I would love to get this! I suppose my birthday is coming up and I can add it to the list if I don’t though ;).

    Blackberry pomegranate jelly is my favorite food in jars. 4 c pom juice, 1 c blackberry juice, 7 c sugar, 1 box pectin. Amazing.

  • The blueberry jam I made last year was TO DIE FOR. But lately I’ve been cold brewing ice tea in a half gallon jar I picked up at the flea market. It’s pretty fantastic.

  • I like peaches! I could easily sit down with a quart of home canned peaches and have the whole thing to myself. 🙂

  • Meals in jars and jams. Yum! Almost as much as enjoying the finished product, I like to find new recipes.

  • Boozy cherries, preferably brandied cherries make from Royal Anne Cherries from Hood River, Oregon (May have picked 24 lbs of them last year because they are THAT good)
    Second favorite: Dilly beans (my moms recipe)

  • the book looks beautiful! my favorite food in jars has got to be dilly beans – so much so that my last name on facebook is dilly beaner!

  • I love canned salsa! There’s nothing better in the winter when I need a reminder of how summer veggies taste.

  • Jam and pickles! I have never canned before but I’m looking forward to getting into it this summer!

  • As much as I love to eat jams, jellies, pickles and all of those delicious, wonderful goodies, my favourite thing to look at is pantry staples in jars – beans, lentils, oats, etc. *Swoon*

  • My mother used to make strawberry jam growing up. But hasn’t for years. I’d really like to make some for nostalgia’s sake!

  • I tend to favor the savory…especially my apple-pear chutney when paired with September Farm cheddar (I need another trip to PA – I’m out!).

  • Love your Dilly Beans and Strawberry Rhubarb recipes. Can’t wait to make them again this summer.

  • The thing I find I’ve enjoyed the most is savory jams and jellies. I haven’t used mayo in a sandwich in forever – it’s all red onion marmalade. I’ve also now been ordered to make more hot pepper jelly by everyone that’s tried mine.

  • i make a pumpkin butter that is out of this world. i also like apple butter and marinara sauce.

  • I love to make jam, tomato sauce and pickles, but the best is peaches!! I would love a copy of your book!

  • Apricot jam…definitely apricot jam…though I just planted a quince tree and am looking forward to processing the fruit in the years to come.

  • It’s so hard to pick, but I really love fig preserves, curry pickle slices, candied kumquats and any type of kimchi, slaw or kraut. Hip-hip hooray for food in jars!

  • I really love pickled vegetables: beets, green beans, cucumbers, just about anything that can be pickled!
    The book is beautiful, I’ll have to find a copy!

  • My favorite food to can? Beets! Love their goodness all year round in side dishes, on salads, etc. Ymmm!

  • Canning has brought great joy and variety to our table, and I love having lots of things on hand. But my must-have, go-to, is simple canned tomatoes. They are so much better than store-bought, and they make a huge difference in our wintertime meals.

  • I’ve been making pectin-free strawberry lemon preserves that people are now asking for….but my personal favorite is pickled carrots!

  • I love to make marmalade and can it. Just to see the slices of oranges, lemons, and limes in jars brings me joy!

  • CONGRATS! I can’t wait to see you book. It is on my “to buy” list for sure. If I do win one I will keep it and buy the other for my sister!

    I love jams! I think my favorite is pear and gin butter. nom nom nom!

  • Jam, mostly because it complements my baking habit so nicely. I’m also a sucker for pickled asparagus, though.

  • I have to thank Mrs. Wheelbarrow who directed me here today. I have been canning for years in order to make my garden’s bounty last throughout the cold, north Idaho winters. My favorite item to can is roasted tomatoes, pureed in the food processor, and tasting of summer in the middle of winter. Congratulations on your book!

  • The book looks absolutely gorgeous! Congrats! I think my favorite thing to MAKE in jars is jam. You can be so creative with spices and herbs and not have to worry over-much about safety, since they’re both high-sugar and high-acid. Plus it’s such a great give. But to EAT, I find that jam doesn’t get used up enough in my house. My current favorite thing-to-eat-in-a-jar are the Persian Tarragon Pickles from Canning for a New Generation. I can literally eat two or three or more in a sitting. YUM!

  • Plum jelly, specifically my mom’s plum jelly, is my favorite food in a jar. It always makes me smile.

  • My favorite thing to can is jam. I love how the taste of that season’s best comes through in the flavor. We are just using up our last pint from last year – a blackberry so complex I can almost smell the berries languishing on the vines in the sunshine.

    (And yes! I always can jam in pints. With two jam-loving small children half-pints are kind of ridiculously small for us)

    Very excited about your cookbook.

  • My favorite canned go-to is meat. I can always come up with something good for dinner no matter how late I’m running.

  • Love Lebanese refrigerator turnip pickles and look forward to making my own Boysenberry preserves from my new vines outside which are blooming as I write these words! Congratulations on the terrific sounding book. You really are amazing!