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Red currant jam sets in about five minutes with nothing but fresh currants and sugar, no pectin, and no long simmer required. Red currants are bright, tart, and just sweet enough, and they make a bright red jam you’ll almost never find on a store shelf.

These little berries are naturally high in both pectin and acid, so they gel all on their own the moment they hit a hot pot with a bit of sugar. It’s the same no-pectin approach I use for most of my small-batch jams, just faster, since red currants do the setting work for you.

Red Currant Jam

If you’ve tasted both blackcurrants and red currants, it’s hard to believe they’re related. Blackcurrants have a deep, almost wine-like astringency, while red currants are light, bright, and quite sweet.

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Both are rare in American grocery stores because the soft fruit bruises easily and doesn’t ship well, so backyard bushes and farmer’s market stands are where these beauties turn up. While homemade blackcurrant jam needs a good 30 minutes of simmering before it sets, red currant jam is ready in about five minutes flat.

You also get to decide whether to keep the seeds. I leave mine in, but red currant jam is often made seedless by running the cooked fruit through a food mill or sieve, which catches the seeds and stems in one step.

Either version sets up beautifully, so it comes down to the texture you like.

Fresh red currant harvest in clusters

Notes from my Kitchen

Our currants grow in the shade, tucked between the house and the woods on the east side near a creek. They catch a bit of morning sun and then spend the rest of the day in cool shade, which is exactly what they want here in Vermont. We’ve grown them for years now, and the bushes always give us far more than we can eat fresh off the stem.

I’m one of those people who actually likes the seeds in jam. I want that toothsome bite of real fruit, so I hand-stem mine and leave the seeds right in. If you’d rather have it smooth, a food mill does the work in a fraction of the time. Either way, whatever the birds don’t get to first ends up in a jar.

Redcurrant Jam

Ingredients for Red Currant Jam

This is a two-ingredient jam, with the measurements in the recipe card below. Here’s what each one does.

  • Red currants: Use them as fresh as you can get them, since they’re at their best the day they’re picked. Fresh and frozen currants both work. You can hand-stem them to keep the seeds, or run them through a food mill for a smooth, seedless jam.
  • Granulated sugar: Sugar sweetens the jam and balances the tartness, but it doesn’t change the set and isn’t needed to safely can currant jam, since the fruit is already high in acid. Use as little or as much as suits your taste, anywhere from a very tart jam to a sweet, store-style one.

A traditional currant jam uses equal weights of fruit and sugar, which is how I make astringent blackcurrants, but bright red currants don’t need nearly that much. I’ve written the recipe at a 2 to 1 ratio of fruit to sugar, which suits most palates.

Drop to about a quarter pound of sugar per pound of fruit for a sharply tart jam, or go all the way to a 1 to 1 ratio if you like the sweetness of store-bought. The amount of sugar is entirely up to you.

Red gooseberries, which are closely related, make a similar deep-red jam if you’d like to compare, and you can read about that in my gooseberry jam recipe.

How to Make Red Currant Jam

There’s almost nothing to it. The only real decision is whether to keep the seeds, and the only thing to watch is that you pull the jam off the heat as soon as it sets. If you’ve made a no-pectin jam like strawberry, blackberry, or grape before, this is the same idea, just much quicker.

Preparing the Currants

Red currants are fragile, so handle them gently. If you’re picking your own, pull whole clusters rather than trying to strip berries off the stems in the field, where you’ll lose more fruit than stems.

Once they’re in the kitchen, hand-stemming is optional. Leave the stems and seeds in if you’ll be straining the cooked jam, or pull the berries off the stems by hand if you want to keep the seeds in a chunkier jam.

For a seedless jam, the easiest approach is to cook the currants first, then run them through a food mill or chinois sieve, which separates the smooth fruit from the seeds and stems in one pass.

That’s how most classic red currant jam is made, and it saves a lot of tedious hand work on a big batch.

Fresh red currant berries off the stem

Cooking the Jam

Add a splash of water or juice to the bottom of the pan to keep things from scorching, then add the currants and bring them up to a simmer. For the first minute, it’ll look like loose berries floating in juice, but it comes together fast.

As the fruit starts to boil, stir in the sugar to taste and let it dissolve. Keep it at a simmer for just a few minutes, until the jam begins to thicken and trace in the pan.

When you run a spoon through it, the surface will look glossy, and the bubbles will turn from watery to a thicker, syrupy boil. That’s your cue to take it off the heat.

Red currants carry a lot of natural pectin and will set hard if you keep cooking, so don’t wait for a long boil. My batches are rarely on the heat more than five minutes before they set firm once cooled.

Red currants beginning to cook down into jam

Testing for Gel Stage

Because red currants set so quickly, the trick is stopping at the right moment rather than cooking long enough.

  • Frozen plate test: Put a small plate in the freezer before you start. Dollop a bit of hot jam onto the cold plate to flash-cool it, wait a few seconds, then check the texture. Once it looks set on the plate, it’s done.
  • Watch the pan: When the jam traces behind a spoon, and the bubbles turn thick and syrupy instead of watery, pull it off the heat.
  • Don’t overcook it. Red currants are so high in pectin that a jam cooked too long will set into a stiff, rubbery block once cool. With this fruit, erring on the side of a shorter cook is always the safer bet.

Canning Red Currant Jam

You don’t have to can this jam. A small batch keeps in the refrigerator for a few weeks, and it freezes well too, so canning is optional. If you’d like it shelf-stable for the pantry, it’s a quick water bath process, and my beginner’s guide to water bath canning covers the whole setup if you’re just starting out.

To can it, ladle the hot jam into prepared half-pint jars, leaving 1/4 inch of headspace. Wipe the rims, seat your two-part lids, and process in a boiling water bath for 10 minutes (adjusting for altitude). Turn off the heat and let the jars rest in the canner for 5 minutes before lifting them out to cool.

Once they’re cool, check that every lid has sealed, and refrigerate any that didn’t.

Altitude Adjustments

Adjust your water bath processing time for elevation:

  • Below 6,000 feet: Process for 10 minutes
  • Above 6,000 feet: Process for 15 minutes

Yield and Batch Size

This is a true small-batch recipe, easy to scale up if your bushes are generous.

  • One pound of red currants, about one heaping farmer’s market pint, makes roughly 1 half-pint jar.
  • Unlike most jams, red currant jam scales up nicely because the high natural pectin sets the fruit quickly. You can comfortably work with 4 to 6 pounds of currants per batch.
  • Past about 6 pounds, it gets hard to keep a big pot from scorching on the bottom, so that’s a good ceiling for a single batch.
Red currant jam thickening and tracing in the pan

Storage Options

However you finish it, here’s how long red currant jam will keep:

  • Refrigerator: 3 to 4 weeks in a covered jar.
  • Freezer: Up to 6 months in a freezer-safe container with a little headspace.
  • Canned: 12 to 18 months in a cool, dark pantry once sealed.

Recipe Tips and Variations

A few things I’ve learned making this jam over the years, plus some variations worth trying:

  • Sweeten it to your taste. Less sugar gives a sharp, tart jam that shines as a condiment with meats and cheese. More sugar gives a softer, sweeter spread for toast.
  • Go seedless for a classic finish. If you want the smooth, silky texture most people picture, strain the cooked fruit through a food mill for a seedless version that’s still a jam with pulp intact, or make a batch of red currant jelly instead by straining through a jelly bag or cheesecloth.
  • Mix in other berries. Red currants pair beautifully with raspberries or black raspberries, and a handful of either rounds out the tartness.
  • Add a little spice. A few cloves or a small piece of cinnamon simmered with the fruit and lifted out before jarring gives the jam a warm, festive note.
  • Frozen currants work fine. Cook them straight from frozen and skip the splash of added water, since they’ll release plenty of their own as they thaw in the pot.
  • Don’t have enough for jam? Currants are endlessly useful, and there are plenty of other ideas in my roundup of creative ways to use currants.

Ways to Use Red Currant Jam

Red currant jam is wonderful on toast and folded into thumbprint cookies, but its bright tartness really earns its keep alongside savory food. A spoonful makes a quick glaze for roast pork, duck, or game, and it’s a classic partner to a sharp cheese on a board. I also swirl it into yogurt and oatmeal, and warm a little to spoon over pancakes or ice cream.

Once you’ve got a few jars put away, there’s no shortage of things to do with them. My roundup of ways to use up a jar of jam has plenty more ideas for working through the harvest.

Red Currant Jam FAQs

How many red currants do I need to make jam?

About 1 pound of red currants, which is roughly one heaping farmer’s market pint or 2 to 2 1/2 cups of fruit, makes a single half-pint jar of jam. The recipe scales up easily, so 4 to 6 pounds of currants makes a larger batch without any trouble.

How much sugar should I use in red currant jam?

That’s entirely up to your taste, since the sugar doesn’t affect the set or the canning safety of this high-acid fruit. A 2 to 1 ratio of fruit to sugar suits most people, while a quarter pound of sugar per pound of fruit makes a sharply tart jam and a 1 to 1 ratio makes a sweet, store-style one. Start on the lower side, since you can always add more.

Do I have to remove the seeds and stems from red currants?

No. You can hand-stem the currants and leave the seeds in for a chunkier jam, or cook the fruit and run it through a food mill or sieve for a smooth, seedless jam. Both versions set up well, so it comes down to the texture you prefer.

Can I use frozen red currants for jam?

Yes. Frozen red currants work just as well as fresh. Cook them straight from frozen and skip the splash of added water, since they release plenty of their own juice as they thaw in the pot. They may take a minute or two longer to come up to a simmer.

Can I make a bigger batch of red currant jam?

Yes, and that’s one of the perks of this fruit. Because red currants are so high in natural pectin, the jam sets quickly even in a larger pot, so you can scale up to 4 to 6 pounds of currants per batch. Past about 6 pounds, it gets hard to keep the bottom from scorching, so that’s a good upper limit.

Ways to Preserve Currants

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Canning Red Currant Jam
4.74 from 30 votes
Servings: 16 servings (1 half pint jar)

Red Currant Jam

Red currant jam is quick and easy to make at home.  Leave the seeds in for a chunky jam, or sieve them out, your choice.
Prep: 10 minutes
Cook: 10 minutes
Canning Time: 10 minutes
Total: 30 minutes
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Equipment

Ingredients 

  • 1 pound red currants
  • 1 cup sugar

Instructions 

  • Prepare the red currants by either hand-stemming them to keep the seeds, or planning to run the cooked fruit through a food mill for a smooth, seedless jam.
  • Add a splash of water or juice to a saucepan to prevent scorching, then add the currants and bring to a simmer.
  • Stir in sugar to taste and let it dissolve.
  • Simmer just until the jam thickens and begins to set, only a few minutes. Pull it off the heat as soon as it sets, since red currants set hard if overcooked.
  • For seedless jam, run the cooked fruit through a food mill now. Ladle into prepared jars and refrigerate, or process in a water bath canner for 10 minutes with 1/4 inch headspace.

Notes

Fruit Amounts: One pound red currants is about 2 1/2 cups, or a heaping farmer’s market pint.  One pound of sugar is about 2 cups.  My ratio by volume is 2 1/2 cups whole fruit to 1 cup sugar for best flavor and set.
Yield: One pound of red currants makes about 1 half-pint jar. The recipe scales up easily to 4 to 6 pounds per batch.
Sugar Amounts: Sugar is to taste and set here and doesn’t affect canning safety. A 2:1 fruit-to-sugar ratio suits most people. For a classic, old-fashioned jam, increase the sugar to 1 pound fruit to 1 pound sugar for a sweet, store-style jam. 
Seeds or Seedless: Hand-stem and leave the seeds in for a chunkier jam, or run the cooked fruit through a food mill or sieve for a smooth, seedless one. Both set well.
Batch Size: Unlike most jams, red currant jam scales up well because the high natural pectin sets the fruit fast. Stay at or below about 6 pounds per batch to keep the bottom from scorching.
Frozen Currants: Cook them straight from frozen and skip the added water, since they release plenty of their own as they thaw.
Sugar substitutes: Honey can change the gel and the flavor, and may scorch before it sets, but it will work in most cases.  Just watch it carefully as you cook it.  Sugar-free sweeteners like monk fruit won’t set properly. 
Altitude Adjustment: Process for 10 minutes below 6,000 feet, or 15 minutes above 6,000 feet.

Nutrition

Serving: 1Tbsp, Calories: 64kcal, Carbohydrates: 16g, Protein: 0.4g, Fat: 0.1g, Saturated Fat: 0.01g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.03g, Monounsaturated Fat: 0.01g, Sodium: 0.4mg, Potassium: 78mg, Fiber: 1g, Sugar: 15g, Vitamin A: 12IU, Vitamin C: 12mg, Calcium: 9mg, Iron: 0.3mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

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About Ashley Adamant

I'm an off grid homesteader in rural Vermont and the author of Practical Self Reliance, a blog that helps people find practical ways to become more self reliant.

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44 Comments

  1. Sarah Ekstrom says:

    5 stars
    I found many wild currant plants on our latest camping trip near Denali Alaska. Your induction and recipe was perfect. Thank you. I made it with seeds in for ease. Turned out well.

  2. Sarah Ekstrom says:

    5 stars
    I found many wild currant plants on our latest camping trip near Denali Alaska. Your induction and recipe was perfect. Thank you. I made it with seeds in for ease. Turned out well.

    1. Administrator says:

      You’re welcome. What a great find! So glad you enjoyed the recipe.

  3. Andrew Rowland says:

    5 stars
    I’m from the UK, and have grown redcurrants for 20 years. They are great eaten straight from the bush, or frozen, and added to fruit salads or with ice cream. Redcurrant jam is must, and keeps well. Thank you for your recipe. My wife prefers blackcurrant jam though.
    I’m always willing to try variations.

  4. Andrew Rowland says:

    5 stars
    I’m from the UK, and have grown redcurrants for 20 years. They are great eaten straight from the bush, or frozen, and added to fruit salads or with ice cream. Redcurrant jam is must, and keeps well. Thank you for your recipe. My wife prefers blackcurrant jam though.
    I’m always willing to try variations.

    1. Administrator says:

      You’re welcome. So glad you enjoyed the recipe.

  5. Astra says:

    I have some frozen red currants, can I just prepare them as fresh? Or do I need to do something specific to account for them having been frozen?

    1. Administrator says:

      You should be able to use frozen currants without problems as long as they weren’t overripe and didn’t have a lot of excess moisture when frozen. I would also skip adding the extra water when cooking them. Also, they may take a bit longer to cook since you are starting from frozen.

  6. Pat Thebo says:

    I have 3 red currant bushes and one black currant. Usually make red currant jelly BUT KICK IT UP A NOTCH by adding about 3 tbs of cloves to about 6 cups of juice, and boil them in juice about 5 min., remove them( can do it with cheesecloth bundled and removed)- then continue on with sugar , pectin and can. Trying the jam with my second harvest. Will add clove/ maybe.
    But adding the clove is really lovely. Also add ginger and occasionally jalapeño to my blackberry jelly. Way Yum!

    1. Administrator says:

      That sounds really lovely. Thanks for sharing.

  7. Gabriel Brogan-Dillon says:

    This is the second year that I’ve made red currant jam from my garden. Last year I used sugar and it was perfect. I have now cut sugar out of my diet so this year I used monkfruit sweetener. I simmered it for quite some timebefore refrigerating it. Overnight it thickened, but it’s not quite firm enough. It is still somewhat pourable. Any chance of a fix this late in the game?

    1. Administrator says:

      I am not sure if there is anything you can do at this point. You could probably just use it more like a syrup. I would say that it was probably the monkfruit sweetener. If you are using the monkfruit, you may want to add a little low sugar pectin like Pomona’s to be sure that you get a good set.

  8. Desiree Snith says:

    I have just picked a bumper crop of red currents from my three bushes this year, I’m getting ready to make some of your jam, and a couple of current/peach cakes. After that I’m not sure. I still have some in my freezer from last year.
    I’d like to say as a footnote, that I live in Michigan and my current bushes are growing really well in full sun. They have tripled in size in three years and now I’m thinking of getting a couple more. So I’m
    It sure why some are having trouble with their bushes.

  9. Barbara Ekin says:

    5 stars
    I make red currant & red raspberry jelly and jam. I buy my currants online at a place called Currant C. They are fast-frozen and come packed in a foam cooler box. You can find black as well as red currants.

  10. Barbara Ekin says:

    5 stars
    I make red currant & red raspberry jelly and jam. I buy my currants online at a place called Currant C. They are fast-frozen and come packed in a foam cooler box. You can find black as well as red currants.

  11. Melissa says:

    First year for Red Currants!! And I’m sure not the last! Quick question…can I leave the blossom ends on? I saw a site that said you had to remove the black currant blossom ends…

    1. Administrator says:

      I don’t believe it’s necessary to remove the blossom ends on the red currants. As a matter of fact most of the sources that I am seeing say it isn’t necessary for the black either.

  12. Katie Carter says:

    5 stars
    Hi everyone! Ive had currants growing on my ranch for years and just figured out what they are! So glad to have discovered them. I live at 7,000 feet elevation in colorado as well and they grow in the shade beautifully. This jam is sooooo delicious and I love the comment earlier about using it with poultry and meats! Definitely!

  13. Winifred Hutton says:

    I have made currant jam for the last 3 yrs. I use the currants from both the black and red bushes combined. Because of the naturally high pectin content, jam making is easy. My husband prefers little to no seeds so this year I have used the hand rotary food mill press. There is nothing better than homemade jam. We live in Southwestern Ontario in Canada and this year went from winter into summer in less than a month. But as a whole, our temps are great for gardening. .everyone enjoy your jam. Thank you for the refresher on jam.

    1. Admin says:

      You’re right, there’s little better than homemade jam! I’m glad you liked the recipe!

  14. Scott A McInnis says:

    5 stars
    I’ve been making currant jam (both red and black) for 60 years. I prefer the lower sugar as I like the tartness. These jams are superb not only on bread but make a superior condiment with meats and poultry. I grew up in Michigan where currants grow well but now live in Colorado at 7,000 feet and the higher elevation is cool enough for the bushes to thrive in part shade. We got 14 lbs from two red currant bushes this year.

  15. Scott A McInnis says:

    5 stars
    I’ve been making currant jam (both red and black) for 60 years. I prefer the lower sugar as I like the tartness. These jams are superb not only on bread but make a superior condiment with meats and poultry. I grew up in Michigan where currants grow well but now live in Colorado at 7,000 feet and the higher elevation is cool enough for the bushes to thrive in part shade. We got 14 lbs from two red currant bushes this year.

    1. Ashley Adamant says:

      Wonderful!

    2. Patrick says:

      Scott, I am excited for you and your bounty of currants. I also grew up in Michigan, but I’ve been a Tennesseean over half my life. I live in the Northeast corner of the state. I try to grow and nurture bushes here, but it is a struggle with our summer temperatures. Some years I get enough to make a single jar of Jam/Jelly and others…not so much. Good for you, I enjoyed reading about your experience.

    3. Katie Carter says:

      5 stars
      Hi everyone! Ive had currants growing on my ranch for years and just figured out what they are! So glad to have discovered them. I live at 7,000 feet elevation in colorado as well and they grow in the shade beautifully. This jam is sooooo delicious and I love the comment earlier about using it with poultry and meats! Definitely!

      1. Administrator says:

        That’s great! Thanks so much for sharing.

  16. Megan says:

    5 stars
    My red current bushes finally made enough currents to do something with (other than munch on while in the yard). I had 1/2 lbs and combined them with 1/2 lbs wild black raspberries and made an amazing pint of jam!

  17. Megan says:

    5 stars
    My red current bushes finally made enough currents to do something with (other than munch on while in the yard). I had 1/2 lbs and combined them with 1/2 lbs wild black raspberries and made an amazing pint of jam!

    1. Ashley Adamant says:

      Wonderful!

  18. Ingrid says:

    I live in southern Ontario in Canada and have some trouble with sawflies on my red currant bushes. I have sprayed them with soap and water and they have greatly reduced. I have a large crop this year. Some leaves are yellow and damaged which I think is from the flies. Any advice for pruning and how to prevent them? We have had unusually wet spring and now some very hot days. My bushes get about 4 hours of sun and rest of day in the shade.

  19. Patrick says:

    Thank you for sharing your insight into currants, jams and all things related. I grew up in Michigan, but have lived my adult life in Tennessee. While growing currants here is a bit of a challenge (summer heat) I’ve planted one black, one pink and one red. It has been a couple of years trial and error gardening, but the bushes are coming along nicely. I’m saving your article and recipe for the future.

    1. Ashley Adamant says:

      In Vermont, even though it’s not that hot, the only grow well in shade. Ours are sandwiched between the house and the woods, on the east side of the house near a creek. They only get a short bit of morning sun, and then spend the day in cool shade. Anywhere else and the leaves turn brown in the sun. Enjoy the jam!

  20. Arsenio says:

    Where can red currant berries ir juice be bought in nj?

    1. Ashley Adamant says:

      The only place I’ve seen red currants (other than homegrown) is at farmer’s markets. I can’t speak for NJ specifically though.

    2. Kim says:

      I’m not sure where you are in NJ but I picked some up last weekend in Brooklyn. The Russian markets at Brighton beach had tons of them.