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Rhubarb jelly is a smooth, sweet-tart spring preserve made from the bright juice of fresh rhubarb stalks. This recipe uses powdered pectin for a quick reliable set with no gel-stage testing.

Rhubarb is naturally low in pectin and naturally acidic, so the recipe works with just three ingredients (rhubarb juice, sugar, and pectin) and produces a clear blush-pink jelly.

Jars of homemade rhubarb jelly

Adapted from the Ball Complete Book of Home Preserving, this recipe relies on Sure-Jell or Ball Classic powdered pectin for a reliable gel. Rhubarb is technically a vegetable we treat as a fruit, and it doesn’t contain any meaningful amount of pectin on its own, so commercial pectin is essential here. Juice extraction is straightforward: simmer chopped rhubarb in water until it falls apart, then strain through a jelly bag for a few hours.

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Rhubarb is one of the earliest things to come up in our Vermont garden, so a few jelly batches in May and June get me set for the rest of the year.

For other ways to use a spring rhubarb harvest, try old-fashioned rhubarb jam with chunky pieces of fruit, strawberry rhubarb jam for the classic flavor combo, or homemade rhubarb wine for something a little different.

Homemade rhubarb jelly in a jar

Notes from My Kitchen

Most years I’m all about chunky jams with big hunks of fruit. My little ones though, they love jelly. I tried to convert them, but I found myself eating my own batches of chunky low sugar jam while they begged for full sugar smooth jelly. I’m not complaining; I’m happy to have a full batch of rhubarb jam and another of strawberry rhubarb jam to myself, but with more rhubarb coming in from the garden, it’s time to make a kid-approved batch of smooth rhubarb jelly.

Rhubarb jelly is also a beautiful spring preserve. The juice extracts a clear pale pink that deepens to rose once you cook it down with the sugar. Varieties with deep red stalks like Crimson Cherry or Canada Red give the most vivid color, but green-stalked rhubarb still tastes wonderful; the jelly just comes out more amber than pink.

Fresh rhubarb harvest from the garden

Ingredients for Rhubarb Jelly

This rhubarb jelly recipe yields about 6 to 7 half-pint jars and uses just three ingredients:

  • Rhubarb juice: Extracted from fresh rhubarb stalks (instructions below). Use any rhubarb variety, red-stalked or green. Frozen rhubarb works too and actually breaks down more easily during juice extraction. The redder the stalks, the deeper pink your finished jelly.
  • 1 box (1.75 oz) powdered fruit pectin: Use Sure-Jell (yellow box) or Ball Classic regular powdered pectin. Rhubarb has no meaningful natural pectin, so commercial pectin is essential for this recipe. Don’t substitute liquid pectin, which requires different ratios. For a low-sugar version, see Pectin Options below.
  • Granulated sugar: Rhubarb is very tart with no meaningful natural sugar of its own, so this recipe uses the full sugar amount called for with regular powdered pectin. Don’t reduce the sugar with regular Sure-Jell; the jelly won’t gel and the result will taste sour. The recipe card has the specific amount.

No lemon juice is needed because rhubarb is naturally acidic (pH 3.1 to 3.3, more acidic than most berries), which is well within the safe range for water bath canning and acidic enough to help the pectin gel reliably.

How to Make Rhubarb Jelly

Rhubarb jelly comes together in two stages: extracting the juice from the chopped rhubarb (which takes most of the time, mostly hands-off as the juice strains through a jelly bag), and then cooking the jelly itself, which only takes about 15 minutes once the juice is ready.

Extracting Rhubarb Juice

Trim the leaves and the woody bottom ends from the rhubarb stalks, then chop the stalks into 1-inch pieces. Rhubarb leaves are toxic and should always go straight to the compost. Place the chopped stalks in a heavy-bottomed pot with about 2 cups of water per pound of rhubarb. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat, then reduce to a simmer and cook for about 20 minutes, until the rhubarb has completely fallen apart and the liquid has turned bright pink.

Transfer the cooked rhubarb mixture to a dampened jelly bag or a strainer lined with several layers of dampened cheesecloth set over a deep bowl. Let it drip undisturbed for at least 2 hours, or up to 4 to 6 hours for more juice.

Don’t squeeze the bag, even though it’s tempting; squeezing releases solids that cloud the finished jelly and the extra yield isn’t worth it. Measure the juice for the recipe (the recipe card has the specific amount).

Cooking the Jelly

Order matters with powdered pectin. Pour the strained rhubarb juice into a heavy-bottomed jam pot. Whisk in the powdered pectin until fully dissolved. Bring to a hard rolling boil over high heat, stirring frequently.

Add the sugar all at once and stir constantly until fully dissolved. Return to a hard rolling boil that can’t be stirred down, and boil hard for exactly 1 minute. Remove from heat and quickly skim off any foam. Ladle the hot jelly into prepared half-pint jars, leaving 1/4 inch headspace, wipe rims clean, and apply two-piece canning lids fingertip tight.

Homemade rhubarb jelly in a canning jar

Don’t Overcook Pectin Jelly

Pectin jelly works on chemistry, not on cooking time. A few things to know:

  • The jelly looks thin in the pot when you take it off the heat, and that’s normal. Pectin sets as the jelly cools, not while it’s boiling.
  • Trust the timing. A hard rolling boil for exactly 1 minute after the sugar fully dissolves is all you need.
  • Skip the thermometer and freezer plate test. Those are for old-fashioned no-pectin jellies. Pectin recipes set on chemistry, not on temperature.
  • Give the jars 24 to 48 hours to fully set before declaring failure.

Canning Rhubarb Jelly

Rhubarb is naturally acidic (pH 3.1 to 3.3), which makes rhubarb jelly safe for water bath canning with no pressure canner required. If you’re new to canning, start with my beginner’s guide to water bath canning before you fire up the canner.

Process the filled jars in a boiling water bath canner for 10 minutes (adjusting for altitude). When the timer goes off, turn off the heat and let the jars sit in the canner for another 5 minutes before lifting them out (this helps prevent siphoning). Cool on a towel for 12 to 24 hours, check seals, and refrigerate any unsealed jars. Sealed jars keep on the pantry shelf for 12 to 18 months.

Altitude Adjustments

Processing time depends on your elevation:

  • 0 to 6,000 feet: 10 minutes
  • Above 6,000 feet: 15 minutes

Yield Notes

Here’s what you can expect from this recipe:

  • 1 pound chopped rhubarb + 2 cups water = about 2 cups of strained juice
  • 2 pounds chopped rhubarb + 4 cups water = about 4 cups of strained juice (one batch)
  • 4 cups rhubarb juice + 1 box pectin + 6 cups sugar = about 6 to 7 half-pint (8 oz) jars
  • Don’t double the recipe. Larger batches don’t heat evenly and may not set properly. Make two single batches back-to-back instead.

Storage Options

Not committed to water bath canning? You have several options:

  • Refrigerator jelly: Let jars cool to room temperature, then store in the fridge. Keeps for 3 to 4 weeks.
  • Freezer jelly: Use freezer-safe straight-sided jars and leave 1/2 inch headspace for expansion. Lasts up to 12 months frozen.
  • Canned jelly: Water bath processed jars keep for 12 to 18 months in a cool, dark pantry. This is what I prefer because it means rhubarb jelly in February when the snow is piling up and the garden is months away.

Recipe Tips

  • Trim rhubarb leaves carefully. Rhubarb leaves are toxic and should never be added to jelly, jam, or anything else you’re going to eat. Compost the leaves and use only the stalks.
  • Use a deep pot. Rhubarb jelly foams quite a bit when it reaches a rolling boil. A deep pot prevents overflows.
  • Strain longer for more juice. A 2-hour drip works, but 4 to 6 hours gives you noticeably more juice for the same amount of fruit. Just don’t squeeze the bag.
  • Save the rhubarb pulp. The leftover cooked pulp from the jelly bag is delicious folded into muffin or pancake batter, swirled into yogurt, or stirred into oatmeal. You can also freeze it for smoothies.
  • Be patient with setting. Rhubarb jelly can take 24 to 48 hours to fully set. Some batches may take up to a week. Don’t call it a failure until you’ve given it time. If it’s still not set after that, read through my guide to troubleshooting an unset jelly.

Pectin Options

Standard powdered pectin (this recipe): Requires the full sugar amount in the recipe card. Use Sure-Jell (yellow box) or Ball Classic regular powdered pectin. UK readers can substitute Certo, which is the equivalent regular powdered pectin available there.

Low sugar pectin: Sure-Jell Low Sugar (pink box) or Ball Flex Batch Low Sugar let you reduce sugar significantly, or substitute honey or maple syrup. Follow the directions on the box, since amounts differ from regular pectin.

Pomona’s Universal Pectin: Pomona’s works with any amount of sugar (or none at all). The set is softer, more like Jello. Read how to use Pomona’s Pectin first, since the process is different.

Liquid pectin: Not recommended. Requires more sugar for the same volume of juice and the texture is inconsistent.

Rhubarb Jelly Variations

Rhubarb juice is a flexible base for flavor twists. Once you’ve made the basic recipe, try one of these:

  • Strawberry Rhubarb Jelly: Replace half the rhubarb juice with strawberry juice (extracted the same way as for strawberry jelly). The strawberry sweetens and softens the tartness of the rhubarb, and the color comes out a deep coral pink.
  • Rhubarb Vanilla Jelly: Split a vanilla bean and scrape the seeds into the rhubarb juice before cooking, or stir in pure vanilla extract right after removing the jelly from heat. Vanilla rounds out the tartness beautifully.
  • Rhubarb Ginger Jelly: Add a 2-inch piece of fresh ginger (sliced thin) to the rhubarb while extracting the juice. Strain it out with the pulp. The ginger adds a warm, slightly spicy note that pairs especially well with cheese.
  • Rhubarb Rose Jelly: Steep a small handful of dried rose petals (food-grade, no pesticides) in the hot rhubarb juice for 10 minutes before adding pectin, then strain them out. The rose adds a delicate floral note.
  • Rhubarb Apple Jelly: Replace half the rhubarb juice with fresh-pressed apple cider or apple juice. The apple adds natural sweetness and pectin, so you may get a slightly firmer set.
  • Spiced Rhubarb Jelly: Add a cinnamon stick and 4 to 6 whole cloves to the rhubarb while extracting the juice. Strain them out with the pulp. Lovely for the holiday gift basket.
Canning rhubarb jelly

Ways to Use Rhubarb Jelly

Rhubarb jelly is a kitchen workhorse. Spread it on toast, biscuits, scones, and English muffins, fold it into peanut butter sandwiches, swirl it into plain yogurt or oatmeal, or use it as the filling for thumbprint cookies. It also melts down nicely as a glaze for pork tenderloin or roasted duck, and a spoonful stirred into a glass of seltzer makes a quick rhubarb soda.

For more inspiration, I have a guide to 100+ ways to use up a jar of jam or jelly. And while you’re already in rhubarb-preserving mode, try small batch rhubarb mead, rhubarb upside down cake, or classic strawberry rhubarb pie.

Rhubarb Jelly FAQs

Does rhubarb have pectin?

No, rhubarb has no meaningful natural pectin. Rhubarb is technically a vegetable that’s treated like a fruit, and unlike high-pectin fruits such as apples or crabapples, the stalks contain almost none. To make rhubarb jelly, you need to add commercial pectin (Sure-Jell, Ball Classic, Pomona’s, or Certo). Without it, you’ll just get sweet rhubarb syrup instead of a true gel.

Why didn’t my rhubarb jelly set and how do I fix it?

The most common causes are not boiling long enough after adding sugar (it needs a full rolling boil for exactly 1 minute), adding sugar at the wrong time, doubling the recipe, or using expired pectin. Pectin also takes 24 to 48 hours to fully set, and some batches take up to a week. If still runny after several days, you can reprocess it with additional pectin following the directions on the pectin box.

What’s the difference between rhubarb jelly and rhubarb jam?

Rhubarb jelly is made from strained rhubarb juice, so it’s smooth, seedless, and translucent with no fruit pieces. Rhubarb jam is made from chopped or whole pieces of rhubarb cooked with sugar, so it has fruit texture and is more opaque. Jelly spreads more smoothly and shows off the bright pink color, while jam has more body and a fuller fruit flavor with the rhubarb stringiness still present.

Can I use frozen rhubarb to make rhubarb jelly?

Yes, frozen rhubarb works well for jelly and actually breaks down more easily during juice extraction because freezing damages the cell structure. No need to thaw before cooking; just add an extra few minutes to the simmer time. Use the same weight of frozen rhubarb as the recipe calls for in fresh.

How long does homemade rhubarb jelly last?

Refrigerator jelly keeps for 3 to 4 weeks in a sealed jar. Freezer jelly lasts up to 12 months in freezer-safe containers with adequate headspace. Water bath canned and properly sealed jars keep for 12 to 18 months in a cool, dark pantry. Once a sealed jar is opened, it should be refrigerated and used within 3 to 4 weeks.

Ways to Preserve Rhubarb

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Rhubarb Jelly
4.56 from 49 votes
Servings: 96 servings, 6 half pint (8 oz) jars

Rhubarb Jelly

Homemade rhubarb jelly is a smooth, sweet-tart spring preserve made from the bright juice of fresh rhubarb stalks. Adapted from the Ball Complete Book of Home Preserving, this recipe uses Sure-Jell or Ball Classic powdered pectin for a quick reliable set with no gel-stage testing.
Prep: 2 hours
Cook: 10 minutes
Canning Time: 10 minutes
Total: 2 hours 20 minutes
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Ingredients 

Rhubarb Juice

  • 2 lbs rhubarb, chopped into 1'' pieces, 2 pounds is about 8 cups
  • 4 cups water

For Full Sugar Rhubarb Jelly

  • 4 cups rhubarb juice
  • 6 cups sugar
  • 1 box Powdered Pectin, 1.75 ounces or 6 Tbsp, such as Sure Jel

Instructions 

Extract the Juice

  • Trim the leaves and woody bottom ends from the rhubarb. Chop stalks into 1-inch pieces. Compost the leaves; rhubarb leaves are toxic and should never be used.
  • Place chopped rhubarb in a heavy-bottomed pot with the water. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat, then reduce to a simmer for about 20 minutes, until the rhubarb has completely fallen apart and the liquid has turned bright pink.
  • Transfer the cooked mixture to a dampened jelly bag or a strainer lined with several layers of dampened cheesecloth set over a deep bowl. Let it drip undisturbed for at least 2 hours, or up to 4 to 6 hours for more juice. Don’t squeeze the bag; squeezing clouds the finished jelly. Measure 4 cups of strained juice for the next stage.

Make the Jelly

  • Prepare half-pint canning jars by washing in hot soapy water, rinsing, and keeping warm. Have lids and rings ready.
  • Pour the rhubarb juice into a heavy-bottomed jam pot. Whisk in the powdered pectin until fully dissolved.
  • Bring to a hard rolling boil over high heat, stirring frequently. Add the sugar all at once and stir constantly until fully dissolved. Return to a hard rolling boil that can’t be stirred down, and boil hard for exactly 1 minute.
  • Remove from heat and quickly skim off any foam.

Canning Rhubarb Jelly

  • Ladle the hot jelly into prepared half-pint jars, leaving 1/4 inch headspace. Wipe rims clean and apply two-piece canning lids fingertip tight.
  • Process the filled jars in a boiling water bath canner for 10 minutes (adjust for altitude — see notes).
  • When the timer goes off, turn off the heat and let the jars sit in the canner for another 5 minutes before lifting them out. This helps prevent siphoning.
  • Cool on a towel for 12 to 24 hours, check seals, and refrigerate any unsealed jars. Sealed jars keep on the pantry shelf for 12 to 18 months.

Notes

Yield: About 6 to 7 half-pint (8 oz) jars.
Altitude adjustment: Process 10 minutes at 0 to 6,000 feet, 15 minutes above 6,000 feet.
No lemon juice needed. Rhubarb is naturally acidic (pH 3.1 to 3.3), which is well within the safe range for water bath canning and acidic enough to help the pectin gel reliably.
Don’t double the recipe. Larger batches don’t heat evenly and may not set properly. Make two single batches back-to-back instead.
Don’t squeeze the jelly bag. Squeezing releases solids that cloud the finished jelly and the extra yield isn’t worth it.
Be patient with setting. Pectin can take 24 to 48 hours to fully set, and some batches may take up to a week before declaring failure.
Toxic leaves: Rhubarb leaves contain oxalic acid and are not safe to eat. Always remove the leaves at harvest and compost them. Use only the stalks.
Pectin alternatives: For a low-sugar version, use Sure-Jell Low Sugar (pink box) or Ball Flex Batch Low Sugar with reduced sugar, following the package directions. Pomona’s Universal Pectin works with any sugar level (or honey or maple syrup) but produces a softer set. 
Rhubarb variety affects color: Red-stalked varieties like Crimson Cherry or Canada Red give the deepest pink color. Green-stalked rhubarb still tastes wonderful, but the finished jelly comes out more amber than pink.

Nutrition

Serving: 1Tbsp, Calories: 65kcal, Carbohydrates: 15g, Protein: 0.1g, Fat: 0.1g, Saturated Fat: 0.01g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.02g, Monounsaturated Fat: 0.01g, Sodium: 2mg, Potassium: 43mg, Fiber: 0.2g, Sugar: 14g, Vitamin A: 14IU, Vitamin C: 2mg, Calcium: 10mg, Iron: 0.1mg

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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48 Comments

  1. Jackie says:

    5 stars
    I often mince and freeze my rhubarb for a little taste of summer during colder months, and when I go to use it in recipes I always need to strain it after thawing. So this jelly helps me make great use of what would otherwise be leftovers. Thanks for posting something so simple and clear.

    1. Ashley Adamant says:

      Glad it’s helpful!

  2. Wesley Deutscher says:

    Hi. Wes here. Want to make reduced sugar Rhubarb jelly. Can you lead me though this.

    1. Ashley Adamant says:

      Yes, all you need to do is use a low sugar pectin (like sure jel low sugar in the pink box) and then you can use this same recipe with whatever amount of sugar you want. If you use pomona’s pectin, that also works, but the process is a bit different and you’d follow the instructions on the box for that one.

  3. Cathy Johnson says:

    Can you can or freeze the rhubarb juice for later use?

    1. Ashley Adamant says:

      Yes, you can freeze it to use later. And if you want to can just the juice, here are instructions: https://creativecanning.com/canning-rhubarb-juice/

      The sugar in that recipe is for flavor, not preservation, so you can just preserve it without added sugar.

  4. Maddie Spruell says:

    5 stars
    every recipe I can’t wait to make comes back to you every time

  5. Dee Gee says:

    5 stars
    I love jelly but have always been afraid to make it but this was soooo easy and even better tasting.
    Thank you.

    1. Ashley Adamant says:

      Wonderful!

  6. Mimi says:

    5 stars
    I made this jelly, combining dry pectin and 2 tablespoons of. lemon juice to rhubarb juice, bringing to full boil, then adding sugar. Bring to a full boil for one minute, then put into jars. The jelly set petfectly.

    1. Administrator says:

      Thanks for sharing.

  7. Laurie Greenia says:

    Where in Vermont? I am a native Vermonter, always interested in fellow Vermonters. Anyway…Have you tried Watermelon Jelly? It is AWESOME if you like watermelon the rind pickles are delicious too. Just don’t use too much lemon.. never had anyone try these two that didn’t like them.

    1. Administrator says:

      That sounds very interesting. I haven’t tried watermelon jelly but I may have to add it to the list of things to try.

      1. Jackie says:

        I’ve tried it before. You have to add quite a bit of lemon to make it set, so it comes out tasting like Watermelon jolly ranchers.

  8. Val E says:

    5 stars
    I used this recipe to make blackberry rhubarb jelly and it tastes so good!

    1. Administrator says:

      That sounds really lovely. Thanks for sharing.

  9. Wendy Purdiak says:

    5 stars
    I had 8 cups of rhubarb juice and prepared a as follows:
    8 cups of rhubarb juice
    12 Cups of sugar
    I/3 cup lemon juice
    2 3oz packages of liquid pectin
    I put the juice, liquid pectin and lemon juice and brought to a rapid rolling boil (2-3 ( minutes)
    I then added the sugar and brought to boil for 2 minutes.
    Jelled nicely and is very tasty.
    I mostly followed your recipe except for the petin timing and I added lemon juice.

    1. Administrator says:

      So glad the recipe worked for you. Thanks for sharing.

  10. Martha E says:

    According to recipes in the canning book I rely on, if you’re using pectin powder, you mix it with the fruit (and lemon juice if called for), and bring it to a boil. Then add the sugar, stir and bring it back up to a boil that won’t stir down, let it boil for 1 minute, then take it off the heat. If using liquid pectin, it’s the other way around. Add the sugar to the fruit, bring it to a boil to dissolve the sugar, THEN add the liquid pectin, etc.

    I made this rhubarb jelly using a 1.75 oz. box of Sure Jell powdered pectin and followed the directions in the first part of my comment. It set wonderfully! If you add the sugar and the pectin at the same time, it’s likely not to set. I found that out in my early years of making jam. You might want to revise your recipe to save people disappointment.

    1. Martha E. says:

      5 stars
      P,S.: I let mine boil for 2 minutes just to be on the safe side. This rhubarb jelly is delicious!

    2. Administrator says:

      Thank you so much for sharing your experience. We appreciate it.

  11. Annette says:

    I am wondering if you can make the juice and refrigerate overnight and make the jelly the next day and turn out well?

    1. Administrator says:

      Yes, that should work just fine.

    2. Jackie says:

      I don’t see why not. I refrigerated crab apple juice for a week before finishing the jelly.

  12. Retta B says:

    Please help! First time jelly maker; I made the full sugar recipe last night and my jelly did not set right. It is more like a maple syrup consistency instead of jelly. I followed the directions closely but my rhubarb/water boil only yielded 3 cups of pink liquid. I used 1 box of brand new original sure jell premium fruit pectin mixed in with the sugar. It yielded 5.5 jars for canning. I then boiled the jars for 10 minutes for sealing. Is there anything I can do to doctor this batch to get them to set?

    1. Administrator says:

      You used 4 cups of water along with the rhubarb to make the juice correct?

  13. Nonarae says:

    Mine did not set either. The instructions are not right. Pectin is EXTREMELY touchy. You cannot just say boil 1-2 minutes because with classic pectin that will overcook it. You have to do pectin and 2tbsp lemon juice with the rhubarb juice, bring to a boil for 1 minute, then add sugar and bring to a hard boil again for 1 more minute. Then put in jars and process. If you don’t follow that order then you get syrup rather than jelly.

    1. Administrator says:

      The order is definitely important and depends on the type of pectin being used. When using full sugar pectin, we like to add the pectin into the sugar so that it doesn’t clump. If the gel is poor, it’s possible that the pectin could not be fresh. It’s important to purchase fresh pectin each year.

  14. Patti says:

    5 stars
    I made rhubarb jelly 3 years ago (not your recipe but it was about the same) using Pomoma’s Pectin and within 2 or 3 months the lovely colour was gone and it was a yucky brownish colour. I then did the research on Pomona’s that I should have done BEFORE making the jelly. There is a note in a recipe book I have that has recipes that all use Pomona’s and the fine print cautions you that the colour may change. Threw out all my remaining boxes of Pomona’s. I am looking forward to making jelly this year but with Certo or Berardin. I am a huge rhubarb fan and look forward to trying some of your lovely looking recipes.

    1. Administrator says:

      I was not aware of that. Thank you for sharing.

      1. dalelyn preysa butterfield says:

        I just read that pale colored jellies and jams do change color earlier to brownish shades read an article from national center for food preservation , and I did read that fruit fresh added can help on another site.

    2. dalelyn preysa butterfield says:

      I used certo and the same after a few months the color was gone and a brownish color now. Although not as color wise as pretty the taste is fine and mine eat it anyway. If you find a product that works let me know.

  15. Carolyn says:

    5 stars
    Hi 🙂
    I just made this recipe today using the full amount of sugar and it is very good. I love rhubarb. If you love rhubarb too, my suggestion would be to start with more rhubarb, (I had about 4 lbs prepared), and don’t add nearly as much water. I start with about a cup of water, the rhubarb begins to break down quickly and adds plenty of juice to the pot. I ended up with about 5 cups of liquid, so I gently boiled it down until I had 4 cups of more concentrated juice, thus giving me much more flavorful jelly! I ended up with 7 half-pints of jelly.
    Thank you for all your great ideas; I can’t wait to try Dandelion jelly next spring… might as well do something positive with the nasty little monsters.

  16. jackie truman says:

    I love your postings! Thank you for sharing your knowledge and time. I made your recipe for Dandelion Jelly and WOW! It’s like sweet heaven in a jar. I have never tried anything dandelion before and this jelly is a definite yearly must do! I made syrup this morning but I’m not confident it’s going to be heavy enough. If not, I’ll just use it in oatmeal instead of water and recipes to add a bit of sunshine. Next week I’m going to try rhubarb jelly. I used to make rhubarb strawberry sauce but it’s been 15 yrs since. I have made so many of your recipes and always share with friends. Do you have a recipe for rhubarb syrup also? Again, THANK YOU,
    Jackie

    1. Administrator says:

      If you’re wanting to make a syrup, I would just start it off using the same directions as the jelly to extract the juice and then finish it off like a syrup.

  17. dalelyn butters says:

    a question. We bought a home and It came with a huge rhubarb plant over 40 pounds this year. Happy plant!. I froze alot of it and in taking it out of the freezer and thawing it I got a ton of juice. Can I make jelly from that juice that was rendered through freezing?

    1. Ashley Adamant says:

      Yup! That’d work wonderfully since this recipe has added boxed pectin. Freezing reduces the pectin in fruit juices, so you can’t make pectin-free jellies out of frozen juice (blackberry jelly for example, that has enough pectin to make into a jelly without adding the boxed stuff.) Since rhubarb doesn’t really have pectin to speak of, making a jelly without added pectin isn’t even an option, and I’ll turn out the same using frozen v. fresh juice.

      1. dalelyn b says:

        Thanks I just love rhubarb and wanted to try jelly, I did try jam and it was not runny but not jam either so we ate it any way. And it took alot to freeze as I just really want to drink it. So now I will save a bit more then give it a go and let you know the results. Thanks again

  18. Rebecca says:

    Hi, I didn’t have quite the two pounds of rhubarb and then yielded only two cups of liquid after five hours. What kind of liquid should be added to make four cups? Thanks so much!
    Rebecca

    1. Administrator says:

      Hi Rebecca. I think rather than trying to add some other kind of liquid to make the 4 cups I would just cut the recipe in half.

  19. Amber says:

    If i end up with 6 cups of liquid can i make a batch and a half? Or will it mess it all up?
    Thank you
    Amber

    1. Ashley Adamant says:

      Yup, you can make a batch and a half if you add the propper amount of pectin, etc. You should be able to double this recipe without issue, but I wouldn’t go bigger than that.

      1. Marlene Porter says:

        Help mine has not set I’m very disappointed

        1. Administrator says:

          Can you tell me exactly which recipe you used and whether or not you made any changes?

  20. Marilyn whitewood says:

    5 stars
    Loved these recipes! Not your usual spring recipes! Going to try dandelion jelly and rhubarb jelly!!
    So happy to come across your post and I’m happy to follow you!! Your lifestyle is a great way to live !!

    1. Kathy says:

      My jelly did not set… so I unsealed and added another pectin brought back to rolling boil for 2 minutes processed for 10 minutes jars sealed but jelly had not set

      1. Marlene Porter says:

        Mine did not either very disappointed
        Did you manage to ever get it to set?