However...
When I picked up a jar and tipped it a little, the "jelly" slopped to one side. Like a liquid.
What the what???
It's not like apple jelly is difficult to make or anything like that. I mean, apples are packed FULL of pectin, which you usually have to add to get jams and jellies to set nicely. I always add pectin, just to be absolutely sure it jells (hence the trademarked name "Sure-Jell" for powdered pectin), but you can easily make apple jelly without adding pectin. So what went wrong? No clue at this point.
What do you do with apple jelly that didn't set? I guess you could use it for syrup, but would you? I sure wouldn't! HA! I know sometimes jams don't set up right away (I've had that happen) and if you let them just sit a couple of weeks or so, they will eventually set enough to pass for jam. Orange marmalade is like that, and you expect it. But jelly isn't supposed to be soft like jam; it's supposed to hold its shape sort of like molded gelatin.
If you've looked at the picture closely, you will have noticed that the date on the label is 3/14/2021 - definitely NOT December, and no, I didn't throw it all out and start over. In fact, all those jars sat on the kitchen table that whole time, while I hoped they'd firm up. No dice. So...
I reworked the jelly!
Inside the Sure-Jell™ package is a sheet of instructions and recipes for jams and jellies. I've made jam or jelly often enough (I THOUGHT) that I knew the ropes well enough. Well...hmmmm. I'd stopped reading ALL the directions. Not a good thing when you're dealing with something finicky like jelly.
You're supposed to:
- make your juice - check
- measure the juice exactly per the recipe - check
- use only pure cane sugar, such as Domino or G&H - WHOOPS!!!
I had used plain old store-brand generic SUGAR. Look at the ingredients: "SUGAR" - no "cane" in there anywhere, which means it's probably beet sugar or a blend of beet and cane sugar. There's nothing wrong with beet sugar for cooking or baking, but if you want your jelly or jam to set up correctly, pure cane sugar is the way to go.
The instructions are right there in the Sure-Jell™ package, so I won't go into all that. But the "jelly" came out of the jars as mostly syrupy liquid with some partially-jelled lumps of different sizes. You're supposed to do a small test batch to see whether it's worth your time to rework all the jelly that didn't set up. I did, it did, and so I went ahead with the full batch.
And...it worked! I went out and bought a bag of Domino Pure Cane Sugar and used it for the test and the full batch. It really did make a difference. The reworked batch isn't quite as firm as it could be, but it's definitely JELLY now, and totally acceptable.
So I've learned my lesson (the hard way): When making jelly, DON'T BUY CHEAP SUGAR!
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