Green Tomato Raspberry Jam Recipe

Preserves & Canning

Green Tomato Raspberry Jam No Added Pectin

Quick Answer Green tomato raspberry jam is an end-of-season preserve made from unripe tomatoes, raspberries, sugar, and lemon juice. Green tomatoes are naturally high in pectin and acid, so the jam sets without commercial pectin, while the raspberries supply the perfume and deep ruby color tomatoes lack.

Every gardener ends up with a bowl of hard green tomatoes when the first frost is coming. This jam is what that bowl is for. Cooked with sugar, lemon, and a heap of raspberries, they turn into something that tastes like a bright, slightly wild berry preserve. Nobody guesses what is in it.

About 90 minutes of active work  |  Makes 6 half-pint jars  |  One heavy pot

Prep Time
30 min
Cook Time
60 min
Total Time
1 hr 30 min
Half-Pints
6
Intermediate Vegan Gluten-Free About 45 cal / tablespoon
Half-pint jars of ruby-red green tomato raspberry jam with fresh raspberries and green tomatoes
Green tomato raspberry jam sets to a soft, spreadable ruby without any added pectin.

Why Green Tomato Raspberry Jam Works

A jam sets when pectin, acid, and sugar reach the right balance at the right temperature. Most fruit fails on at least one of those, which is why so many recipes reach for a box of commercial pectin. Green tomatoes fail on none of them. Pectin peaks in unripe fruit and drops as it ripens and softens, and green tomatoes are more acidic than red ones. That combination is the whole reason this old preserve exists.

What green tomatoes do not have is flavor worth building a jam around. On their own they cook down into something pale, vegetal, and faintly sour. Raspberries fix that. They bring the aroma, the color, and enough of their own tartness to make the finished jam read as a berry preserve rather than a novelty. The tomatoes become texture and structure instead of flavor, leaving a soft-set jam flecked with tiny bits of skin that most people mistake for seeds.

Why the lemon juice is not optional: It does two jobs. It pushes the pH low enough that pectin molecules stop repelling each other and link into a gel, and it keeps the batch safely acidic if you plan to water-bath can it. Use bottled lemon juice for canned jam, since its acidity is standardized and a fresh lemon’s is not.

Ingredients

Adjust yield above to rescale · Makes 6 half-pints

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    Ingredient Notes & Substitutions

    Green Tomatoes

    Use fully unripe tomatoes that are hard and solid green, not ones blushing pink. The blushing ones have already started losing pectin. Any variety works. Core them and cut out any tough white center, but leave the skins on; they soften completely and carry pectin.

    Raspberries

    Fresh or frozen both work, and frozen are often better value out of season. If using frozen, do not thaw first; add them straight to the pot and expect an extra five minutes of cooking to drive off the extra water.

    Sugar

    Plain granulated sugar. Sugar is not just sweetness here; it binds water so the pectin can link up, and it is what makes the jam keep. Cutting it back significantly will give you a loose syrup and a much shorter fridge life.

    Lemon Juice

    Bottled lemon juice if you are canning, fresh if the jam is going straight to the fridge. The zest is optional but adds a clean edge that keeps the sweetness from going flat. Do not swap in vinegar; you will taste it.

    Equipment

    • Wide heavy-bottomed pot
    • Candy or instant-read thermometer
    • Chilled saucers for testing
    • Six half-pint jars and lids
    • Wide funnel and ladle
    • Long-handled skimming spoon

    Before You Start

    1. Chill two saucers in the freezer. You will need a cold surface to test the set on, and you want it ready before the jam is close, not after.

    2. Plan the maceration. The chopped tomatoes and sugar need at least four hours together, and overnight in the fridge is easier. Sugar pulls juice out of the fruit by osmosis, so you start with liquid already in the pot instead of scorching dry fruit, and the pieces hold their shape better through the long cook.

    3. Decide fridge or canned now. If you are canning, wash and sterilize your jars while the jam cooks so they are hot when you fill them. If this is refrigerator jam, clean jars are enough.

    Step-by-Step Instructions

    1

    Chop and Macerate

    Core the green tomatoes and chop them into roughly quarter-inch pieces. Small pieces release pectin faster and break down evenly. Toss them in the pot with the sugar, lemon juice, and zest, stir, cover, and refrigerate at least 4 hours or overnight. You will come back to an inch of pale syrup in the bottom and the sugar mostly dissolved.

    2

    Bring It Up to a Boil

    Set the pot over medium heat and stir until any remaining sugar granules dissolve. Do not let it boil before the sugar is gone, or you risk a grainy jam. Add the raspberries and the pinch of salt, raise the heat, and bring it to a full boil that keeps rolling when you stir it. The raspberries collapse almost immediately and the whole pot turns from murky green to red.

    Green tomatoes and raspberries boiling together and turning deep red in a heavy pot
    The raspberries take over the color within a minute of hitting the boil.
    3

    Skim the Foam

    A pale pink foam builds up around the edges in the first ten minutes. Skim it off and discard it. It is only trapped air and protein, so it is harmless, but leaving it in gives you cloudy jam and a greyish, bubbly surface in the jar. Stirring in the optional half teaspoon of butter now cuts the foam down sharply if you would rather not stand there skimming.

    4

    Cook to the Setting Point

    Keep it at a steady boil, stirring often as it thickens so the bottom does not catch. Expect 35 to 45 minutes. The sound changes as you get close: the rapid splashy boil turns into slower, heavier plops. The bubbles get bigger and glossier. Your thermometer should read 220F at sea level, which is the temperature where the sugar concentration is right for a set.

    Green tomato raspberry jam boiling hard with a candy thermometer clipped to the pot
    Big, slow, glossy bubbles and a heavier sound mean you are near the setting point.
    5

    Test It, Do Not Trust the Clock

    The clock lies, because your tomatoes, your pot, and your stove are not the ones the recipe was written on. Test instead. Pull the pot off the heat, drop a teaspoon of jam onto a frozen saucer, wait 60 seconds, then push it with your fingertip. If the surface wrinkles and holds the furrow, it is done. If it floods back, boil 5 more minutes and test again on the second saucer. A second check: lift the spoon and let the jam run off. Ready jam sheets off in a single curtain instead of dripping in separate drops.

    6

    Jar It and Store It

    Let the jam sit 5 minutes off the heat and stir once so the fruit distributes instead of floating to the top. Ladle into jars through a funnel. For refrigerator jam, leave half an inch of space, cool uncovered, then lid and refrigerate. For canning, see the section below and follow it exactly.

    Hot green tomato raspberry jam being ladled through a funnel into a half-pint jar
    Rest the jam 5 minutes and stir once so fruit does not float to the top of the jar.

    Chef’s Tips From Real Kitchen Testing

    1

    Use the widest pot you own. Jam thickens by evaporation, and surface area does that work. A narrow deep pot can add twenty minutes and gives the sugar more chance to scorch.

    2

    Adjust the target temperature for altitude. Subtract about 1F from 220F for every 500 feet above sea level. At 3,000 feet you are aiming for roughly 214F, and cooking to 220F there will give you a stiff, overcooked jam.

    3

    Under-set is fixable, over-set is not. If in doubt, stop early. Loose jam can be poured back and boiled another few minutes the next day; jam boiled into candy cannot be walked back.

    Recipe Variations

    Serving Suggestions

    • Toast with salted butter, the classic test
    • Spooned over thick plain yogurt
    • On a cheese board with sharp cheddar or goat cheese
    • Warmed and brushed on roast pork or duck

    Nutrition Facts

    45
    Calories
    0.1g
    Protein
    11g
    Carbs
    0.1g
    Fat
    0.1g
    Sat Fat
    0.4g
    Fiber
    10g
    Sugar
    6mg
    Sodium

    Values are estimates per 1 tablespoon serving and vary with the final thickness of your batch.

    Make-Ahead Tips

    The maceration is the make-ahead step and the one worth planning around. Chop the tomatoes, mix them with the sugar and lemon, and refrigerate up to 24 hours before you cook. Beyond that they soften too much and the finished jam loses its texture. The jam itself also improves after a few days in the jar, as the flavor rounds out and the set firms slightly while the pectin network finishes forming.

    Storage, Canning & Shelf Life

    Refrigerator
    The simplest and safest option. Cool the jars uncovered, lid them, and refrigerate. Use within 3 to 4 weeks.
    Freezer
    Up to 12 months in freezer-safe jars. Leave an inch of headspace for expansion. Thaw in the fridge.
    Water Bath
    For shelf storage, use sterilized jars and new lids. Fill hot jam to a 1/4 inch headspace, wipe the rims clean, and tighten the bands to fingertip-tight only. Process in a full rolling boil with at least an inch of water over the jar tops for 10 minutes, adding time for altitude per your local extension guidance.
    Sealing
    Remove the jars and leave them undisturbed for 24 hours, then check every seal. A sealed lid is concave and does not flex when pressed. Refrigerate any jar that did not seal and use it within 3 to 4 weeks. Sealed jars keep well for about a year in a cool dark place.

    Never do this: Do not invert jars to force a seal, do not process in an oven, and do not use paraffin wax. These are legacy methods that produce weak or false seals and are no longer considered safe. A water bath is the only home method that belongs here.

    Common Mistakes to Avoid

    ×Skipping the maceration. Dry fruit and dry sugar in a hot pot means scorched sugar before any juice appears.
    ×Cooking to a timer. Every batch of tomatoes holds a different amount of water. The saucer test is the only honest answer.
    ×Cutting the sugar to make it healthier. Sugar is doing structural work here. Halve it and you get syrup that spoils fast.
    ×Screwing the bands down hard before processing. Air has to escape during the boil. Overtightened bands buckle lids and cause failed seals.

    Troubleshooting

    Jam did not set? Give it a full 48 hours in the jar first, since pectin keeps setting as it cools. If it is still loose, pour it back, add 2 tablespoons of lemon juice, and boil hard 5 to 10 minutes more, testing on a cold saucer.

    Too stiff or rubbery? It went past the setting point. Warm the jar gently in a pan of water and stir in a spoonful of hot water to loosen it.

    Fruit floating at the top? You jarred it too hot. Next time rest the jam 5 minutes and stir before ladling.

    Tastes flat or too sweet? It needs acid, not less sugar. A tablespoon of lemon juice stirred in sharpens everything.

    Where This Preserve Comes From

    Green tomato preserves show up across American and British farm cookery for one plain reason: frost. Tomatoes that will not ripen are not a delicacy, they are a deadline. Pairing them with a strongly flavored berry was the standard trick, because the tomato supplied the set and the berry supplied the identity. Our guide to canning crushed tomatoes covers the same water-bath process for the ripe half of your harvest.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Not really. The raspberries dominate the flavor and color completely. What the tomatoes contribute is body, a soft chewy texture, and a faint background tartness that keeps the jam from tasting like straight berry sugar.
    No. Green tomatoes are unripe fruit, and unripe fruit is where pectin is most concentrated. Combined with the lemon juice and sugar, there is more than enough to set the batch on its own.
    You can, but expect a softer set. Ripening breaks pectin down into forms that gel poorly. If half your batch is blushing, plan on a looser jam or a longer boil.
    Use two signals. The thermometer should read 220F at sea level, less at altitude. Then drop a spoonful on a frozen saucer, wait a minute, and push it. If it wrinkles and holds the line your finger draws, it is set.
    Refrigerator jam keeps 3 to 4 weeks. Frozen, up to 12 months. Properly water-bath canned and sealed, about a year in a cool dark cupboard, and it should go in the fridge once opened.
    Almost always unskimmed foam. Skim it in the first ten minutes of boiling, or stir in half a teaspoon of butter early to break the foam before it forms.

    Culinary Reviewer: Ghazala Shakeel

    Last updated: [mc_modified_date]

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    Urooj Mukhtar is a classically trained chef and food blogger at TomatoAnswers.com, creating healthy, seasonal, plant-based recipes that put tomatoes at the center of the plate. She focuses on making nutritious, flavour-forward home cooking both accessible and delicious.

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