Nutrition, Family and Consumer Sciences
University of California
Nutrition, Family and Consumer Sciences

Pectin is not gelatin

If you only have time to read this much: pectin is vegan-friendly.

I was having lunch at an outdoor venue with a lovely vegetarian friend. When we got around to all things canning, I told her how excited I was to try a sugar-free jam recipe using a particular pectin. "I cannot eat jams with pectin. I'm vegetarian," she mentioned. I was shocked. Having a smartphone, I immediately looked up the pectin in question. It's 100% plant-based. I showed her the ingredients, and she was surprised. She thought pectin and gelatin were similar and not vegetarian- or vegan-friendly. If my lovely, smart vegetarian friend was confused by pectin, I suspected others are, too.

Pectin is a thread-like vegetable-based carbohydrate that, when cooked, creates a cross-bond to form a gel. We endorse no products in the UC Master Food Preserver program, so the pectin brand I'm about to reference is for information only.

The pectin I looked up was Pomona's Universal Pectin®. According to their website, it is 100% citrus pectin. The pectin is extracted from the dried peel of lemon, lime and orange after the fruit has been juiced and the oil has been pressed out of the peel. The product is vegan, gluten-free and GMO-free. This particular brand of pectin is set using calcium water; instructions are included in the package. With Sure-Jell Powdered Pectin® and Ball Powdered Pectin®, the ingredients are dextrose, citric acid (assists gel) and fruit pectin.

Pectin gels jams and jellies quickly, saving cooking time at the stove, and helping keep a fresh fruit flavor. Photo credit: Maureen Ladley

Commercially packaged pectin comes in liquid or powdered form. Each type has particular uses and cannot be substituted for each other. Recipes typically call out what type of pectin to use and how to use it. Here is an example of a jam using powdered pectin from the UC ANR (University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources) Recipe Library

Strawberry Jam, using powdered pectin: https://ucanr.edu/sites/camasterfoodpreservers/files/334998.pdf 

Making strawberry jam with pectin helps preserve the bright color. Photo credit: National Center for Home Food Preservation
Do you have questions about pectin or food preservation? You can find your local county program at http://mfp.ucanr.edu/Contact/Find_a_Program/, and send in your questions. You can also submit a question to the statewide UC Master Food Preserver office.

If Solano/Yolo is your local county, contact us online by following this link: https://surveys.ucanr.edu/survey.cfm?surveynumber=30140.

Happy canning!

For more information about the UC Master Food Preserver Program, including the Food Preservation Video Library, visit mfp.ucanr.edu.

Posted on Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 1:52 PM
  • Author: Maureen Ladley, UC Master Food Preserver of Solano/Yolo Counties
Tags: jam (4), jelly (2), pectin (1), Strawberries (24), vegan (1), vegetarian (1)
Focus Area Tags: Food

Comments:

1.
I am allergic to gelatin. What kind of pepkin can i use to thicken cranberry sauce? Thank yiu

Posted by Ginny on November 27, 2023 at 9:18 AM

2.
Per the author, Cranberries are high in pectin, as are orange peels that can sometimes be called for in the recipe. You may not need to add a thickener. If you find you need to add a thickening agent to a cranberry sauce recipe, you can choose from either the liquid or powdered form of pectin, depending upon what's best suited to your recipe. Liquid pectin is added to hot, cooked fruit and sugar mixtures, then the mixture is brought to a boil. The powdered kind is mixed with unheated fruit, which is then heated to boiling, with sugar added only after the pectin dissolves.  
 
Best of luck with your cranberry sauce, and let us know how it turns out.

Posted by Sue Mosbacher on November 27, 2023 at 10:16 PM

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