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Victoria Plum Jam

Victoria Plum

While this recipe was originally devised for Victoria plums, its balance of sugar, pectin, and acidity means it works beautifully with most plum varieties you’ll find in Europe. By adjusting the pectin and lemon juice slightly depending on the natural pectin and acidity of your chosen plums, you can achieve the same reliably firm set every time.

Below is a quick reference table for common plum varieties available in Europe, their typical pectin content, and how you might adjust the recipe for best results.

For clarity the weight of the fruit is the weight after it has been stoned.

 

Plum Variety Common Colour Natural Pectin Suggested Pectin (g/kg) Lemon Juice (ml/kg)
Victoria Red/purple skin, golden flesh Moderate 15 35
Greengage (Reine Claude) Green skin, green/golden flesh Moderate–High 13 33
Damson Dark purple skin, yellow/green flesh High 12 28
Mirabelle Yellow skin, golden flesh Moderate 15 33
Opal Reddish skin, yellow flesh Moderate–Low 16 38
Stanley Purple skin, yellow flesh Moderate 15 33
Japanese-type (e.g., Santa Rosa) Red to deep purple, amber/red flesh Low 17 40

* Adjust pectin amount based on stoned fruit weight.
** Lemon juice amount based on stoned fruit weight; 1 medium lemon yields ~30 ml juice.

How to use the table

  • High pectin plums ike damsons may need slightly less added powdered pectin for a softer set.
  • Low pectin plums like Japanese varieties benefit from a little extra powdered pectin and lemon juice.
  • The lemon juice amount ensures the right acidity for pectin activation and adds a bright note to the jam’s flavour.

 

Plums

Plum Jam

Ingredients
  

  • 2 Kg Victoria plums, stoned and halved The weight of the fruit is the weight after it has been stoned
  • 1.5 Kg granulated sugar
  • 30 g powdered pectin
  • 70 g lemon juice

Instructions
 

  • Sterilise 12 × 250 ml jars and their lids by boiling for 10 minutes or heating in an oven at 140 °C. Keep hot until ready to fill.
  • Whisk together sugar and pectin in a bowl,
  • In a preserving pan, combine plums and lemon juice. Add 75–100 ml water if fruit is very firm. Simmer gently for 12–15 min until starting to break down.
  • Remove pan from heat, stir in sugar–pectin mixture until dissolved.
  • Bring to a vigorous rolling boil and hold 1–2 min, or until jam reaches 105 °C / passes plate test.
  • For a firmer jam, remove from heat and let the jam cool for 10–15 minutes. Then return to the heat and boil again for about 2 minutes to lock in a firmer texture.
  • Skim any foam, ladle jam into the hot jars leaving about 5 mm headspace, and seal with lids.
  • Place jars into a large pot of boiling water, ensuring they are submerged by at least 2–3 cm. Once the water returns to a full boil, process for 10 minutes.

Plum Jam Calculator

Enter the weight of stoned plums (kg) and choose a variety. This follows your firm-set base: sugar = 0.75 × fruit, pectin ≈ 15 g/kg, lemon ≈ 35 ml/kg, with variety-specific tweaks.

Results will appear here.
Notes: Pectin and lemon are shown with variety-appropriate adjustments. Jar estimate is conservative: we scale from 12 × 250 ml jars at 2.6 kg fruit (then round up). Consider sterilising one extra jar, just in case.
CategoriesJam Recipe