French Date Jam Recipe

French Date Jam Recipe


Make French date jam with just three ingredients! An easy recipe using traditional methods, perfect for beginner home jam makers.

Total Time: 13 hours
Prep Time: 35 minutes
Cook Time: 25 minutes
Macerating Time: 12 hours

RECIPE

French Date Jam Recipe

French-style date jam is one of the easiest jams to make, and it only takes three ingredients.

I follow my families classic French jam-making method, and it turns out perfect every time.

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TL;DR

Dates are most commonly sold dried, and therefore they are dehydrated fruits.

Therefore, unlike the conventional method to turning fruits into a jam, we leave the fruits to macerate with sugar, water, and lemon overnight.

Normally, we don’t add water to jams because water reduces the shelf-life of a preserve. The exception are dried fruits such as dates, raisins, and apricots.

The idea is to soften the dates and to help bring out all the flavors when they are cooked down to a jam.

By the way, quality dates are a must if you want a tasty date jam!

Cut dates look like candy
Cut dates look like candy

Ingredient Notes

  • DatesMedjool dates are sweeter than other and have more flesh, but technically, you can use any date variety. Just make sure the dates are not too old or of poor quality. I use Safawi dates mixed with Medjool in the pictures.
  • Sugar — Plain sugar.
  • Water
  • Lime or Lemon Juice — Fresh, always. I used a lesser-known calamansi lime variety in the pictures (it’s orange on the inside) which has some fruity floral notes.

Tip: To get great dates, purchase your dates at the duty-free, if you fly a lot and end up transiting in one of the Arab countries. The ones that I used in the pictures are from the Doha International airport.

Process Overview

Step 1

Cut open your dates and discard the seed.

Slice your dates and weigh them. Juice your lemon/lime.

Step 2

Add to your sliced dates the sugar, water and freshly squeezed lime or lemon juice, as well as the squeezed out lemon/lime halves.

Mix everything well and leave to macerate overnight.

Step 3

The next day, heat your jam cooking pan and bring your dates to a rolling boil.

Keep on a lower heat setting and stir frequently. Cook for about 20 minutes.

Step 4

Take out the lemon halves and discard. Blend the jam to your desired consistency.

Step 5

Test if the jam is set with a thermometer (The setting temperature is 220 Fahrenheit/105 Celsius) and/or by dropping hot jam on an ice-cold plate.

The jam is set if it doesn’t run on the plate, and if it’s not set, continue cooking down (but date jam always turns out thick).

test if jam is set

Step 6

Pour jam into clean jars. Close jars tight, turn upside down to create a vacuum, and turn them back up when the jar is lukewarm.

lemon date jam

📖 Recipe

French Date Jam Recipe

French Date Jam Recipe

Make French date jam with just three ingredients! An easy recipe using traditional methods, perfect for beginner home jam makers.

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Course: Breakfast, DIY

Cuisine: French

Prep Time: 35 minutes

Cook Time: 25 minutes

Macerating Time: 12 hours

Total Time: 13 hours

Servings: 4 8 oz/230 ml jars

Calories: 815kcal

Instructions

  • Cut open your dates and take out the seeds. Discard the seeds. Slice each date into smaller chunks and weigh them.

    4 cups Dates

  • Cut open lemon or lime, squeeze and collect the juice. Keep the lemon halves, you will need them.

    2 Lemon

  • Place sliced dates, lemon/lime juice, water, and sugar into a large jam cooking pan. Mix it all well.

    4 cups Dates, 2 cups Sugar, 2 cups Water, 2 Lemon

  • Leave to macerate (infuse) for about 12 hours or overnight so that the dates soften and infused with the lime and sugar.

  • The next day, take the heat to your stove top and keep over a medium heat setting until you get to a rolling boil.

  • Reduce the heat and keep over a lower heat setting to cook down the date jam. This takes about 20 minutes, and you will need to stir frequently so that nothing sticks to the bottom of the jam pan. The jam is done when it appears shiny and the fruits are cooked, sticky and thick.

  • Take your pan from the heat and remove the lemon halves to discard them.

  • Blend your jam with a hand blender to the desired consistency. It can be smooth or chunky, you get to decide.

  • Do a final test to see if the jam is set with a thermometer or with an ice-cold plate. In general, date jam will turn out thicker, so you won’t really have to worry that much about the setting of the jam (setting = shelf life). The thermometer setting temperature is 220 Fahrenheit/105 Celsius and for the ice-cold plate, drop some hot jam on it and the jam will cool instantly, revealing its true consistency. Move around the plate, if it doesn’t run, it’s set. You can do both tests or either one.

  • Pack set jam into sterilized clean jam jars and fill up to the top. Close the jar with a lid and turn the hot jar upside down to create a vacuum in the jar (increases shelf life). Clean jars with you made a mess. The jars can be turned back upright once the jars are not that hot anymore.

Notes

800 grams or 4 cups compressed dates = 28.2 oz.
Makes about 4×8oz/230 ml jam jars.
Tip: In France, we pour a few drops of some liquor into the lid to kill remaining bacteria. This is optional, and you can use rum or vodka or distilled schnapps. The alcohol is then poured away, or you can drop it over your jam if you like.

Nutrition

Nutrition Facts

French Date Jam Recipe

Amount Per Serving (230 g)

Calories 815
Calories from Fat 9

% Daily Value*

Fat 1g2%

Saturated Fat 0.1g1%

Polyunsaturated Fat 0.1g

Monounsaturated Fat 0.1g

Sodium 11mg0%

Potassium 1041mg30%

Carbohydrates 215g72%

Fiber 13g52%

Sugar 194g216%

Protein 4g8%

Vitamin A 27IU1%

Vitamin C 29mg35%

Calcium 76mg8%

Iron 2mg11%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Tips

  • In France, our jams are cooked in a large copper jam pan. Copper is a better heat transmitter, and the jams will cook better in it. Alternatively, we also use large stainless-steel pots.
  • Drop hot jam on a cold plate to test the setting. Keep a small quarter plate in your freezer before you start cooking your jam. If the jam is not running on the plate, it is ready, and you can put it in your jars.
  • Alternatively, the safest way to test your jam setting is with a candy thermometer. The setting temperature is 105 Celsius/220 Fahrenheit.
  • Use only clean jars. The best is to sterilize your jars and lids. This is important so that your French jam will last longer. Jam jars and lids can be sterilized by washing them in a high heat setting in your dishwasher, by boiling them in hot water or by heating them in the oven on a rack.
  • If you follow this recipe precisely and work in a clean environment, and store your jam in a dry, cool place away from direct sunlight, your date jam will last at least 10–12 months.
  • The shelf life will be greatly reduced if you change the ingredient quantities. Sugar is a main ingredient in preserving your jam and helps in preserving it.
  • If you skip adding sugar to your jam, eat your jam within days and in that case, reduce the quantity considerably.
Date Jam

Serving

In Europe, we enjoy our homemade jams slathered over a slice of bread for breakfast, or we drop some jam in yogurt.

This date jam is special because it can be used with all savory appetizers. For example, serve it up with a spice log of goat cheese or with your cheese board.

We like to offer jams and chutneys at cookouts with grilled meats or with pan-fried meats and seafood. This date jam is a great addition.

Jams are also used in cakes and pastries. This is a thicker jam, so think chewy bars and protein balls.

I haven’t tried it myself yet, but you can add a dollop of this date jam to your cooked oatmeal or porridge. I think it would taste wonderfully with Tibetan Tsampa porridge or Norwegian rice porridge.

Storing

Store your unopened date jam jars on a pantry shelf away from direct sunlight and humidity.

They are good for 10–12 months (as per the French jam making method, without a water bath).

You can do the FDA approved canning recommendations, by water bath canning your jam after you are done filling them with the date jam. This can add another layer of protection to your jam and it will extend the shelf-life.

If you live in a humid, hot environment, keep the jars in an Air conditioned environment all the time or keep them in your refrigerator.

Once you open the jar, always store in the fridge. Never double dip as this can cause mold growth and this habit is unhygienic.

French Date Jam Recipe pin picture



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