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I made a recipe for strawberry preserves and used the six cups of fruit called for and reduced sugar from 4.5 cup to 3 cups. I added 2 tbs bottled lemon juice and used a packet of low sugar pectin. Cooked it for time that jam recipes with pectin call for. I put the hot mixture in washed clean jars and left to cool on counter.

When I came to put them in fridge I saw the jars had sealed on their own, so I put them in fridge.

I’ve looked at different places, Newell says not to change recipe, Google says maybe, maybe not worry about botulism. I just don’t know if I should toss these out. I didn’t can them in a water bath, just made it a refrigerator jam. Thank you for help

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  • It's called botulism. When making jam, you normally seal the jars while they are hot. If you didn't, I would suggest that mould was more of a risk than botulism. Commented Feb 13 at 17:39
  • @KateBunting of the jars are sealed, this implies the asker put the lids on while hot. Commented Feb 13 at 17:41
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    @Stephie - The question is a bit incoherent! Commented Feb 13 at 17:43
  • "Google says maybe, maybe not worry about botulism" do you mean results from a Google search or Google's "PVA glue will keep the cheese from sliding of your pizza" Gemini? Commented Feb 19 at 3:13

2 Answers 2

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If you have handled it as for refrigerator jam (since that was what you were making) i.e. cooled and then refrigerated, without waiting more than several hours it should be fine, whether or not the jars sealed.

Just keep it in the fridge, as it is refrigerator jam and has not been processed to be shelf-stable for room temperature storage.

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No — botulism is not a realistic concern for typical refrigerator jam.

Clostridium botulinum can only produce toxin under a specific set of conditions:

  • Low acidity (pH above ~4.6)
  • Anaerobic (low-oxygen) environment
  • Available moisture
  • Temperatures that allow bacterial growth

Fruit jams do not meet those conditions.

Most fruits used for jam are naturally acidic, typically around pH 2.8–3.8. That is well below the ~4.6 pH threshold required for C. botulinum toxin production. Many recipes also add lemon juice, which further lowers the pH.

In addition, traditional jams contain a high concentration of sugar. This reduces water activity, which makes the environment even less favorable for bacterial growth. Storing the jam in the refrigerator adds another barrier by slowing microbial activity.

Because of these multiple hurdles — high acidity, high sugar content, and refrigeration — botulism is extremely unlikely in fruit-based refrigerator jams.

The more realistic issue with refrigerator jam is simple spoilage, such as mold or yeast growth over time. Using clean utensils, keeping the jar refrigerated, and consuming it within a few weeks are the usual precautions.

Botulism concerns in home preservation are primarily associated with improperly canned low-acid foods stored at room temperature (for example vegetables, meats, or garlic in oil), not acidic fruit preserves kept in the refrigerator.

pH scale showing fruit jam (pH ~3–3.5) well below the botulism threshold of pH 4.6

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  • The chart in figure is wrong: pH 7 is listed twice, the botulism risk line at pH 4.6 is placed at pH 7, the 4.6 line is placed between 6 and 7 and the fruit jam between 4 and 6 when it's labeled as 3-3.5. Commented Mar 12 at 12:20

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