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30+ Strawberry Canning Recipes

 

Strawberry season catches me off guard every single year.  I’ve waited through a long northern winter, and then it feels like I’m buried in fruit out of nowhere when the strawberries finally ripen. 

While jam is delicious, sometimes you want other options.

I’ve put together a list of all the ways you can preserve strawberries in a canning jar, from versatile plain canned strawberries that are delicious right out of the jar, all the way through drinks like strawberry lemonade, and even a few unique recipes for pickled strawberries and strawberry chutney.


Canning Strawberries in Syrup

One of the benefits of canning plain strawberries is that you can decide later what you want to do with them. It’s a great way to put up a large number of strawberries and still have the freedom to turn them into pies, jams, syrups, and so much more.


If you have children, they will probably love them straight from the jar, and they’re perfect topping shortcakes for a quick dessert. Either way, plain strawberries are a wonderful treat all year long.


Strawberry Pie Filling

Canning strawberry pie filling is one of those “do it once and you’ll be hooked” pantry projects, because it turns peak-season berries into an instant dessert. The berries stay suspended in a glossy, lightly thickened syrup, so you get that classic pie-filling texture without having to cook the fruit to death. When I’m short on time, I love having a few jars ready for quick pies, crisps, cobblers, and even spooning over cheesecake or pancakes.

The key is using a tested pie-filling method (this isn’t the place to wing it), since home-canned pie fillings need a specific thickener to stay safe and stable in the jar. You can’t use regular corn starch, flour or tapioca to thicken the pie filling, the only canning safe thickener is Cook Type Clear Jel. It can be tricky to find in stores, but we order ours online from Hoosier Hill Farm.


Canning Strawberry Pie Filling

Canning Strawberry Rhubarb Pie Filling

Canning Strawberry Pie Filling 


Strawberry jam is the classic place to start with strawberry canning recipes, and for good reason: it’s simple, reliable, and tastes like summer on toast. When strawberries are at their peak, the flavor is naturally bright and sweet, and a batch of jam is an easy way to capture that fresh berry taste for months.

What I love most about strawberry jam is how flexible it can be depending on the style you like. You can go old-fashioned and cook it down without added pectin for a deeper, more caramelized strawberry flavor, or use pectin for a fresher taste and a higher yield with less cooking time. I usually keep the fruit in larger pieces for a jam that feels homemade, and gives you big bites of fruit flavor.


Simple Strawberry Jam Recipes

Old Fashioned Strawberry Jam (Without Pectin)

Quick Strawberry Jam (with Pectin)

Sugar Free Strawberry Jam

Honey Strawberry Jam Recipe

Strawberry Jam Recipe 

Old Fashioned Strawberry Jam

Strawberry Jams with Herbs and Spices

Strawberry Basil Jam

Strawberry Jalapeno Jam

Strawberry Mint Jam

Strawberry Thyme Jam

Mixed Fruit Strawberry Jams

Strawberry Rhubarb Jam

Strawberry Watermelon Jam

Strawberry Kiwi Jam

Strawberry Banana Jam 

Strawberry Rhubarb Jam 

Strawberry Rhubarb Jam

Strawberry Jelly

Strawberry jelly is the smooth cousin of strawberry jam, made from clear strawberry juice instead of crushed fruit. It’s perfect if you love that pure strawberry flavor but don’t want seeds or bits of berry in the finished spread. A well-made strawberry jelly sets up crystal clear and glossy, and it’s honestly one of the prettiest jars you can put on the shelf.

I reach for strawberry jelly when I want something a little more refined than jam, especially for gifting or for serving with biscuits and scones. The trick is taking the time to strain the juice well so it stays clear, then using a reliable pectin method to get a consistent set without overcooking the flavor.

It’s also a great option when you’ve got berries that are a little too soft for jam texture, since you’re using the juice anyway nothing goes to waste, and you still end up with a jar that tastes like summer.


Classic Strawberry Jelly

Strawberry Rhubarb Jelly

Strawberry Balsamic Jelly

 


Strawberry Marmalade

Strawberry marmalade is what I make when I want strawberry preserves with a little more personality. You still get that sweet, fragrant berry flavor, but it’s lifted by citrus, so each spoonful tastes brighter and a bit more complex than straight jam. The citrus peel also gives the texture more interest.

I like strawberry marmalade for the jars I’m going to gift, because it feels a little special without being fussy. The key is keeping the citrus notes balanced so they enhance the berries instead of overpowering them, and slicing the peel thin so it turns tender as it cooks.

Classic Strawberry Marmalade (with Lemon, no pectin)

Quick Strawberry Marmalade (With pectin, and lemon zest)

Strawberry Blood Orange Marmalade (no pectin)

Strawberry Marmalade 

Strawberry Marmalade with Lemon



Strawberry Preserves

Old-fashioned strawberry preserves are the kind of jars that feel like time travel, with whole berries (or big pieces) floating in a thick, clear syrup instead of being mashed into a spread. They’re intentionally high sugar, because the sugar was used to preserve the fruit before modern canning practices.

That gives them that classic glossy look and a texture that’s closer to candied fruit than jam. When you spoon them onto toast, you get actual berries first, then that rich strawberry syrup soaking in behind them.

While most people assume that “preserves” is just another word for “jam,” in reality, it’s something altogether different (and delicious).


Old Fashioned Strawberry Preserves

Strawberry Preserves Recipe 



Strawberry Sauce

Canning strawberry sauce is one of the easiest ways to turn a big pile of berries into something you’ll actually use all year. It’s smooth, pourable, and intensely strawberry, so it works anywhere you’d use syrup or a fruit topping, from pancakes and waffles to ice cream and cheesecake. Unlike jam, it’s meant to stay spoonable, which makes it perfect for quick desserts and weeknight treats.

I like strawberry sauce because it’s flexible, too. You can keep it simple and let the berries shine, or lean into a richer, more “dessert” vibe with a little extra sugar and a splash of lemon to brighten it up.


Strawberry Sauce

Chocolate Strawberry Sauce

Strawberry Applesauce

Strawberry Butter

Strawberry butter is one of the simplest ways to turn strawberries into something that feels extra special, because it’s basically a concentrated strawberry spread with a smooth, creamy texture. It’s thicker than sauce but softer than jam, and it melts right into warm toast, biscuits, or muffins like it was made for them.

I like strawberry butter for small-batch canning because it doesn’t require perfect berries, and it’s a great use for fruit that’s very ripe and fragrant. Most versions are cooked down low and slow until they’re thick and spreadable, which deepens the berry flavor and gives you a richer finished preserve.

Strawberry Honey Butter

Strawberry Hibiscus Butter

Spiced Strawberry Butter

Strawberry Honey Butter from Grow Forage Cook Ferment 

Strawberry Honey Butter. Image courtesy of Grow Forage Cook Ferment



Strawberry Juice & Drinks

Canning strawberry drinks is a smart way to preserve the flavor of ripe berries in a form that’s easy to use, especially when you’re not in the mood to make another batch of jam.

Juice captures that bright, fresh strawberry taste without seeds or pulp, and it’s incredibly versatile once it’s on the shelf. You can drink it straight, mix it with sparkling water, blend it into smoothies, or use it as the base for homemade lemonade-style drinks and mocktails.

Strawberry lemonade concentrate turns into a quick treat with just water and ice, and is the perfect break when I come in tired and sore from the summer garden.

Canning Strawberry Juice

Canning Strawberry Lemonade Concentrate

Canning Strawberry Lemonade Concentrate 

Strawberry Syrup

Strawberry syrup turns a pile of ripe berries into a sweet, pourable pantry staple that works in a dozen different ways. It’s perfect on pancakes, waffles, ice cream, or cheesecake, and it’s also an easy way to add real strawberry flavor to homemade soda, lemonade, milk, or cocktails without needing fresh fruit.

What I like most is that strawberry syrup feels like a shortcut ingredient that still tastes homemade. I usually aim for a syrup that’s thick enough to cling to a spoon but still pours easily, and I keep the flavor bright with a little lemon so it doesn’t taste flat or overly candy-sweet.

Canning Strawberry Syrup

Strawberry Syrup with Vanilla

Strawberry Syrup 

Pickled Strawberries

Pickled strawberries are the wild card in a strawberry canning roundup, and they’re worth including because they turn sweet berries into something tangy, bright, and unexpectedly fancy. They’re less “PB&J” and more “charcuterie board,” and once people try them, they always come back for more.

I like pickled strawberries as a small-batch preserve because they’re quick to make and they make even slightly bland berries taste more interesting. They’re great with goat cheese or brie, chopped into salads, tucked into tacos with pork, and they’re a fun way to turn strawberries into something that feels restaurant-worthy without much effort.

Pickled Strawberries

Balsamic and Herb Pickled Strawberries

Pickled Strawberries 

Strawberry Chutney

Strawberry chutney is one of the few “not a dessert” ways to preserve strawberries, and it turns sweet berries into a savory condiment with real depth. It’s usually cooked with vinegar, sugar, onions, and warm spices, so you get a balance of sweet, tangy, and aromatic in every bite.

Think of it as the bridge between jam and relish. It’s still fruity, but made to pair with dinner instead of toast. It’s amazing with roasted chicken or pork, spooned next to a cheese board, or piled onto a sandwich with sharp cheddar.

It also shines when you use slightly underripe berries, since the tartness helps the finished chutney taste brighter and less candy-sweet.

Strawberry Chutney

Rhubarb Chutney with Strawberries and Ginger

Strawberries are one of those fruits that never seem to last long on the counter, but they preserve beautifully in just about every form you can imagine. Whether you’re stocking the pantry with classic jam and jelly, tucking away pie filling for last-minute desserts, or trying something a little different like pickles or chutney, a few jars now means you get to taste summer long after the berry season is gone.

Pick a couple recipes that fit how you actually cook and bake, put up what you’ll use, and you’ll be glad you did the next time you’re craving strawberries and the produce aisle just isn’t cutting it.

Summer Fruit Canning Ideas

Preserving more than just strawberries this season? I’ve got you covered!

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