Best 6 Apricot Pepper Jelly Recipes

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Indulge in a delightful culinary journey with our diverse collection of apricot pepper jelly recipes, each offering a unique blend of sweet, tangy, and spicy flavors. From the classic apricot pepper jelly, perfect for elevating cheeseboards and charcuterie platters, to the savory apricot habanero jelly, which adds a fiery kick to grilled meats and sandwiches, our recipes cater to various taste preferences. Explore the zesty apricot serrano jelly, ideal for adding a zesty touch to salads and wraps, or try the sweet and mild apricot red bell pepper jelly, a versatile condiment that complements both sweet and savory dishes. With detailed instructions and helpful tips, our recipes ensure a successful and enjoyable cooking experience, allowing you to create delectable homemade apricot pepper jellies that will tantalize your taste buds and impress your friends and family.

Check out the recipes below so you can choose the best recipe for yourself!

HABANERO APRICOT JAM



Habanero Apricot Jam image

This zippy and versatile jam was a blue-ribbon winner at our county fair. I mix it with applesauce as a condiment for pork, with cranberry sauce for poultry and with cream cheese as a spread on celery sticks. It's a beautiful color...and in "hot" demand as a gift item! -Janet Eckhoff, Woodland, California

Provided by Taste of Home

Time 20m

Yield 11 half-pints.

Number Of Ingredients 5

3-1/2 pounds fresh apricots
6 tablespoons bottled lemon juice
2 to 4 habanero peppers, seeded
1 package (1-3/4 ounces) powdered fruit pectin
7 cups sugar

Steps:

  • Pit and chop apricots; place in a Dutch oven. Stir in lemon juice. Place habaneros in a blender; add a small amount of apricot mixture. Cover and process until smooth. Return to the pan. , Stir in pectin. Bring to a full rolling boil, stirring constantly. Stir in sugar; return to a full rolling boil. Boil for 1 minute, stirring constantly., Remove from the heat; skim off foam. Carefully ladle hot mixture into hot sterilized half-pint jars, leaving 1/4-in. headspace. Wipe rims and adjust lids. Process for 5 minutes in a boiling-water canner. , For best results, let processed jam stand at room temperature for 2 weeks to set up.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 71 calories, Fat 0 fat (0 saturated fat), Cholesterol 0 cholesterol, Sodium 0 sodium, Carbohydrate 18g carbohydrate (18g sugars, Fiber 0 fiber), Protein 0 protein.

APRICOT RED PEPPER JELLY



Apricot Red Pepper Jelly image

Make and share this Apricot Red Pepper Jelly recipe from Food.com.

Provided by dicentra

Categories     Fruit

Time 35m

Yield 6 half pints

Number Of Ingredients 7

1 (6 ounce) package dried apricots, chopped (about 1 1/4 cups)
3/4 cup chopped red bell pepper
1/4 cup seeded chopped jalapeno chile
2 1/2 cups cider vinegar
1 1/2 cups water
1 (1 3/4 ounce) box powdered pectin
6 cups sugar

Steps:

  • In a blender or food processor, chop apricots, peppers, and 1 3/4 cups of the vinegar until fruit and vegetables are finely ground. Pour into a heavy bottomed 8 to 10 quart pan.
  • Rinse food processor / blender with the 1 1/2 cups water and remaining 3/4 cup vinegar, pour into pan. Stir in pectin, bring to a full rolling boil over high heat, stirring constantly.
  • Quickly add sugar, still stirring. Return to a full rolling boil, then boil, stirring for 1 minute. (If using a 2 oz box of pectin, boil for 2 minutes.).
  • Remove from heat and skim off any foam. Ladle hot jelly into prepared half pint jars, leaving a 1/4 inch headspace. Process in a boiling water bath for 10 minutes. Adjust time according to your altitude.
  • Or omit processing and ladle jelly into freezer jars or freezer containers, leaving 1/2 inch headspace, apply lids. Let stand for 12 to 24 hours at room temperature, freeze or refrigerate.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 900, Fat 0.3, Sodium 26.2, Carbohydrate 228.5, Fiber 3.4, Sugar 217.1, Protein 1.3

APRICOT JALAPENO JELLY



Apricot Jalapeno Jelly image

I love the jalapeno-fruit recipes to have at home and to give as gifts. With a nice wheat cracker, a little cream cheese and dollop of the jelly you have a nice snack or appetizer. The 'heat' from the jalapenos depends on how many of the seeds you leave in the jelly. A friend likes this on hotcakes, and we also like the jelly on biscuits.Try this, it will surprise you!

Provided by Colorado Lauralee

Categories     Low Protein

Time 20m

Yield 7 half pints

Number Of Ingredients 6

1/2 cup fresh jalapeno pepper, stemmed, seeded, and cut up
1 large red bell pepper, stemmed, seeded and cut up
2 cups apple cider vinegar
1 1/2 cups dried apricots, chopped
6 cups granulated sugar
1 (3 ounce) package liquid pectin

Steps:

  • Place the jalapenos, pepper and vinegar in a blender (or food processor).
  • Pulse until small chunks remain.
  • Combine apricots, sugar and the pepper/vinegar mixture in a large saucepan.
  • Bring to a boil; boil rapidly for 5 minutes.
  • Remove from the heat; skim off any foam that forms.
  • Allow mixture to cool for 2 minutes.
  • Mix in the pectin.
  • Pour into sterilized jars, seal and cool.
  • (At this point I turn the sealed jars over several times as they cool for about 10 minutes at a time to keep the fruit nicely distributed in the jar).
  • * Note; It is an excellent idea to wear rubber gloves when working with hot peppers, they otherwise may make the hands burn. And don't rub your eyes!

APRICOT HABANERO JELLY



Apricot Habanero Jelly image

I make this with fresh Habaneros from the garden. A great way to use up extra peppers. Enjoy with cream cheese and crackers, or as a glaze for meats.

Provided by TJW2725

Categories     Low Protein

Time 25m

Yield 24 ounces

Number Of Ingredients 7

6 whole habanero peppers
1 cup cider vinegar
1 fresh mango, peeled, and seeded
1/2 cup apricot nectar
1/2 cup orange juice
6 cups sugar
1 (1/3 ounce) package Certo

Steps:

  • Cut off stem ends of peppers and blend together with 1/2 of the vinegar, peppers, mango, and the juices.
  • DO NOT stick your nose in the blender and take a whiff after you open it.
  • In fact, open the windows in the kitchen when making this, and avoid sniffing the fumes from the blender, or pot while it is cooking.
  • Bring the rest of the vinegar and sugar to a boil, add the contents from the blender and bring to a boil for two minutes.
  • Add the certo and bring to a boil again.
  • Skim , pour into jars and seal.
  • Let cool upside down, so the seal becomes vacuum packed.
  • Makes about 24 oz of jelly.
  • ** My recipe states one package Certo, I can't buy it here in Germany, as we have sugar for making jams which includes pectin, and you just add one part sugar, one part fruit mixture. As such, I have guessed the .3 ounces of Certo. Just use one package and it should be ok.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 215, Fat 0.1, Sodium 3.1, Carbohydrate 54.8, Fiber 0.5, Sugar 53.6, Protein 0.4

HABANERO APRICOT JELLY



Habanero Apricot Jelly image

This is adapted from the "Habanero Gold" recipe, which can be found in the Ball Blue Book of Preserving. I use fewer habaneros, as I grow my own and they are extremely hot, much hotter than those you would find in a grocery store, and it also omits the onion found in the "Habanero Gold" recipe. Use this as you would use any pepper jelly - over cream cheese, with other cheeses, as a glaze for chicken or other meats. Since this jelly does not have onion or garlic in it, it also makes a nice, spicy PB&J. I like to use a food processor to mince the apricots and peppers, because it does a nice job of getting them small enough, but doesn't turn them into mush. Finely mincing the apricots and peppers allows them to stay suspended throughout the jelly, instead of floating to the top of the jar. You could also use a blender, but if you are not careful the apricots and peppers could get too mushed up and turn into a puree. The idea of this jelly is to have nice small bits of apricot and pepper suspended throughout the jelly. A note on pectin amount: I use one 3 ounce packet of Certo liquid pectin, which results in a nice soft jelly - it is set, but if you shake the jar the jelly will wiggle a little. If you want a really firm jelly, like the kind you would buy in a store, use two 3 ounce packets of Certo. Some people like a really loose, almost pourable jelly to use over cream cheese, brie, or to use as a thick dipping sauce - if this is what you're after, use just half of a 3 ounce packet of Certo. Use a large stainless steel stock pot to make this - twice as large as what you'd think you would need. When the mixture reaches a full boil, it more than doubles in size, and if your pot is too small you will have a big, sugary mess to clean up off your stovetop. Always wear rubber gloves when working with hot peppers. The "5 hours" prep time includes the time needed to soak the apricots in the vinegar.

Provided by xtine

Categories     Jellies

Time 5h5m

Yield 6 half pints

Number Of Ingredients 6

2/3 cup diced dried apricot
1 1/2 cups white vinegar
1/2 cup diced red bell pepper
4 habanero peppers, diced
6 cups white sugar
1 (3 ounce) packet certo liquid pectin

Steps:

  • Using a food processor, finely mince the diced apricots.
  • Place the apricots in a large stainless steel stockpot, add the vinegar and cover. Let the apricots soak in the vinegar for at least 4 hours (can be left to sit overnight if you'd like, but 4 hours will do the trick).
  • Using a food processor, finely mince the red bell pepper and habanero peppers.
  • Place the apricots, vinegar, peppers, and sugar in a large stainless steel stockpot. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat, stirring to make sure all the sugar dissolves.
  • Once the mixture has reached a full rolling boil (a boil you can not stir down), it will double in size. Stirring constantly, keep at a full boil for one minute.
  • Remove from heat and whisk in pectin and continue to stir for 3 minutes - this helps to evenly distribute the apricot and pepper pieces throughout the jelly.
  • Ladle the jelly into sterilized canning jars, leaving 1/4" headspace. Wipe the rims of the jars with damp paper towels to remove any jelly which got on the rims or the threads. Place the lids and the bands on the jars, just tightening the bands fingertip tight.
  • Process in a boiling water bath for 5 minutes, then remove and let sit, undisturbed, for at least 12 hours before checking seals. It is important to let them sit undisturbed for 12 hours because the sealing compound on the lids is still cooling and hardening, completing the seal. While the jars cool, you will hear a "plink" type sound from each jar - this is the jars completing the vacuum seal as the final air escapes the jar. After 12 hours have passed, remove the bands and check the lids - press down in the center of the lid. If you cannot push the lid down any further, the jar is sealed. If the lid "gives" a bit, and you can push it down, the jar did not seal. You can either put the band back on the jar, and reprocess it for another 5 minutes, or you can just put it in the fridge and use it within 3 months.

APRICOT JELLY



Apricot Jelly image

Make and share this Apricot Jelly recipe from Food.com.

Provided by Dienia B.

Categories     Jellies

Time P3DT1h

Yield 3 pints

Number Of Ingredients 5

5 cups peeled pitted chopped apricots
1 1/2 cups water
1/3 cup fresh lemon juice
6 cups sugar
2 (3 ounce) envelopes liquid pectin

Steps:

  • Combine apricots and water.
  • Over medium heat bring mixture to a boil.
  • Reduce heat to a simmer gently for 5 minutes
  • Take pan off heat; skim and let set 30 minutes.
  • Sieve the apricots and strain juice from pulp (use pulp in apricot jam).
  • Line sieve with 4 layers of clean damp cheese cloth.
  • Strain; cover the juice and refrigerate overnight.
  • Ladle the juice from container, being careful not to disturb the sediment from bottom using 3 cups of juice.
  • To make the jelly, combine juices when they are warm add sugar.
  • Stirring constantly until sugar is dissolved, bring to a rolling boil.
  • Pour pectin in, bring to a rolling boil again, stirring constantly (apricot LOVES to burn) for 1 minute.
  • Remove pan from heat; skim off foam.
  • Ladle into hot jars, leaving 1/4 inch head space.
  • Water bath for 15 minutes.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 1693, Fat 1.1, SaturatedFat 0.1, Sodium 5.4, Carbohydrate 434, Fiber 6.8, Sugar 425.7, Protein 4

Tips:

  • For the best flavor, use fresh, ripe apricots. You can also use frozen apricots, but be sure to thaw them completely before using.
  • If you don't have a candy thermometer, you can test the jelly by dropping a small spoonful onto a cold plate. If the jelly wrinkles when you push it with your finger, it is ready.
  • Be careful not to overcook the jelly, or it will become too thick and hard.
  • Store the jelly in a cool, dark place for up to 1 year.
  • Apricot pepper jelly is a versatile condiment that can be used on a variety of foods, including chicken, pork, fish, and vegetables. It can also be used as a glaze or marinade.

Conclusion:

Apricot pepper jelly is a delicious and easy-to-make condiment that can be enjoyed on a variety of foods. With a little planning and effort, you can make your own apricot pepper jelly at home. So next time you're looking for a new and exciting way to spice up your meals, give apricot pepper jelly a try.

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