The simplest 2 ingredient cherry jam you can make uses just fresh cherries and sugar, with no pectin and no complicated canning steps. You get a thick, glossy spread with real fruit pieces and a clean cherry taste that beats most store jars. This method works because cherries are naturally high in pectin when slightly underripe and the sugar draws out moisture while preserving the fruit.
You don’t need special equipment beyond a heavy pot and a spoon. The result is a small batch you can keep in the fridge or freeze for later. It’s a practical recipe when cherries are cheap in summer and you want a topping that isn’t loaded with corn syrup. If you enjoyed this, our cherry tomatoes is worth trying next. Making this 2 ingredient cherry jam at home is surprisingly straightforward once you know the key steps.
Why You’ll Love These 2 Ingredient Cherry Jam
- Only two items in the pot, so shopping is fast and cheap
- No pectin packets or thermometer required
- Ready in about 25 minutes of active cooking
- Real cherry chunks, not a uniform gel
- Small batch fits in one fridge jar
Ingredients You’ll Need
- 500 g fresh sweet cherries, pitted (about 3 cups)
- 200 g granulated sugar (about 1 cup)
Use ripe but firm cherries for the best balance of pectin and flavor. The sugar weight is 40% of the cherry weight, which is enough to preserve the jam without making it candy-sweet. The 2 ingredient cherry jam works well for weeknight cooking when time is limited.
Ingredient Substitutions
Fresh sweet cherries: Replace with an equal weight of frozen pitted cherries if fresh are out of season. Frozen fruit releases more water as it thaws, so extend the simmer by 5 minutes and expect a slightly looser set at first. The flavor stays close, though fresh cherries give brighter color and firmer pieces.
Granulated sugar: Swap with an equal weight of caster sugar for a faster dissolve and smoother texture. Caster sugar caramelizes a touch quicker, so keep the heat at medium-low heat near the end to avoid scorching. Avoid liquid sweeteners like honey here, as they shift the set and can ferment faster in the fridge.
Fresh sweet cherries: Use sour cherries at the same weight if you want a tart profile closer to classic preserves. Sour cherries have more natural pectin, so the jam thickens sooner; cut the sugar to 150 g to keep it from turning sharp. The color deepens to a darker red and the pieces break down more during cooking.
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Place 500 g pitted cherries in a heavy 2-liter pot and crush about half with a potato masher to release juice.
- Add 200 g sugar and stir over medium-low heat until the sugar dissolves completely and the mix looks glossy, about 5 minutes.
- Raise to medium heat and simmer, stirring every 2 minutes, until the liquid reduces and bubbles turn slow and thick, 15–18 minutes.
- Test the set by dropping a spoonful on a cold plate; it should wrinkle when pushed after 30 seconds. If it stays runny, cook 2 minutes more.
- Remove from heat and cool 10 minutes before spooning into a clean 500 ml jar. The jam will thicken more as it cools.
Pro Tips
Keep a small plate in the freezer before you start so the set test is fast and reliable. Cold plate shock shows the true texture better than testing in the hot pot.
Don’t rush the reduction by cranking the heat; high heat burns sugar before water leaves the fruit. Steady medium heat gives even thickness.
For a clearer jam, skim the light foam with a spoon in the last 5 minutes of cooking. It doesn’t affect safety but improves the look.
Read proper jam making basics if you plan to scale this up, since larger batches need wider pots to set right.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Using only overripe cherries leads to a thin jam because pectin drops as fruit softens. Mix in some firmer cherries if yours are very soft.
Skipping the stir cycle lets sugar sit on the bottom and scorch, turning the batch bitter. Stir every couple of minutes once simmering starts.
Sealing the jar while the jam is piping hot without a clean lid risks mold. Cool to warm, then cap and refrigerate.
Serving Suggestions
Spread the 2 ingredient cherry jam on warm sourdough with butter for a quick breakfast. It also pairs well with almond oatmeal as a swirl on top.
Use it inside thumbprint cookies or as a layer in plain yogurt. A spoonful cuts the richness of walnut sauce pasta when served on the side.
Storage and Reheating
Keep the sealed jar in the fridge for up to 3 weeks thanks to the sugar content. For longer hold, freeze in a straight-sided container for up to 6 months.
This jam is eaten cold, so reheating isn’t needed. If you want it loose for pouring, warm 20 seconds in a microwave and stir.
Always use a clean spoon to scoop, since introduced crumbs shorten fridge life. Discard if mold appears or smell turns off.
Recipe Variations
Lemon Lift Version
Add the finely grated zest of 1 lemon with the sugar at step 2. The citrus brightens the cherry note and makes the 2 ingredient cherry jam taste less heavy. Expect a lighter red color and a fresher finish that suits scones.
Vanilla Batch
Stir in 1 tsp of vanilla extract after you take the pot off heat. The warmth releases the aroma without cooking it off. The result is a dessert-style jam good with fruit smoothies as a topping.
Spiced Winter Jar
Drop in a 5 cm cinnamon stick during the simmer and remove before jarring. The spice adds a warm edge that reads as holiday preserve. Color stays deep red but the scent shifts toward mulled fruit, nice with corn flour pancakes.
Chunky Freezer Set
Cut cherries in halves instead of crushing, and cook 2 minutes less for a looser, piece-forward jar. Freeze directly in 250 ml jars with 1 cm headspace. Thaw overnight in the fridge before use on tomato pasta as a sweet contrast.
2 Ingredient Cherry Jam
Description
A simple 2 ingredient cherry jam made with fresh cherries and sugar, no pectin or canning required. It delivers a thick, glossy spread with real fruit pieces and a clean cherry taste in about 25 minutes of active cooking.
Ingredients
Instructions
-
Crush cherries in pot
Place 500 g pitted cherries in a heavy 2-liter pot and crush about half with a potato masher to release juice. Use firm, ripe but firm cherries so the natural pectin helps the jam set as it cooks.
-
Dissolve sugar on low
Add 200 g sugar and stir over medium-low heat until the sugar dissolves completely and the mix looks glossy, about 5 minutes. You should see no grainy sugar on the spoon and the fruit should be sitting in a clear, shiny syrup.
-
Simmer to thicken
Raise to medium heat and simmer, stirring every 2 minutes, until the liquid reduces and bubbles turn slow and thick, 15–18 minutes. The spoon should leave a clear trail and the bubbling should sound heavy and lazy rather than rapid.
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Test the set
Test the set by dropping a spoonful on a cold plate; it should wrinkle when pushed after 30 seconds. If it stays runny, cook 2 minutes more and test again until the surface wrinkles under light finger pressure.
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Cool before jarring
Remove from heat and cool 10 minutes before spooning into a clean 500 ml jar. The jam will thicken more as it cools, so judge final consistency after this rest rather than in the hot pot.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 8
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 320kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Sodium 2mg1%
- Total Carbohydrate 80g27%
- Dietary Fiber 2g8%
- Sugars 76g
- Protein 1g2%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
- Storage: Keep the sealed jar in the fridge for up to 3 weeks, or freeze for up to 6 months; use a clean spoon each time to avoid shortening fridge life.
- Pro tip: Keep a small plate in the freezer before you start so the set test is fast and reliable, as noted in our canning basics guide for safe preserves.
- Safety: Cool the jam to warm before capping the jar; sealing while piping hot without a clean lid risks mold growth.
- Texture: Skim light foam in the last 5 minutes for a clearer look, and avoid high heat which burns sugar before water leaves the fruit.
