Altering Your Canned Salsa Recipe (2024)

It’s salsa canning time! The time of year when tomatoes, peppers, and onions are fresh and plentiful. But canning books don’t include many creative salsa recipes. Can you alter a recipe to make your own canned salsa?

September always brings questions about canning salsa. Published recipes for canning salsa don’t often meet our desires. We want a spicier salsa, or a thicker salsa, or more cilantro (or less cilantro!). We want to add corn, or black beans or extra onions. Can we safely do so? The answer is……

No – Not Usually

Here is the short version of why you cannot change an approved recipe:

  • Your home recipe most likely has not been tested for safety.
  • It may not be acidic enough to be safe.
  • The processing period may not be long enough to be safe.

An Acidic Recipe

Water bath canning is for high acid foods. Tomatoes are borderline on the acidity scale, which is why we add lemon juice to canned tomatoes, to increase the acidity.

Other salsa ingredients, like onions and peppers, are low-acid. So, we add vinegar or lemon juice to the salsa mixture to make it acidic; much like turning low acid cucumbers into high acid pickles by adding vinegar.

But, whipping up our very own creative salsa and adding a little vinegar still doesn’t make a safe recipe. Approved recipes have been tested for safety. An approved recipe makes sure that the amount of vinegar or lemon juice added in the recipe acidifies the amount of low acid ingredients in the salsa mixture.

Heat Penetration

The other part of a tested, approved recipe is assuring that the heat penetrates the salsa in the jar, killing all harmful bacteria. This is done in a testing lab and is why different products have different processing times. For example, tomatoes may be processed for 35 minutes while some pickles are processed for 20 minutes.

You can understand why a recipe made up of chopped tomatoes has a different processing time than a recipe of pureed tomatoes; the thickness of the two products differs. This is why we can’t change the salsa recipe texture, along with not being able to change the salsa ingredients. Frustrating, I know. But better slightly frustrated than ill (or worse) from botulism!

See – Botulism is Not an Old Wives Tale

Approved Recipe Alterations

Don’t despair, all is not lost. Luckily there are some ways to alter approved recipes.

  1. Replace hot peppers with bell peppers. Or replace bell peppers with hot peppers. Or use a combination of hot and bell peppers. Just don’t increase the total amount of peppers in the recipe.
  2. Of course, you can reduce or eliminate the low-acid ingredients too. Use fewer onions or peppers or herbs than the recipe calls for.
  3. You can use red onions instead of yellow onions or vice versa.
  4. Lime juice can be used instead of lemon juice. Lemon or lime juice can be used instead of vinegar. However, vinegar cannot be used instead of lemon or lime juice.
  5. Use white vinegar instead of apple cider vinegar. Or use apple cider vinegar instead of white vinegar. You can also use white wine vinegar instead of either of the above. Just make sure the vinegar is noted as at least 5% acidic.

But Don’t Make These Changes!

  1. Never increase the total amount of peppers, onions, garlic or other low acid ingredients.
  2. Do not use fresh lemon or lime juice. You should always use bottled juice as it is calibrated to meet specific acid requirements.
  3. Vinegar must be at least 5% acidic. Some specialty vinegars don’t specify the acid level. Do not use these vinegars when making canned pickled products of any kind, including salsa.
  4. Don’t thicken salsa before canning. You can thicken it when you open a jar to serve.

Make the Salsa Recipe Your Own

Think of home canned salsa as a basic product – similar to a cake mix. Follow an approved recipe and use the salsa as is, just like making a basic chocolate cake. Or….. once you open the jar, you can add all kinds of things to your salsa. Turn it into black bean salsa by combining a jar of salsa with a can of black beans. Or make it spicier by adding chopped cilantro just before serving. It’s the salsa equivalent of a chocolate sour cream cake or a chocolate strawberry cake made from a basic chocolate cake mix.

Of course, you can also make any salsa recipe you want, using as many low-acid ingredients as you like, as long as you freeze the end result instead of water bath canning it. I do this with my favorite taco sauce recipe. I don’t use an approved recipe, so I freeze the end result. Freezing does change the texture a little bit from canning, but it’s not a noticeable difference. Sometimes I even freeze salsa made from an approved recipe. I do this if I only make one or two jars at a time. Instead of heating up the water bath canner, I ladle the mixture into small containers and store them in the freezer.

Don’t Fall for These Misconceptions

Home food preservers are a creative bunch, but sometimes we try to overcome the rules. It’s not a good idea so don’t fall for these misconceptions:

  • Don’t be fooled into thinking you can pressure can your salsa and it will be safe. To my knowledge, there are no tested pressure canned salsa recipes.
  • Sterilizing the jars (instead of using clean jars) doesn’t change the equation either. If the salsa recipe isn’t safe, putting it a sterilized jar won’t fix the problem. All canning jars should be clean of course, but remember, you only need sterilized jars for products that will be processed less than 10 minutes.
  • Ditto for heating the salsa mixture to boiling. Again, if the salsa mixture isn’t safe – not an approved recipe – putting it in jars while really hot won’t make it a safe mixture.
  • And remember, sealing the jar doesn’t make the product a safe product. A sealed jar keeps a safe product safe. Everything that comes before must be done safely too; no moldy or spoiled ingredients, an approved recipe, clean jars, and a prescribed processing period.

Now it’s time to get to work. I have a big batch of green tomatoes just begging to be turned into salsa. I like the recipe in the Ball Blue Book! I bet you will too.

Did I forget anything? If so, let me know in the comments!

Altering Your Canned Salsa Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Can I use lime juice instead of vinegar when canning salsa? ›

You CAN substitute some of the vinegar for bottled lemon or lime juice (this will affect the overall flavor). DO NOT USE FRESH LEMON OR LIME JUICE; it is not acidic enough. Dried spices won't affect pH, so you can also experiment with those, but the amount of vegetables and tomatoes and acidity need to stay the same.

Why do you put vinegar in canned salsa? ›

You must add acid to canned salsa because the natural acidity may not be high enough. Commonly used acids are vinegar and bottled lemon juice. Lemon juice is more acidic than vinegar and has less effect on flavor.

Can you reprocess canned salsa? ›

Remove the screw rings. Label sealed jars with the contents and canning date. Unsealed jars may be reprocessed safely within 24 hours, or the jars of salsa may be refrigerated for fresh consumption. To reprocess, empty the salsa into a pan, heat to boiling and ladle the mixture into clean, hot jars.

How to thicken homemade salsa for canning? ›

Slicing tomatoes produce a thinner, more watery salsa. If you use slicing tomatoes, you can thicken your salsa by adding tomato paste or by draining off some of the liquid after you chop the tomatoes. Never add flour or cornstarch to salsa before canning because an unsafe product may result.

What if I put too much lime in my salsa? ›

- Add some sugar or honey to the dish. Sugar and honey can counteract the sourness of vinegar and add some sweetness to the dish. You can start with a small amount and adjust according to your taste.

How do you doctor up canned salsa? ›

At the very least, a little fresh lime juice and some minced cilantro can wake up even the sleepiest of salsas, ushering back in the flavor of just-squeezed citrus and herbs that taste like they came from a living plant. Beyond that, a crunchy raw vegetable or two never hurts.

Is it necessary to peel tomatoes for canned salsa? ›

Can you leave skin on tomatoes when making salsa? You sure can! This is the easiest way to make salsa Making this food processor salsa for canning your tomatoes and peppers is the perfect way to save some time!

Do you have to simmer salsa before canning? ›

Do You Have To Cook Salsa Before Canning? Yes, otherwise, if you can raw or fresh salsa, you will have to process it for a longer time than cooked salsa. This will take much longer, so it is better to cook the salsa before canning.

Is freezing salsa better than canning? ›

There is not a better time to make large quantities of tomato sauces or salsas. Canning is often the preferred method to store sauces for use later, but freezing is also an option which many prefer—especially those who have large freezer space.

How much headspace do you leave when canning salsa? ›

Fill the hot salsa into prepared hot jars, leaving 1/2-inch headspace. If needed, remove air bubbles and re-adjust headspace to ½-inch. Wipe rims of jars with a dampened clean paper towel.

Can I redo the canning process? ›

Canned food can safely be re-canned if the unsealed jar is discovered within 24 hours. To re-can, remove the lid and check the jar rim for tiny nicks. Change the jar, if necessary. Add a new treated lid and reprocess using the same processing time.

What to do if salsa is too watery? ›

Fortunately, there's an easy way to thicken this kind of salsa to your exact liking: tomato paste. A tablespoon or two could be just what you need to tighten up your sauce but do keep in mind that not all salsas are the same.

Should I add citric acid to my canned salsa? ›

But just to be extra safe, it's recommended to increase the acidity just a little bit more. That's where the citric acid powder comes in. Before you begin filling your jars with salsa, just drop in 1/4 of a teaspoon of citric acid into each quart jar (1/8 teaspoon per jar for pints). And that's it!

What is a substitute for vinegar in salsa? ›

You can use bottled lemon juice instead of vinegar for this recipe in the same amount, though I highly recommend the vinegar option and note by the hundreds of reviews that this salsa does not taste vinegary.

Is lime juice safe for canning? ›

You can safely use bottled lime juice instead of bottled lemon juice. Bottled lemon and lime juice contain sulfites.

Can lime juice replace vinegar? ›

The simple answer is yes, you may use lemon (or lime juice) in place of vinegar in home canning recipes, as lemon and lime juice are slightly more acidic than vinegar. Some people prefer the tastes of lemon or lime juice over vinegar, as they feel it has a milder flavor.

Do you have to use vinegar when canning? ›

Whether the residue on the jars is minerals from hard water or particulate matter from your canning rack, adding vinegar to the water will help keep it off the jars and prevent build-up on the inside of your canner. Make it part of your canning routine this summer!

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