How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (2024)

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by Kristi Stone 17 Comments

Summer is a fantastic time for not only eating delicious salsa made from your huge tomato harvest, but for canning salsa too! This is the best salsa recipe for canning, and is wonderful to make for your shelf every year. It has been tested and found to be safe when you follow the given instructions, so you don’t have to worry that you’ll mess up!

Part of the goodness of having a tomato harvest is that you can make so many different products out of them. With your ripe tomatoes, you may try your hand atcanning them whole, makingtomato sauce, pizza sauce, or as in we will learn in this post, canning salsa. You can even make salsa with green tomatoes, but for today, we will be canning the following delicious salsa recipe.

The Best Salsa Recipe for Canning

This recipe is from the Ball Blue Book. All canning recipes from this book are tested and found to be safe when directions are followed carefully. It has a lot of steps, but that is because I break up each step so it’s easy to follow. Just take canning this salsa step-by-step and you will have beautiful salsa on your shelf in no time for use in your chilis, with your chips, to season your burrito filling, or wherever you love to use salsa.

This post is going to assume that you understand the basics of water bath canning, but if you are doing this for the first time, or are not quite sure you have the basics down, you can refer to my post, “How to Can Food for Beginners”. It’s a fantastic article that takes you step-by-step through both canning processes. This time you will only need the information under the headings of Steps Before Processing, Water Bath Processing, and Steps After Processing.

Home Canned Salsa (fresh)

taken from the Ball Blue Book

Print Recipe Pin Recipe

Prep Time 1 hour hr 30 minutes mins

Processing Time 15 minutes mins

Total Time 1 hour hr 45 minutes mins

Course Condiments

Cuisine Mexican

Servings 6 pints

Ingredients

  • tomatoes 6lbs
  • jalapeno peppers 6
  • dried hot chili peppers 9
  • diced red onion 3 cups (or 2 medium)
  • chopped cilantro tightly packed, 1-1/2 cups
  • garlic 15 cloves
  • salt 1 Tbsp
  • crushed red pepper 3/4 tsp.
  • red wine vinegar 3/4 cup

Instructions

  • Fill up a stock pot about halfway with water and bring to a boil. Do step 2 while you are waiting for that to happen.

  • Remove all of the stems from tomatoes. Fill up a clean sink with water and dump all of your tomatoes in. Swish around and drain.

  • This step will need to be done in separate small loads. Add about a quart of tomatoes at a time to the boiling water and allow to blanch (boil in the water) for 30 seconds to one minute. While you are waiting for the first load to finish, put some ice in a big bowl and fill up with water. Set on the counter near the pot you are using for the tomatoes.

  • With a slotted spoon, remove the tomatoes from the boiling water and place them into the ice water for a couple of minutes. This will stop the cooking process. Remove from the ice water and place in a bowl for later. Repeat Steps 3 and 4 until all of the tomatoes have been blanched, cooled, and moved to the bowl for later.

  • With a knife or a tomato corer, remove the stem end and slip the skins off the tomatoes. You can use the scraps to make tomato powder later if you have a dehydrator. At this point, you can cut your tomatoes into halves or quarters, or leave them whole.

  • Dice tomatoes into 1/4-inch pieces.

  • Remove stems and seeds from jalapenos and dice those too. (Use rubber gloves just for good measure.)

  • Dice the red onion.

  • Pour boiling water over chili peppers just to cover, then cover the bowl they are in for about 15 minutes to steep. Drain half the water off and puree chili peppers until smooth (about a minute).

  • Combine all ingredients in a large saucepan and bring mixture to a boil over medium-high heat. Reduce heat to a simmer and allow to simmer for 10 minutes or until thickened.

  • Fill your hot jars with salsa, leaving a 1/2-inch head space. Remove air bubbles with a bubble remover, and clean the jar rim.

  • Center the lid onto the clean jar rim and screw on the band only fingertip-tight. Repeat steps 6-9 until all jars are filled.

  • Place jars into the simmering water in your canner. Water must cover jars by at least 1 inch. Adjust heat to medium/high and cover the canner. Wait until the water boils. Once water is boiling, set your timer for 15 minutes.

  • Once processing time is finished, turn off the heat and uncover the canner. Allow canner to sit for 5 minutes, then remove jars with the jar lifter to a towel on your counter. Allow to cool for 12 hours. Test seals, label, and store jars

Notes

Makes about 6 pint jars. It is not recommended to process in quart jars.

Adjust for High Altitude Canning

  • 1,001- 3,000 5 minutes.
  • 3,001- 6,000 10 minutes.
  • 6,001- 8,000 15 minutes.
  • 8,001-10,000 20 minutes.

Keyword canning recipes, water bath canning

How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (3)

Looking for a much easier salsa recipe with fewer ingredients for canning? Try this one!

PIN FOR LATER

How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (4)

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (5)linda spiker says

    Thanks so much for this. I never can because I am always afraid I am going to poison the family! This is so helpful.

    Reply

    • How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (6)Kristi Stone says

      Hi Linda! Nope, you sure won’t if you follow the directions I’ve given in this and my “How to Can Food for Beginners” post. You totally can do this!

      Reply

  2. How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (7)Karon Warren says

    Can you substitute can tomatoes in this recipe and it still be safe for canning? If so, how many cans of tomatoes it would take to equal the amount in recipe?

  3. How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (9)Laura says

    Hello! I really liked your post/tutorial. I have never canned before and am working up my nerve to get started. I was wondering how long is the shelf life of canned salsa? I don’t know if I missed it in the post.

    Thank you

    Reply

    • How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (10)Kristi Stone says

      Oh! I should add that if I didn’t already!

      The shelf life for canned foods is usually a year, but could be used after that. Some people keep canned foods for years, but I understand that nutritional value/quality diminishes over time. Ours never lasts a year, so I’m not sure it the flavor is different, though!

      Reply

  4. How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (11)Catherine says

    How many jars does this receipe make and what size?

    Reply

    • How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (12)Kristi Stone says

      6 pint jars!

      Reply

  5. How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (13)Stacy says

    How hot/ spicy is this recipe? There’s a lot of hot peppers in it!!

    Reply

    • How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (14)Kristi Stone says

      Hi Stacy! You know, I find that spicy is relative to the person! I don’t find it very spicy, but if you are not used to eating hot peppers, it will probably be for you!

      Reply

  6. How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (15)Holly says

    Hi! What kind of dried peppers do you use?

    Reply

  7. How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (16)Jenny says

    Hi. It seems to have a good bit of garlic. Is the garlic supposed to be minced or diced? Do we add it whole to the pot to simmer? Thanks for your guidance.

    Reply

    • How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (17)Kristi Stone says

      Hi Jenny! Either way would be fine, unless your family realllly doesn’t like to bite into small pieces of garlic. Sometimes I use the minced garlic from the store instead of doing it myself, and that works just fine, too!

      Reply

  8. How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (18)MK says

    Can these be kept in the pantry?

    Reply

  9. How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (19)Chelsea says

    Can you reduce the amount of peppers? I am wanting to do about 1/2 of the jalapeño and chili pepper

    Reply

  10. How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (20)Lisa says

    how many cups of tomatoes is 6lbs? I already peeled, cored and seeded my tomatoes. I found your recipe after I prepped them. Thank you.

    Reply

  11. How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (21)Candie says

    Can I substitute white vinegar in place of the red wine vinegar?
    Thanks,
    Candie

    Reply

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How to Make THE Best Salsa Recipe for Canning in a Water Bath (2024)

FAQs

How long should salsa be in a hot water bath? ›

Water must cover jars by 1 inch. Adjust heat to medium-high, cover canner, and bring water to a rolling boil. Process pint jars and half pint jars for 20 minutes, adjusting for altitude. Turn off heat and remove cover.

Is vinegar or lemon juice better for canning salsa? ›

Acidic Ingredients

Lemon juice is more acidic than vinegar and has less effect on flavor. You can safely substitute an equal amount of bottled lemon juice for vinegar in salsa recipes using vinegar. However, do not substitute vinegar for lemon juice because this would reduce acidity and produce an unsafe product.

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.

Do you need to add lemon juice when canning salsa? ›

All varieties of salsa without added lemon juice tested above 4.6 and a risk for botulism. This research explains why an acid must be added to tomatoes when home canning them to lower the pH and prevent botulism.

How much lemon juice to add when canning salsa? ›

Add one of the following for acidification:Pint JarsQuart Jars
Bottled Lemon Juice1 tablespoon2 tablespoons
Citric Acid¼ teaspoon½ teaspoon
Vinegar (5 percent acidity)2 tablespoons4 tablespoons
1 more row
Aug 11, 2020

Why do you have to eat salsa within 3 days? ›

Bacteria can grow that you probably won't be able to taste to tell you that it's gone bad, but it could still make you sick. This is for commercially prepared salsa; fresh made salsa usually won't last more than just a few days.

How do you thicken homemade salsa for canning? ›

For a fresh salsa (pico de gallo) straining the juice from the tomatoes seems to work really well. But for the thickness I was going for the key was experimenting with Tomato Paste/Cooking the salsa. I am able to get a much thicker salsa that I enjoy much more.

How do you make canned salsa taste better? ›

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.

What happens if you forgot to put vinegar in your salsa? ›

The vinegar is acidic, so presumably it's part of bringing the pH to a safe one for boiling water canning. Without it, the salsa won't be safe to can like this. If you realize right away and recan immediately, it's basically just cooking it extra. It may not be as good with the extra cooking, but it'll be safe.

Do I need to peel tomatoes for salsa? ›

You don't have to, but you could

Deciding on keeping tomato skins on or off is really a matter of taste — and how much time you've got on your hands. You don't need to peel them.

What are the best tomatoes for salsa? ›

Roma Tomatoes are a popular choice for salsa-making due to their dense and meaty texture, small number of seeds, and full-of-flavor tanginess. Variations of this tomato are sometimes called “plum” or “paste” tomatoes. Red Beefsteak Tomatoes are another favorite for those who favor a juicier tomato in their salsa.

How much vinegar is needed for canning salsa? ›

The guideline for the safe canning of tomatoes is for 2 tbsp of 5% vinegar per pint of tomatoes. If you made 16 pints then you'd need 32 tbsp of vinegar, and that is almost 2.5 cups.

Why do you put vinegar in salsa? ›

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.

Is it safe to can salsa in a water bath? ›

Water bath canning is best for high-acid foods and recipes that include the right amount of acid. The combination of time and temperature destroys bacteria while the heat creates a vacuum seal. Items such as fruit, jams, jellies, salsa, tomatoes, pickles, sauces, pie fillings, and condiments use this method.

Can salsa be hot water bath canned? ›

You can preserve fresh foods by canning, which uses heat to kill naturally occurring microorganisms. The easiest way to get started is by using the hot water bath method.

How long to process tomatoes in hot water bath? ›

Boiling-water bath: pints – 40 minutes; quarts – 45 minutes. Dial-gauge pressure canner: pints or quarts – 15 minutes at 11 PSI or 20 minutes at 6 PSI. Weight-gauge pressure canner: pints or quarts – 15 minutes at 15 PSI or 20 minutes at 10 PSI.

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