Pear Butter Recipe | Easy + Crockpot | Chasing Vibrance (2024)

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This sweet and easy pear butter recipe is the perfect fall comfort food. Use this old fashioned recipe for pear butter as topping for toast, ice cream, and fresh biscuits. It is similar to apple butter in flavor, just with a bit sweeter natural flavor.

Updated August 2019

Who doesn’t love fall? It’s my favorite season–everything is just so VIBRANT in the fall here in the midwest.

The crisp air….high school football games…my favorite cozy sweatshirt…Harry Potter movie marathons, apple cider making in Amish country, my favorite potato soup….all the good and wonderful fall things!

This pear butter is right up there in my favorite fall foods. Pears are an easily overlooked fall choice thanks to apple cinnamon and pumpkin spice errrrything taking over the world, but do NOT forget about pears!

I have gotten a lot of questions about this old fashioned pear butter recipe over the years so I thought I would answer some of the most common ones here.

What are the best canning pears?

I like to use Bartlett Pears for canning. This is my EXPERT level, mother approved choice! Be sure to check your local farmer’s market or fruit stand for the best deal on quality pears this fall!

What to do with lots of pears?

You can easily use a large amount of pears (I like Bartlett pears best for canning and preserving) for this sweet pear butter. It cooks down nicely without a large amount of work (besides the slicing and peeling). I used 15 large pears (5 pounds) for this recipe.

RELATED: EASY PEAR CRISP

How long will canned pear butter last?

Like most home canned products it is recommended to use up your pear butter within a year. Will they keep longer? Yes. Will anyone turn you into the canning police? No. Shhh. This is the golden standard canning book where I take all my canning and preserving questions!

If you’re a fan of easy healthy recipes you won’t want to miss my 4 Week Healthy + Easy Fall Meal Plan!

In this healthy fall meal plan you’ll find 4 weeks of cozy, healthier comfort food for busy weeknight dinners. Let me take meal planning off your full plate!!

This easy pear butter recipe is sure to pair nicely with all your fall comfort food favorites!

Pear Butter Recipe

Pear Butter Recipe | Easy + Crockpot | Chasing Vibrance (6)

Pear Butter Recipe

Yield: 5 cups

Prep Time: 30 minutes

Cook Time: 8 hours

Total Time: 8 hours 30 minutes

This sweet and delicious pear butter recipe is the perfect fall comfort food. Use this old fashioned recipe for pear butter as topping for toast, ice cream, and fresh biscuits.

Ingredients

  • 12 cups sliced and peeled pears
  • 1 tsp cinnamon
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 TBSP lemon juice

Instructions

  1. Peel, core and slice pears. Pulse pears in blender until smooth. Pour blended pears into crockpot.
  2. Add cinnamon and sugar and gently stir. Cook with lid off (your house is going to smell amazing!!) for 16-24 hours. Pear butter should be thick enough to gently mound on spoon.
  3. Stir in lemon juice. Ladle pear butter into half pint (8 ounce) small jam jars, leaving 1/4 inch head space. Wipe rim with damp cloth. Store pear butter in fridge up to one week or process for canning.
  4. To can pear butter: Place half pint jars into canner. Fill canner with water just to the tops of the jars. Bring water to a boil and boil for 20 minutes. With canning lifter remove jars to cool on a towel on the kitchen counter for 12 hours. Enjoy!
Nutrition Information:

Yield: 80Serving Size: 1 grams
Amount Per Serving:Calories: 23Total Fat: 0gSaturated Fat: 0gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 0gCholesterol: 0mgSodium: 0mgCarbohydrates: 6gFiber: 1gSugar: 5gProtein: 0g

If you like this recipe be sure to pin it on Pinterest to your favorite Fall or Canning board!

My Mom’s reflections on canning pear butter

Pear Butter – thick and sweet, dripping in globs from a spoon and sliding off a warm biscuit like lava down a mountain. Until I was 25 I’d never even heard of it. Now it has become a tradition linked to fall, comfort food, and memories of a dear friend.

One of the traditions I embraced as a young bride was canning and freezing fruits and vegetables. I felt like it connected me to the women in my family. I have memories of homemade chunky applesauce served as dessert around the table at my Great Aunt Caroline’s old farmhouse.

I see, like it was yesterday, the arthritic fingers of my grandma as she wiped spills off the rims of jars full of crimson tomatoes.

My mouth waters at the memory of my mother’s spicy, sweet homemade pickle relish all warm and crunchy and good, ready to be canned in pint jars on a hot August day.

And I smile at the memory of a young bride canning a bushel of red beets alongside a kind hearted mother-in-law.

Pear Butter Recipe | Easy + Crockpot | Chasing Vibrance (8)

Pear butter came to me on the wings of a very dear woman.

Evelyn was the middle aged farm wife of the young adult Sunday school teacher at our country church. She was a hospitable, generous woman whose life revolved around God, her husband and her family.

Every fall she peeled bushels of pears alongside her elderly mother at her kitchen sink. The pears were blended into sauce which was then refrigerated until the appointed day that her large family came together to cook the sauce down in a copper kettle over an open fire. She shared with me the joy of her family tradition and the instructions of making pear butter for my own family.

And so it began – the yearly practice of cooking down pears into pear butter. Not with my elderly mother at my side. Not in a copper kettle over a crackling fire. Not in 10 gallon batches.

And not with my family gathered around.

But in my own kitchen, at the sink I’ve stood at every day since we moved here 24 years ago. And with pears from the trees that my good husband faithfully cares for throughout the year in an old red crock pot that once belonged to my mother.

And as the sweet smell fills the rooms of my house, God fills the nooks and corners of my heart with joy and gratitude. I feel connected to Evelyn who went home to be with Jesus just a month ago. I remember with love those women in my life (all of whom are now home with the Lord) who taught me the art of food preservation and love for my family.

And I feel connected to my husband, children, and grandchildren who enjoy the fruit of my labor. My heart is full and I am thankful to God for the gift He has given me in pear butter!

Hope you enjoy this pear butter as much as my family has!

Pear Butter Recipe | Easy + Crockpot | Chasing Vibrance (2024)

FAQs

Why is my pear butter not thickening? ›

Any of the methods– slow cooker, Instant Pot, or stove top– may need additional time to let the fruit spread thicken. This is best done by leaving the lid off or cracking the lid open so that more liquid can escape and evaporate.

How long does homemade fruit butters last? ›

Fruit butters will last for one to two weeks in the refrigerator but they can also be frozen, using freezer-safe packaging. Some fruit butters can also be preserved using the water bath canning method.

Why is my pear butter grainy? ›

Some varieties are more grainy or gritty than others but peeling any pear will help reduce that graininess. As pears ripen on the tree, they develop stone cells, and most of these lie just under the skin. Most pears are harvested before they're fully ripe for this reason.

Do you have to peel pears for pear butter? ›

Some choose to ignore that recommendation so basically it is your choice. Personally I feel shortcuts compromise quality so I peel.

How do you know when fruit butter is done? ›

To test doneness, put a spoonful of fruit butter on a plate. If no liquid seeps from the edges, it's done. Return to a simmer to thicken more if necessary. For very smooth fruit butter, puree in a food processor or blender, then strain and push the mixture through a sieve before storing.

Does fruit butter thicken as it cools? ›

Strain your puree, if necessary, to remove seeds, bits of peel, or any lumps. Put the smooth puree back into a clean pan, add lemon juice, and continue to cook, stirring often, until the mixture is thick enough to coat the back of a spoon. Cool and then refrigerate. It will thicken further as it chills.

Does homemade butter go rancid? ›

Homemade butter's shelf life depends on how thoroughly you extract the buttermilk. If a substantial amount of buttermilk remains, it will sour within a week, otherwise homemade butter can keep for up to 2-3 weeks in the fridge.

Why are my pear preserves runny? ›

If there isn't enough pectin in the fruit itself and you don't add extra pectin, the result is runny jelly or jam. Additionally, if the fruit is overripe, its pectin levels are lower. Added pectin comes in a couple of forms.

Why is my pear sauce so runny? ›

Be sure to drain the pears well with the spoon so your sauce won't be too thin. NOTE: You can wait for your pears to cool before you blend them, but they'll be easier to blend and your pear sauce will be thicker if you blend the pears while still very warm.

What do you do if apple butter doesn't thicken? ›

Just keep cooking, as alilja and Golly suggest. Mix a small amount of corn flour with some water if it's already cooled and keep mixing until it thickens. This is a bad idea if you are expecting your apple butter to keep for more than a week.

How do you thicken fruit butter? ›

Fruit butters generally don't use pectin, which is usually what is added to jams and jellies to make them thicken. Make a slurry with about 1 to 2 TPS of arrowroot or tapioca flour, in a 1/2 cup of your apple sauce. Add to the sauce and cook until thickened.

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