One of the most common problems during the height of the
canning season is the incidence of jar breakage. I feel bad that many work so
hard to grow or pay for ingredients only to find them floating in the water
when they take the lid off the canner. Here are several reasons that canning jars will break.
Another reason may be the home canner using a metal knife to remove the bubbles
in the jars. You can scratch the glass and over time create stress fractures
that eventually will cause the jar to break. Some of those breaks look like the bottom of the jar just falling out in a perfect circle.
Toss that butter knife
aside and use a either a small rubber spatula, Bubble and Headspace measurer (shown below) or find a great set of
chopsticks since they get through some of those tight spaces.
One of the more common factors is the change in temperature for the glass. We heat the jars either by water bath canner or dishwasher to introduce "hot jars" into the hot water of the canner. As they cool during filling, the change in temperature when adding the jars back to the water bath can cause breakage. To help avoid excessive cooling make sure that you use a dishtowel on your counter to keep a barrier between the cold surface and the hot glass.
Available at SB Canning Store |
One of the more common factors is the change in temperature for the glass. We heat the jars either by water bath canner or dishwasher to introduce "hot jars" into the hot water of the canner. As they cool during filling, the change in temperature when adding the jars back to the water bath can cause breakage. To help avoid excessive cooling make sure that you use a dishtowel on your counter to keep a barrier between the cold surface and the hot glass.
Rings tied together to make a rack! |
Make sure there is a rack on the bottom of the canning pot because the heat, directly on the
jar, causes breakage. This is not as common but it does happen when we are
not paying attention or when you are new to canning. A rack keeps the direct
heat of the stove away from the bottoms of the jars. This can be accomplished inexpensively by
tying a set of rings together.
Some of the older jars that we pick up at yard sales and thrift shops, ones that get donated, or passed down from family may have hairline cracks that are difficult to see. Some even get these crack going through the dishwasher or being washed in the sink. It's rare but they do occasionally break. It is advised that if you have older jars to only use them in a water bath to keep them from being over stressed.
These are some of the ways that I have seen or investigated breaks during canning and processing. It can happen in one or two in a canning season, but using some of the tips that I mentioned above may help avoid loss of your work in "canner error".