• Stovetop@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Out of curiosity, are you British/European?

    In the UK at least (and by extension other European countries which tend to prefer UK nomenclature when using English) jelly has a different connotation than it does in the US.

    British jelly is gelatin, set in a mold. In the US, that dish is more commonly known as Jell-O, a name brand of gelatin that has entered common use.

    American jelly is what the British would call seedless jam, a fruit spread made like jam but with the more solid parts of the fruit like seeds filtered out until it is a single consistency. It traditionally comes in jars, but its viscosity makes it easy to put in a squeeze bottle like ketchup.

    • bionicjoey@lemmy.ca
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      6 months ago

      Canadian.

      Only thing I’ve ever put on a PB&J is fruit preserves from a glass jar. The kind that is a heterogeneous suspension of small fruit chunks in a medium. I would use the terms jelly and jam completely interchangeably talking about that stuff.

      Never heard of or seen “seedless jam” like that in the OP image before.

      Jell-O and jelly are completely different in my mind. Jell-O is Jell-O, jelly is the thing I described above.

      We seem to have stumbled onto a very strange cultural/linguistic oddity. I legitimately never considered that Americans put this “seedless jam” stuff on their sandwiches. I always assumed American PB&J was identical to Canadian.

      • CyanideShotInjection@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        From what I know, jam is what you described as the heterogenous fruit preserve. It’a basically fruits roughly choped, sugar and pectine.

        Jelly is kinda the same thing, but instead of using whole fruits, you use juice (with sugar and pectine).

        Jell-o is generally artificially flavored gelatine (which comes from animal bones).

        If I’m not mistaken, in Canada there are laws specifying what can be labeled as jam and jelly, like sugar concentration and stuff like that.

      • prettybunnys
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        6 months ago

        You’re a Canadian and you’ve never seen Welch’s grape jelly, or jelly in general?

        • bionicjoey@lemmy.ca
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          6 months ago

          I’ve seen Welch’s gummies before… Never jelly in a squeeze bottle like that though. The jam aisle at most grocery stores I’ve gone to is pretty much just Smuckers and similar jarred jams

          • ℛ𝒶𝓋ℯ𝓃@pawb.social
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            6 months ago

            Interesting. We have jars of smucker’s jellies here in America too, but it’s the homogenous seedless kind as described above, same stuff that’s in the squeeze bottle. We don’t really call it “seedless preserves” here though, that’s just implied with jelly. I might call the heterogeneous kind you described “jam” or “preserves” instead of jelly, but that distinction might be a local thing.

            • xor@infosec.pub
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              6 months ago

              i too, grew up calling it “jam”… preserves were actually the extra heterogeneous variety, usually homemade… and jelly was the congealed, grape flavored, high fructose corn syrup…

              and then there’s apple butter… which is just made out of apples…

      • Ranvier@sopuli.xyz
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        6 months ago

        It’s a little weird, here’s an article that would describe the process of making some if you’re curious:

        https://www.masterclass.com/articles/how-to-make-easy-homemade-jelly-basic-jelly

        I prefer jam in general, but a lot of people find this stuff easier to spread on a pb&j sandwich (like softer untoasted bread) or other uses where a thick texture would make jam more difficult to use but they still want the fruit goo (like filling a pastry with maybe). Usually we would use the word jam to mean like a chunkier fruit preserve, and jelly specifically refers to this stuff.

    • JadenSmith
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      6 months ago

      American Jelly, in regards to Peanut Butter and Jelly, is often made from fruit juice of usually concord grapes.