All of these projects can be done with the juice or syrup in a can of fruit. It can also be used to sweeten iced tea if you opened something like pears or peaches. Marinate chicken or pork in it. A frugal home finds ways to use every bit of what has been purchased.
Tuesday, July 22, 2025
Repurposing Leftover Fruit Syrup
I bought seven pounds of cherries when they were $3 per pound. I attempted to make seven pints of canned cherries, but two didn't seal. Those got frozen with the others I had set aside to freeze.I wasn't sure how much syrup to make for hot pack pitted cherries (yes, I pitted seven pounds of cherries in one day), and ended up with more than a quart left over. It was four quarts of cherries (including blanching the ones to be frozen). I thought I would need far more per jar than I did. It felt like a waste to just pour it out, so I went looking for other things to do with it. Then I realized this is also a frugal way to make use of the syrup or juice in store-bought canned fruit and started a section topic post.The first idea was to add lemon juice to cut the sweetness. I have way too many overly ripe lemons on the tree right now, so that worked two problems at once. Cherry lemonade is pretty good.Next up was popsicles. I had to go buy some popsicle molds for that one, but I think I'll be using those several times a year. I actually bought two sets. The one from The Container Store cost three times as much as the one from Home Goods, but it's higher quality and I expect it to last three times as long. I want to experiment with unexpected things like freezing chai tea.There was yet more juice to play with, so I made gelatin desserts. The box of plain gelatin says one packet will set one cup of juice, so I just made two half-cup servings. I did find that too firm, and will probably do 1-1/2 C of juice per packet in the future.
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