How Do You Can Sweet Peppers? | Fast, Tested Method

To can sweet peppers, blister and peel, hot-pack into jars, then pressure-can plain peppers or water-bath pickled peppers.

Canning sweet peppers at home is safe and rewarding when you follow tested steps. You’ll prep the peppers, choose the right canning method, and process for the correct time based on altitude. This guide keeps the crunch, keeps the color, and keeps your pantry stacked with jars you can trust.

Pepper Canning Paths At A Glance

Use this quick map to pick the right method for your batch. Plain peppers are low-acid, so they need a pressure canner. Pickled peppers ride on vinegar acid and go in a boiling-water canner.

Product Safe Method Core Time/Notes*
Plain Sweet Peppers (halves/strips) Pressure canner Pints/half-pints 35 min; hot pack; 1" headspace
Roasted Sweet Peppers In Water Pressure canner Pints/half-pints 35 min; peel skins; 1" headspace
Pickled Bell Peppers (vinegar) Boiling-water canner Pints/half-pints 10 min; 1/2" headspace
Pickled Hot-And-Sweet Mix Boiling-water canner Pints/half-pints 15 min; 1/2" headspace
Marinated Peppers (no oil in jar) Boiling-water canner Pints/half-pints 20 min; 1/2" headspace
Pepper Relish (tested recipe) Boiling-water canner Time varies by recipe; follow tested source
Salsa With Peppers (tested recipe) Boiling-water canner Time varies by recipe; follow tested source

*Times are for sea level and pint/half-pint jars; see the altitude table below for adjustments and the linked official charts for full details.

How Do You Can Sweet Peppers? Step-By-Step Home Method

This section walks you through a reliable workflow for plain peppers (pressure canner) and for pickled peppers (boiling-water canner). The gear list and prep steps overlap, so you can switch paths after peeling.

Gear You’ll Need

  • Pressure canner for plain peppers; deep boiling-water canner for pickled jars
  • Pint or half-pint canning jars with new two-piece lids
  • Jar lifter, ladle, bubble remover, clean towels
  • Large sheet pan or skillet for blistering, or a grill/broiler; tongs
  • White vinegar at 5% acidity (for pickled batches)

Prep The Peppers

Pick firm, glossy bells with no soft spots. Wash well. Trim off stems. For large peppers, quarter or slice into wide strips. Slash a few small vents in each piece so steam can escape during blistering.

Blister And Peel For Best Texture

Skins can go leathery in jars. Blistering loosens skins so you can peel without losing flesh. Pick one method:

  • Oven/broiler: 220°C/425°F oven or a hot broiler. Roast 6–10 minutes until skins blister and char in spots.
  • Stovetop: Lay peppers on a wire rack over a burner and turn until blistered.
  • Boil & peel: Brief 3–4 minute blanch, then slip skins.

Move hot peppers to a bowl and cover with a damp cloth for a few minutes. Peel off skins. Keep pieces large for better texture in the jar.

Set Up Jars And Canner

Wash jars, rinse, and keep them hot. Heat lids per the package. For a boiling-water canner, keep water at 82–88°C/180–190°F before loading jars so the boil returns fast. For a pressure canner, preheat a few inches of water as your model’s manual directs.

How To Pressure-Can Plain Sweet Peppers (No Vinegar)

Plain peppers are low-acid, so they require a pressure canner and a 35-minute process for pints and half-pints, with altitude-based pressure changes. This method mirrors the official pepper directions from trusted sources such as the National Center for Home Food Preservation and the USDA guide (linked below).

Hot-Pack Steps

  1. Bring a pot of clean water to a boil for packing liquid.
  2. Pack peeled pepper halves or strips into hot jars. Add optional 1/2 tsp canning salt per pint.
  3. Pour boiling water over peppers, leaving 1" headspace.
  4. De-bubble with a plastic tool. Adjust headspace. Wipe rims.
  5. Apply lids and bands to fingertip tight.
  6. Load the pressure canner. Vent a steady column of steam for 10 minutes. Lock to pressure.
  7. Process 35 minutes at the correct PSI for your altitude (see altitude table).
  8. Turn off heat. Let pressure return to zero naturally. Wait 5–10 minutes before opening the lid away from you.
  9. Lift jars. Cool 12–24 hours. Check seals. Wash and label.

You can confirm the 35-minute pint time, 1" headspace, and PSI adjustments in the NCHFP peppers processing table. That page draws from the USDA Complete Guide to Home Canning and spells out both dial-gauge and weighted-gauge settings.

Pickled Sweet Peppers (Boiling-Water Method)

Pickling adds vinegar at 5% acidity, which lets you use a boiling-water canner. The brine can be simple—vinegar, water, canning salt, a touch of sugar—plus garlic or spices if a tested recipe lists them. Keep oil out of jars for shelf-stable storage.

Pickled Pepper Steps

  1. Make brine: 5 cups 5% vinegar to 1 cup water with canning salt and a little sugar. Simmer 10 minutes; remove garlic if used.
  2. Fill hot jars with peeled strips or rings. Ladle brine to 1/2" headspace.
  3. De-bubble, adjust headspace, wipe rims, apply lids.
  4. Process pints/half-pints for 10–15 minutes based on pepper type and elevation.

For reference recipes and exact times, see the University of Minnesota pickled pepper processing chart and NCHFP’s pickled hot pepper page. These sources set the 10-minute water-bath time for bell peppers and the 15-minute time for hot pepper mixes at sea level, with altitude add-ons where listed.

Close Variant: Canning Sweet Peppers At Home — Rules, Times, And Gear

Whether you jar plain peppers or pickled slices, the guardrails stay the same: follow tested times, measure headspace, and adjust for altitude. These basics prevent spoilage and keep texture snappy.

Jar Size, Headspace, And Pack Style

  • Jar size: Pints and half-pints are standard for peppers. Quarts aren’t listed for plain peppers in current public tables.
  • Headspace: 1" for plain peppers in water; 1/2" for pickled products.
  • Hot pack only: Preheating peppers and liquid reduces floating and siphoning.

Altitude And Pressure Settings

Processing times assume sea level. At higher elevations, water boils at a lower temperature. You must raise pressure (pressure canning) or add minutes (boiling-water canning) to deliver the same lethality. The table below gives a handy view; always cross-check your dial- vs weighted-gauge needs in the linked official tables.

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Elevation Pressure Canner Boiling-Water Canner
0–1,000 ft Weighted 10 PSI; Dial 11 PSI Use base time (10–15 min)
1,001–2,000 ft Dial 12 PSI Add 5 min for many pickled recipes
2,001–4,000 ft Dial 12 PSI Add 5–10 min per tested chart
4,001–6,000 ft Dial 13 PSI Add listed minutes per chart
6,001–8,000 ft Dial 14 PSI; Weighted 15 PSI Add listed minutes per chart
Above 8,000 ft Follow your canner manual and tested tables Follow tested tables only

Headspace And De-Bubbling Tips

Always check headspace with a ruler or tool; eyeballing leads to sealing issues. Slide a bubble remover along the jar walls to release trapped air. Top up with hot liquid if headspace widens after de-bubbling. A tight pack helps peppers stay submerged.

Why Pressure For Plain Peppers?

Peppers are low-acid. Without enough acid, spores of C. botulinum can grow in a sealed, room-temperature jar. A pressure canner reaches temperatures above 100°C/212°F and delivers the target process for safety. The NCHFP peppers page lays out the 35-minute pint time with PSI by altitude, adapted from the USDA guide. If you want a water-bath route, use a tested pickled recipe where the vinegar supplies acid.

Flavor Add-Ins That Stay Within Tested Ratios

Peppers take on brine flavors fast. You can add garlic, peppercorns, or a pinch of sugar to pickled jars as long as a tested recipe shows those amounts. Skip thickeners. Skip oil in the jar. For plain peppers, stick to water and optional salt.

Texture And Color

Packed tight and peeled, sweet peppers hold structure through processing. Red and yellow bells keep a vivid hue. To reduce floating, keep pieces broad, use a firm hot pack, and leave the full 1" or 1/2" headspace as listed.

Troubleshooting Common Issues

Floating Peppers

Use a hot pack, press peppers down with a clean spoon before sealing, and wait a few weeks; many batches settle on the shelf.

Siphoning (Liquid Loss)

Rapid pressure changes cause loss. Vent your pressure canner for a full 10 minutes before pressurizing, cool the canner undisturbed, and wait a few minutes after the gauge hits zero before removing jars. Minor loss is normal if food remains covered.

Soft Texture

Over-processing, thin strips, or bruised produce can go soft. Keep pieces larger, trim away bruises, and stick to the listed time.

Cleaning, Storage, And Shelf Life

After 12–24 hours, remove bands, wash jars, and check seals. Store in a cool, dark spot. Most pepper products keep quality for a year. Once opened, refrigerate and use within a week or two.

Method Notes From Trusted Sources

For plain peppers, the process above reflects the official pepper directions, including the 35-minute pint time and 1" headspace, shown on the NCHFP peppers page (adapted from the USDA guide). For boiling-water canner basics—water depth, preheating, and loading steps—see Using Boiling Water Canners. For pickled bell and hot pepper times at sea level (10–15 minutes), see the UMN Extension pickled pepper chart.

Safety Reminders You Should Not Skip

  • Stick to pint or half-pint jars for plain peppers, with hot pack and 1" headspace.
  • Do not can peppers in oil for shelf storage. Oil changes heat transfer and raises risk.
  • Use 5% vinegar for pickled recipes. Weaker vinegar changes acidity.
  • Adjust for altitude every time. Check the PSI or added minutes.
  • Vent a pressure canner a full 10 minutes before pressurizing.

How Do You Can Sweet Peppers? Real-World Batch Planner

Here’s a simple plan that fits a busy weekend. It hits prep, roasting, and two safe canning paths. It also uses your oven time well so the kitchen stays calm.

Two-Hour Prep Window

  1. Hour 1: Wash and cut 6–8 large bells. Roast trays at high heat until skins blister. Cover and peel. While peppers rest, preheat your canner and warm jars.
  2. Hour 2: Choose a path:
    • Plain jars: Boil water for packing liquid. Hot-pack peppers, 1" headspace, process 35 minutes at your PSI.
    • Pickled jars: Simmer brine 10 minutes, pack peppers, 1/2" headspace, process 10–15 minutes.

Frequently Missed Details That Matter

  • Headspace checks: Re-check after de-bubbling. Topping up takes seconds and prevents siphoning.
  • Rest time: After a water-bath cycle, kill heat, remove the lid, and wait 5 minutes before lifting jars.
  • Band removal: Store sealed jars without bands. You’ll spot seal failures fast.
  • Labeling: Add the product name and date. Rotate stock within a year for peak flavor.

Reference Charts At Your Fingertips

Bookmark the official pepper and canner pages. They keep times and PSI in one place and get updated when research shifts. Both links open in a new tab and go straight to the relevant section, not a generic homepage.

This guide gives you a clear plan and the right links so you can can sweet peppers with confidence. From blistering to headspace checks to altitude adjustments, every step here aligns with tested directions and keeps jars safe on the shelf.

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Mo

Mo

Founder

I am a dedicated home cook and appliance enthusiast. I spend hours in my kitchen testing real-world storage methods, reheating techniques, and kitchen gear performance. My goal is to provide you with safe, tested advice to help you run a more efficient kitchen.