How to Start Canning Oranges

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Have you ever tried canning oranges? Learn how to preserve oranges to make them shelf-stable for months to come with this easy picture tutorial!

Have you ever tried canning oranges? Learn how to preserve oranges to make them shelf-stable for months to come with this easy picture tutorial! #canningoranges #preserving #canning #oranges

Canning Oranges

This is a new thing to can for me. Normally I don’t buy alot of extra oranges but there was a 25 pound bag on sale from my co-op last month for only $10 so I figured I’d get them and figure out what to do with them.

The problem with buying super fresh produce is that it tends to go bad fast. So even though the hubby has been eating them, I needed to figure out something new to do with them. I’ve recently been reading Putting Food By. It has a lot of ideas to can things that I have never thought about before so I decided to look up oranges and see if they could be canned. It said they can be canned just like any other fruit so I made up a batch of very light syrup and canned oranges!

—Want to freeze them instead of canning? Here’s my tutorial on Preserving Orange Juice.

How to Can Oranges

What you need:

  • Oranges
  • Sugar
  • Water
  • Hot Water Canner
  • Canning Supplies

For us, I used pint size jars. If you have a bigger family and go through alot of oranges in one sitting you may want to use quarts.

Also, I use turbinado sugar to make my syrup. It has a slightly more brown sugar taste for the finished product but nothing major. If you want to use regular sugar that’s totally fine. You don’t even have to use sugar if you don’t want to!

For a very light syrup, boil 5 1/2 c. water and 1 1/4 c. sugar. Simmer until the sugar has dissolved. Keep this warm until you are ready to pack your cans. Just one batch of this was enough for all 7 pints I did.

Make sure the oranges you are using are fresh. The hard or moldy ones are too difficult to peel. If you bought them from the store or anywhere they might have been sprayed, make sure you wash them in produce wash first. I used no-spray oranges.

Peel the oranges with a citrus peeler. Try and get as much of the membrane or “white stuff” off as you can. Then separate into slices.

Pack your jar with the slices tightly but leave about 1 inch of headspace.

Once the jars have been packed with oranges, fill them until the oranges are covered with the light syrup we made earlier. Make sure you still leave about 1/2 inch headspace after the syrup is added.

Clean off the rim of the jar well before adding the lid. I wipe them once with a wet rag and then again with a dry one. You don’t want any sticky spots or water left on the rim of the jar or it won’t seal properly.

Add the lids and then the rims. Make sure you screw the rims on tight!

Preheat the water before you add the jars. You want it just simmering. Add all of the jars to the water. Make sure the water covers the tops of the jars. If it doesn’t, add a little more.

Simmer/low boil these jars for the time indicated on the chart above according to your altitude. Click over to the USDA website for guidelines on a weighted pressure canner. Be sure to check your pressure canner’s instruction manual to follow proper procedures.

After you have processed the jars for the correct amount of time, turn off the stove and let the water cool down slowly before you take them out.

Once you remove the jars, put them on a cutting board or another heat-resistant surface. I use old flour sack rags to cover the counter so I can set them down and soak up the water that drips off.

Do not touch the jars until they have sealed. You will know this by the “pop” they make and the lid will have an indent in it instead of being puffed out. Leave the jars alone for several hours. If some of the jars didn’t seal, either put them in the fridge and eat or you can replace the lid and try and re-bath them to get them to seal.

–For more information on how to see if your jars have properly sealed and what to do if they haven’t, check out this post on Testing Jar Seals And Reprocessing Jars (Safe Home Canning)

Please check with your local extension office for any changes on times/temps/high altitude.

Want to add to your Recipe Binder? Print the Home-canned Oranges recipe below:

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Canning Oranges

Ingredients

  • Oranges
  • Sugar
  • Water

Instructions

  1. I used pint size jars. If you have a bigger family and go through alot of oranges in one sitting you may want to use quarts.
  2. For a very light syrup, boil 5 1/2 c. water and 1 1/4 c. sugar. Simmer until the sugar has dissolved. Keep this warm until you are ready to pack your cans. Just one batch of this was enough for all 7 pints I did.
  3. Make sure the oranges you are using are fresh. The hard or moldy ones are too difficult to peel. If you bought them from the store or anywhere they might have been sprayed, make sure you wash them in produce wash first. I used no-spray oranges.
  4. Peel the oranges with a citrus peeler. Try and get as much of the membrane or "white stuff" off as you can. Then separate into slices.
  5. Pack your jar with the slices tightly but leave about 1 inch of headspace.
  6. Once the jars have been packed with oranges, fill them until the oranges are covered with the light syrup we made earlier. Make sure you still leave about 1/2 inch headspace after the syrup is added.
  7. Clean off the rim of the jar well before adding the lid. I wipe them once with a wet rag and then again with a dry one. You don't want any sticky spots or water left on the rim of the jar or it won't seal properly.
  8. Add the lids and then the rims. Make sure you screw the rims on tight!
  9. Preheat the water before you add the jars. You want it just simmering. Add all of the jars to the water. Make sure the water covers the tops of the jars. If it doesn't, add a little more.
  10. Simmer/low boil these jars for the time indicated on the USDA chart according to your altitude. Click over to the USDA website for guidelines on a weighted pressure canner. Be sure to check your pressure canner’s instruction manual to follow proper procedures.
  11. After you have processed the jars for the correct amount of time, turn off the stove and let the water cool down slowly before you take them out.
  12. Once you remove the jars, put them on a cutting board or another heat-resistant surface. I use old flour sack rags to cover the counter so I can set them down and soak up the water that drips off.
  13. Do not touch the jars until they have sealed. You will know this by the "pop" they make and the lid will have an indent in it instead of being puffed out. Leave the jars alone for several hours. If some of the jars didn't seal, either put them in the fridge and eat or you can replace the lid and try and re-bath them to get them to seal.

Make sure you check out all of the free Canning and Preserving Recipes we have on Little House Living! And don’t forget to check out The Canner’s Cookbook, it has recipes on how to use all your home canned goods!

I recommend a Presto Pressure Canner and the book Putting Food By for all your canning projects!

Have you ever had canned orange slices? Will you be making some of your own?

This post on Canning Oranges was originally published in February 2011. It has been updated as of November 2019.

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37 Comments

  1. Pingback: Ball Canning Book ~ A Giveaway!
  2. I would not have thought of that, how about grapefruit? Same technique? Around August I start fantasizing about grapefruit…

  3. Here is a way to easily peel grapefruit. I bet it would work with oranges if you used less time. Bake the whole grapefruit on a cookies sheet on 350 degrees for 15 mins. The peel comes off super easy and the white part doesn’t stick to the fruit. I peeled mine while they were still warm. Use a pot holder to handle them when they first come out of the oven.
    Thanks for the canning instructions for oranges.

  4. Have you used the turbinada sugar for canning anything other than oranges? I would like to know if it would work for applebutter or peach jam?
    Thank you

  5. Did you candy the orange peels? Thats another way to makebthe fruit go even farther. Basically you boil the peels, drain, repeat, simmer in sugar syrup, then roll in granulated sugar. There are tons of recipes online for it. You can do it with grapefruit peels as well.
    Also, we make a basic orange cleaner with our citrus peels. I put them packed tightly in a quart jar and pour white vinegar over them just to cover them, put a lid on top and stick it in a cabinet for about a month or two, just until the orange/citrus smell is as strong as the vinegar smell or stronger, strain it into a spray bottle and you have a lovely strong all purpose cleaner! And no waste!

    1. Thank you for the orange all purpose cleaner recipe,last year we & everyone was plagued with Asian beetles/Lady bugs .
      I read recently they hater the smell of citrus .I am going try this .
      Even thru the winter months in Canada they appear ,I have had one bite on my head & has taken a long time to heal.
      So I am willing to try anything to keep out these critters

  6. This is an excellent idea. I am allergic to most fresh fruits, but can usually eat them when they have been cooked or canned. I never get to have oranges. I am going to try this while I can still get them inexpensively. Thanks for this.

  7. Thank-you for the lovely canning directions! I bought FFA oranges at Christmas … so many oranges and my husband thought they were sour. I did not want to waste them or make a sugary preserve. Works!

  8. Don’t have to throw all those orange peels away, either! (Im big on using EVERYTHING ) You can make candied orange peel, which is delicious and they store well. You can also dry the peels, the powder them in a food processor and use as an exfoliating scrub or mix with borax for a cleanser. 🙂

  9. Take your orange peels and pack them loosely into a quart jar. Fill the jar with white vinegar and screw on a lid. Let sit for 10 days. Strain out the orange peels (I used cheap muslin fabric) and put the remaining liquid in a clean spray bottle. It cleans just about everything and leaves a fresh, clean scent behind. And it’s inexpensive to boot.

  10. My oranges are looking a little cloudy is that normal? The seals are all still good and I used your instructions up above.

      1. Mine are a little cloudy as well. They have sat for 1 month on the shelf. I thought maybe 1 or 2 seals may have been bad. I did a batch of 40 jars. But ALL of them are cloudy. Is it possibly the sugar water mixture with the juice of the oranges swirling together?

  11. Just brought boxes of oranges back to Sask. from Arizonia so thanks so much fdor the recipe. I am in the process of making them right now

  12. Hi, we would like to try canning oranges but we are concerned about over cooking the oranges. Can you recommend a boil time that won’t cause the oranges to be stewed or mushy. We are at sea level in Nova Scotia, Canada. Thank you

  13. 2 stars
    I followed the recipe to the T I let them sit for Another day before trying them…. was really disappointed…. they taste like grapefruit…. what did I do wrong….

  14. I can oranges every year they are delicious in the summer in punch or put them in the fridge and get them cold delicious on a hot day