I made some salsa (my first time) to can, I was worried about the preservation so I added 2 TBS of vinegar per pint as recommended. I tried a jar and it is too vinegary. Is there any way to fix this? Thank you for your help.

by Any_Needleworker2340

21 Comments

  1. LES_G_BRANDON

    I think your screwed on this batch, unfortunately. It’s hard to tell how much volume you have here, but I’d start with a quarter teaspoon next time. You can’t remove it once it’s in there, so best to tread lightly.

  2. ToastedEvrytBagel

    Add some sugar? Or make more salsa? Idk

  3. LhandChuke

    Ok. As a salsa nerd I never use vinegar.

    If you need acid use lime juice or lemon juice.

    But to mellow the acid flavor (assuming you’ve used regular white vinegar) add sugar. It’ll counter the acid.

    You could also dilute the salsa by adding more tomatoes, peppers, onions, or cilantro (unless you think it tastes like soap).

    Basically you have to counter the acid one way or another.

    12 pints is a lot of salsa. I salute you. Ha ha.

    Edit: batter to salsa. Ha ha. Stupid fat fingers.

  4. C_Gnarwin2021

    Baking soda helps. Use only a pinch. And when I say a pinch, I mean a little tiny pinch at a time. That’s what I do sometimes for things that are too acidic. Kind of neutralizes it. Might have to start from square one though. But if it’s for canning, I would definitely look into this further, I can’t say how it would affect your salsa in this instance

  5. Walrusliver

    Recommend only using lime juice next time. Less harsh flavor, less acidic, more fruity deliciousness.

  6. Crafty_Ad3377

    And sugar. Just a tiny bit until you hit the right blend

  7. likesexonlycheaper

    Blend it up, strain it, call it a hot sauce

  8. JohnnyBroccoli

    I’ve literally never even considered adding vinegar to my homemade salsa. Doesn’t matter how much I make (no, I’m not making industrial amounts), it’ll all get eaten within 48 hours or so.

  9. RatherPoetic

    If you are actually canning the salsa you need to be following a tested and approved recipe. You’re better off asking r/canning for advice since the added acid is vitally important to ensure the safety of home canned recipes.

  10. letstalkaboutrocks

    I’m surprised with the amount of people stating to never use vinegar and I feel it shouldn’t be binary.

    Almost all my recipes where the salsa is used as a topping I use apple cider vinegar. For dipping salsa I typically use lime.

  11. bock_samson

    A good way to counter acid without adding sugar is to use baking soda, you don’t need much, like a teaspoon will handle a normal pot

  12. 2 tbs per pint is quite a lot, what recipe did you use? I’d be very wary about altering recipes for canning based on opinions in Reddit – remember, this sub is mostly folks making fresh and eating fresh, not canning to shelf stable. This happens to be one of my go to canning recipes though (ball has a ton of tested and safe recipes!). https://www.ballmasonjars.com/blog?cid=fresh-salsa

  13. Did you consider cutting down the amount of vinegar

  14. GreyMatters_Exorcist

    No vinegar needed use lime … the tomato also adds acid…

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