Rhubarb Jam Swirl (3-ingredients, No Pectin)

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This small-batch rhubarb jam comes together with just three ingredients—fresh rhubarb, sugar, and lemon juice—and no pectin needed. It’s tart, deeply flavored, and thick enough to hold its shape as an ice cream swirl without bleeding into the base. It also works beautifully on yogurt, scones, or as the filling in Happy Marriage Bars.

The recipe makes about 2 cups, more than enough to swirl through three pints of ice cream with a good chunk left over for the fridge.

thick pink homemade rhubarb jam in a glass container.

Why I Started Growing Rhubarb (And Why I Refuse to Stop)

Rhubarb is one of those flavors people either love immediately or come around to slowly. I was immediately a convert. I bought my first plant in 2019, and when we moved in 2023, I dug her up and brought her with me. She resurrects from the dead every spring, and as a former black thumb, I am committed to protecting her with my life.

My favorite low-effort use for it is a simple rhubarb syrup stirred into cold seltzer on a warm afternoon. But this jam has become its own obsession, and it started with a recipe I’d been eyeing for years: Happy Marriage Bars. I first heard about them about a week after we got home from our honeymoon in Iceland (a total missed opportunity). But when I finally made them this year, I had some leftover rhubarb jam, and I was already planning a batch of pistachio ice cream—it was kismet. My husband wasn’t so sure about the pairing, but he ate his words (literally) when he tasted the tart-and-nutty combination.

overhead view of a freshly packed pint of pistachio ice cream with rhubarb jam swirl.

Why This Jam Doesn’t Need Pectin (And You Don’t Need to Be a Canning Expert)

I’m admittedly a jam-making novice—I don’t gave a canning setup, I have no idea where to buy pectin, and I have to look up the right temperature every time. But this rhubarb jam recipe eliminates two of those three variables (sorry, you still have to know the right temp!). We’re not making a shelf-stable preserve here; just a fresh jam that lives in your fridge or freezer and gets used up quickly.

Rhubarb is naturally high in pectin, which means it has most of what it needs to set on its own. The acid in lemon juice activates it, sugar concentrates it, and heat does the rest.

The one thing you do need is a thermometer. For rhubarb jam without pectin, temperature is everything, and 224°F is your finish line. Hit that number, and you’re done. Pull it too early and the jam stays loose; push it too far and it sets too firm. But with a thermometer in hand, there’s almost no way to get it wrong.

thick pink homemade rhubarb jam in a glass container.

3-Ingredient Rhubarb Jam

This small-batch rhubarb jam without pectin uses just three ingredients, and it's good enough to eat straight from the jar. Make it to swirl into some pistachio ice cream; keep it for everything else.
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 25 minutes
Total Time: 35 minutes
Servings: 16 servings

Ingredients  

  • 454 g rhubarb (1 lb, chopped)
  • 454 g cane sugar
  • 28 g fresh lemon juice (2 tbsp)

Equipment

  • Saucepan
  • Instant-Read Thermometer
  • Immersion Blender

Method

  1. Add 454 g rhubarb, 454 g cane sugar, and 28 g fresh lemon juice to a medium saucepan.
    chopped rhubarb, sugar, and lemon juice in a saucepan.
  2. Heat over medium-high and stir continuously. The sugar will begin to melt within 2–3 minutes as the rhubarb releases its liquid.
    stirring chopped rhubarb, sugar, and lemon juice in a saucepan.
  3. Stir until all of the sugar has melted.
    melted sugar and chopped rhubarb in a saucepan.
  4. Once the sugar has fully melted and the mixture is liquid, reduce the heat to medium and stir frequently. It will begin to bubble and foam.
    bubbling rhubarb and sugar in a saucepan.
  5. The rhubarb will start to break down and lose its shape as the temperature climbs. You'll see it go from distinct chunks to a soft, pulpy mass. Keep stirring to prevent burning on the bottom.
  6. Check the temperature frequently with an instant-read thermometer. Once the mixture reaches 224°F, immediately remove it from the heat. This takes about 20–25 minutes total from when you started.
    a thermometer inserted in thick rhubarb jam reads 224°F.
  7. Blend with an immersion blender until smooth and glossy, or leave it chunky if you prefer texture.
    thick rhubarb jam in a saucepan.
  8. Pour into a heatproof container and cool at room temperature for at least 1 hour, then transfer to the refrigerator to chill completely before using.
    closeup of freshly-made rhubarb jam in a bowl.

Notes

Yield: This recipe makes approx. 2 cups of jam. A serving is 2 tbsp.
  • Fresh rhubarb varies widely in color, but not in flavor. Field-grown rhubarb tends to be greener and will give you a more muted, earthy-pink jam. Garden rhubarb with redder stalks gives a deeper, rosier result. 
  • Don’t be alarmed when the mixture looks impossibly dry at first. The sugar will melt, and the rhubarb will break down quickly once it hits the heat.
  • For a jam that holds its shape as an ice cream swirl, cook it to 224°F. This is intentional, so you have a nice, thick jam with very low water content.
  • Blending after cooking gives you a smooth, glossy swirl that ribbons cleanly through ice cream. If you prefer a chunkier texture, you can skip it.
  • Let it cool to room temperature before refrigerating, and chill it completely (overnight is ideal) before using it as a swirl. Warm jam will melt into your ice cream rather than staying distinct. Cold jam holds its shape.
  • Ways to use rhubarb jam: swirl into homemade pistachio or vanilla ice cream, spread on sourdough toast, spoon over Greek yogurt or oatmeal, use as a filling in Happy Marriage Bars, or layer into a thumbprint cookie.
Storage: Store leftover rhubarb jam in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks or in the freezer for up to 6 months. Let thaw overnight in the refrigerator (it may turn out slightly watery) before using.
detailed nutrition facts for a serving of rhubarb jam.

Samantha Marceau

Samantha has been making homemade ice cream for over a decade, and she's become a little obsessed with getting it right. A professional food writer and editor with more than 10 years of experience working with sites like The Cookie Rookie, Budget Bytes, and Mama Knows Gluten Free, she brings the same attention to detail to her recipes that she does to her writing. Her goal is simple: help you make better ice cream at home.

View all posts by Samantha Marceau

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