Reddit Reddit reviews 6 Mini Tulip Jelly Jar with Glass Lids 6 Rings and 12 Clamps

We found 4 Reddit comments about 6 Mini Tulip Jelly Jar with Glass Lids 6 Rings and 12 Clamps. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Kitchen & Dining
Kitchen Cookware
Home & Kitchen
Canning Products
Canning Jars
6 Mini Tulip Jelly Jar with Glass Lids 6 Rings and 12 Clamps
As seen on your favorite food networks and magazines!Wide mouth for easy fillingBeautifully displays your preserved and stored foods and home goods.Absolutely gorgeous on your shelf!Includes 6 jars, 6 lids, 6 gaskets, and 12 clamps for easy canning.
Check price on Amazon

4 Reddit comments about 6 Mini Tulip Jelly Jar with Glass Lids 6 Rings and 12 Clamps:

u/kaidomac · 7 pointsr/sousvide

Craft stores like Michael's & Jo-ann's will often have them as well. I use them to make different flavors of egg bites on just about a weekly basis! You can also buy alternative jars, like Weck jars. I have a set of these, which are really great during the holidays when you want to look fancy, haha:

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00F739OFC/

They're pretty pricey at $24 for a 6-pack, but the restaurants around here charge $6 for a single creme brulee about that size, so I think the cost trade-off works long-term.

Lately I've been building up my Oui jar collection, which are mini single-serve yogurts from Yoplait, sold by themselves as singles, or in small packs, which have cool shapes. They have a full-size & a half-size version (both of which are small). For sous-vide, I've been using these lids:

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0169E49HA/

They fit the Oui jars perfectly & work great for sous-vide; the only downside is that they are ridiculously expensive for what you get (~$4.25 shipped each, once you break the cost of a 2-pack with shipping down). But again, I look at it as the cost of going out to eat vs. the cost of having a tool in my kitchen that I will be using for years to come, so it kinda-sorta makes it worth it, especially as I use tiny jars for yogurt, creme brulee, pots de creme, custards, puddings, jellos, and all kinds of other little fun stuff like lemon curd, homemade jams, and to hold spices in.

I may or may not have a small addiction to tiny glass jars...

u/mr_patsy · 6 pointsr/ArtisanVideos

I was wondering about that cool little jar too. Think this is it.

u/anoklumberjack · 3 pointsr/CrappyDesign

In case anyone else is curious/nosey like me: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Weck-762-Tulip-Jelly-Jar/dp/B00F739OFC

u/SnyperBunny · 2 pointsr/Canning

to be honest... as a canner a gift of jars is always something I'd be happy to get. Perhaps a case of patterned or unusually shaped jars? Just be sure they take standard sized lids and are a standard volume (pint, half pint, quarter pint).
(I searched amazon for "jelly jar", these are pretty cool: http://www.amazon.com/Weck-762-Tulip-Jelly-Jar/dp/B00F739OFC/ref=sr_1_19?s=kitchen&ie=UTF8&qid=1449038603&sr=1-19&keywords=jelly+jars
They have the "weck" style of lid which is a good type although quite uncommon and can be tricky to learn to use from what I have heard, the other more normal one is the two-piece one with the flat metal disk and the screw-on band. I'd say to shy away from the ones with lids like commercially bought jams, these are not typically reusable and can be awkward to replace.)


Oh! something else, a Canadian store called Lee Valley has a really nice metal jar funnel that fits both wide-mouth jars and regular mouth, if you can find something like that that may be a nice addition. If he does a lot of things relating to apples, (and if he doesn't have one yet) an apple peeler (like this: http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_2?url=search-alias%3Dkitchen&field-keywords=apple+peeler) might be handy for him.