The Kitchen Affections Pressure Canner · now on Amazon

Preserve today. Enjoy for tomorrow.

The 24-quart pressure canner we designed for first-time canners — built to USDA guidelines, sized for a full batch of seven quart jars, and shipped with the complete 6-piece toolkit you need to finish your first jar tonight.

Capacity24 qt
Holds7 quart jars
Included tools6 pieces
USDABuilt to spec
01 / The Canner
Editor's pick · for absolute beginners

The canner we wished we'd had on day one.

We tested fifteen beginner-grade canners on a normal home stove and could not find one we'd hand to a friend. So we built our own. The Kitchen Affections 24-Quart Pressure Canner is engineered around the questions first-time canners actually ask — not the ones equipment companies assume.

/ 24 qt · aluminum body Kitchen Affections 24-Quart Pressure Canner with dual pressure gauge and 6-piece starter kit
New release · built to USDA guidelines

Kitchen Affections 24-Quart Pressure Canner — Complete Starter Kit

★★★★★ 4.8  ·  2,147 early reviews

A 24-quart aluminum pressure canner with a dual-pressure precision gauge, quick-lock bayonet lid, and a full 6-piece toolkit in the box. Designed, tested, and shipped by the same team that writes the tutorials on this site.

  • 24-qt aluminum body
  • Fits 7 quart / 18 pint jars
  • Dual-pressure precision gauge
  • Quick-lock bayonet lid
  • Three-vent safety system
  • Glass-top & gas safe
$189.00 $229.00 Free Prime delivery
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Affiliate disclosure · Kitchen Affections is the manufacturer of this product. As an Amazon Associate we also earn a small commission on Amazon purchases through this link, at no additional cost to you.

02 / Why this canner
Engineered for beginners

Six reasons it just works.

Every detail of the Kitchen Affections canner was chosen by people who have actually finished — and ruined — a batch. These are the six that mattered most.

Dual-pressure gauge

A precision dial and a weighted regulator. You can read the exact PSI and hear the rhythm — the way experienced canners actually work.

Holds 7 quart jars

A full tomato-day batch in a single load. The 24-quart capacity is the USDA reference size for safe processing of low-acid foods.

Three-vent safety

Vent pipe, overpressure plug, and a metal-to-metal seal. If anything is wrong, the canner stops you before you can hurt yourself.

Quick-lock lid

One-quarter turn and the bayonet lid seals. No fiddly screw clamps, no second-guessing whether you tightened it evenly.

Built to USDA spec

Processing times in every official USDA recipe assume a pressure canner that holds 10–15 PSI cleanly. This one does, and is tested to do so.

Glass-top & gas safe

Flat-machined aluminum base, induction-friendly, and light enough that you can actually lift it onto the stove with hot water inside.

03 / In the box
Complete starter kit

Everything you need to finish a jar tonight.

The canner is only half of it. The other half is the six small tools that turn a stressful first canning night into a calm one.

9 Items. One Box. Everything You Need. — Kitchen Affections complete starter kit
01

The canner

24-quart aluminum body, machined base, bayonet lid, dual-pressure gauge.

02

Jar rack

Stainless rack lifts seven quart jars off the base so they heat evenly and don't crack.

03

Jar lifter

Rubber-jawed tongs that grip a wet, hot jar from rim to shoulder without slipping.

04

Wide-mouth funnel

Stainless, dishwasher-safe, sized to drop into both regular and wide-mouth Mason jars.

05

Headspace tool

Notched ruler in inches and centimeters; doubles as a bubble remover along the jar wall.

06

Magnetic lid wand

Lifts hot flat lids out of the sanitizing bath without ever touching the sealing surface.

07

Recipe booklet

64-page printed beginner's guide with thirty USDA-tested recipes, indexed by season.

And every tutorial on this site, free.

Scan the QR on the inside cover for the full video library, lifetime.

04 / Why bother

Three honest reasons to can at home.

We're not going to tell you it'll change your life. But it might change your weekends, your pantry, and the way you taste August in December.

01

You taste the season.

A peach picked ripe in July, processed the same afternoon, will out-flavor anything you can buy in February. Canning is a way to keep eating the best week of summer for the rest of the year.

02

You know what's in it.

No preservatives you can't pronounce, no mystery sweeteners, no factory-floor question marks. Just fruit, sugar, lemon, salt — ingredients you measured yourself.

03

You slow down.

Canning makes you stand in one room for two hours doing one careful thing. In a world that rewards twelve open tabs, that small monastic act is its own reward.

05 / Tutorials
Watch · 42 episodes

Full-length lessons, unhurried.

Real-time runs of every common process, filmed in one continuous take. No fast-cuts, no music swells — just the hands, the timer, and the quiet sound of jars settling.

/ tutorial · coming soon 22:14
Episode 01 · The first batch 22:14

Water-Bath Canning, Start to Finish

A complete, unedited walkthrough — clean jars to cooling rack — using a single jar of strawberry jam as the first project. Begin here.

/ tutorial · coming soon 14:02
Episode 0414:02

Pressure canning, gently explained

/ tutorial · coming soon 09:48
Episode 0709:48

Crisp dill pickles, every time

/ tutorial · coming soon 06:30
Episode 1106:30

Headspace, sealing & the ping

/ tutorial · coming soon 07:55
Episode 1807:55

Altitude, adjusted simply

06 / The method
Beginner walkthrough · 75 min

Six steps from boil to ping.

The entire water-bath process, demystified. Print this, tape it to the inside of a cabinet door, and follow along the first three times. After that you won't need it.

Step 01

Sanitize

Wash jars, lids, and rings in hot soapy water. Keep jars warm in a 180°F bath until you're ready to fill.

Step 02

Prepare

Use a tested, modern recipe — USDA, Ball Blue Book, or a university extension. Acidity is non-negotiable.

Step 03

Fill

Funnel hot product into warm jars. Leave the headspace your recipe specifies — usually ¼ inch for jams.

Step 04

Seal

Wipe rims with a clean damp cloth. Place lids on, screw bands fingertip-tight — no more, no less.

Step 05

Process

Lower jars into boiling water with at least one inch above the lids. Process for the time your recipe specifies.

Step 06

Cool

Lift jars onto a towel and leave undisturbed for 12–24 hours. Press the lid center: no flex means a good seal.

07 / Recipes
Tested · safe · seasonal

Recipes we've made more than once.

Each one comes with exact acidity notes, altitude tables, and process times. None of them are improvised. All of them are delicious.

/ jam · 4–5 half pints
No. 014 · beginner

Strawberry & vanilla preserves

30 minWater bath
/ pickle · 6 quarts
No. 027 · beginner

Garlic & dill cucumbers

1 hrWater bath
/ butter · 7 half pints
No. 048 · intermediate

Spiced apple butter

3 hrWater bath
/ chutney · 5 pints
No. 071 · intermediate

Plum & black pepper chutney

2 hrWater bath
08 / Answers
Common questions, plainly answered

What everyone asks the first time.

If you're new, you've probably got one of these questions tucked somewhere in your head. Here are the honest, USDA-aligned answers.

Q 01 What is the easiest thing to can for a first-time canner? +

Strawberry jam is the gentlest first project. It's high in acid, forgiving on headspace, and processes in only ten minutes in a boiling-water bath. Most beginners are eating their first jar before the week is out.

Q 02 Do I need a pressure canner to start canning at home? +

No. A water-bath canner is enough for all high-acid foods — jams, pickles, salsas, fruit, and most tomato recipes. Pressure canning is only required for low-acid foods like beans, meat, and plain vegetables.

Q 03 How long do home-canned foods last? +

The USDA recommends using home-canned goods within twelve to eighteen months for best flavor and texture. A properly sealed jar stored in a cool, dark place will remain safe well past that, but quality slowly declines.

Q 04 Can I reuse canning lids? +

Flat lids are single-use for canning — the sealing compound deforms when it seats. Screw bands are reusable indefinitely as long as they aren't rusted. There is one exception: Tattler reusable lids are designed to be used again.

Q 05 Is home canning safe? +

Home canning is safe when you follow a tested, modern recipe from a reliable source — the USDA Complete Guide, the Ball Blue Book, or a university extension service. Risk comes from improvising recipes, ignoring processing times, or canning low-acid foods without a pressure canner.

Q 06 What does the popping sound mean after canning? +

That small metallic ping is the center of the lid pulling down as the jar cools and a vacuum forms inside. It is the sound of a good seal. Most jars ping within an hour of leaving the canner.

09 / Warranty
Register today · unlock your bonuses

Your canner is covered.
Register it.

Take 60 seconds to register at go.kitchenaffections.com and unlock your full warranty plus exclusive owner bonuses — a free replacement gasket kit, extended coverage, and priority support.

Register your canner
· Free gasket kit · Extended coverage · Priority support