Seasoned Advice Asked by Athanasius on December 10, 2020
What are the advantages (if any) for unlined copper jam pans?
Apologies for this long question, but I’ve spent a lot of time searching for an answer to this and so far have not found any satisfactory explanation. But I’ll at least share what I’ve learned in the process.
Background: Traditional French jam pans are made of copper, and many serious cooks claim they are superior. (See, for example, claims by Serious Eats and a chef interviewed for Bon Appetit.)
And if you look into the claimed advantages of such copper pans, they’re almost always about the superior heat response of copper. Jam (or preserves or whatever) must be cooked quickly, and overcooking the fruit lessens the flavor. So copper is supposedly ideal for heating and cooling quickly.
As someone who owns a number of copper pans, I know the advantages of copper can be overstated sometimes. But the difference in responsiveness is noticeable in sensitive applications (like egg dishes). So I’m not questioning the potential value of a copper vessel here, even though it might be quite pricey.
But a search for copper jam pans will quickly demonstrate that they are almost exclusively made of unlined copper. Why?
Copper is a heavy metal that is poisonous in large doses. Many people are aware that cooking or holding foods in unlined copper can be hazardous over time. As far as I know, there are two places in the kitchen where unlined copper is commonly justified: (1) copper bowls for beating egg whites, where the copper ions help stabilize egg white foams, and (2) traditional French pots for caramelizing sugar, where the high temperatures needed for caramelization would come close to the melting temperature of traditional tin linings. Such applications are attested in reputable sources like Harold McGee’s On Food and Cooking and Shirley Corriher’s CookWise. (One further application of cooking green vegetables in unlined copper because copper ions help retain a strong green color is also mentioned by both McGee and Corriher, but not advocated by either: Corriher even warns explicitly against the practice because of the poisonous elements of copper.)
And searches on jam pans and the use of unlined copper seem to turn up loads of references of people worrying about them, and lots of people arguing that since jam is cooked quickly and most people don’t eat a lot of jam, the concern for unlined copper is minimal. (See, for example, Serious Eats, Fine Cooking, and this oft-cited blog, with a huge number of comments worrying about just how acidic and low-sugar it’s okay for a jam mixture to be before you should use a different cooking vessel.)
All of these sources make the same sort of claims to excuse the use of unlined copper. And most sources severely caution users to be sure not to cook fruit alone in these pans (since fruit can be too acidic and might react with the copper), but rather to always wait and only cook the final mixture diluted by sugar in the pans. (This sort of warning is even sometimes listed by sellers: Williams Sonoma for example notes: “Unlined interior is safe for use with foods with a high sugar content.”)
I should also mention that I’ve tried to find a reputable scientific reference claiming that added sugar makes unlined copper safe to use, but I have so far been unable to find one. Acidic fruit will still be acidic even with added sugar; it may be diluted and buffered, but I’m not sure immediately of the chemistry that significantly inhibit copper absorption just by adding sugar. And jams and preserves are often acidified further with the addition of lemon juice or other acid, which would seem to increase the potential for reactivity with the copper. Moreover, copper salts (which can build up on a corroding copper surface over time; the familiar greenish stuff being the most familiar) are often highly soluble and often highly poisonous, so keeping the interior of your pan sparkling becomes important.
In any case, assuming you keep your pan clean and uncorroded, it may not be a huge concern because jam is cooked quickly and people don’t eat a lot of jam, so copper poisoning is unlikely.
But that seems to be an odd argument, since lined copper is now standard in kitchens. Tin, stainless steel, and even silver linings are possible and would make any concerns about reactivity or corrosion moot. And such pans with thin coatings are basically as responsive as unlined copper. So why are jam pans still almost exclusively sold unlined? Neither McGee nor Corriher makes reference to unlined copper for jam-making (which is suspicious). Nor does any other food science source I’ve consulted give a positive reason for requiring the copper to be unlined for jam.
And even if there were some relatively minor advantage to unlined copper (e.g., Bon Appetit mentions “smoothness” compared to stainless steel, but tin and silver linings are both generally very smooth too), why continue to make these incredibly expensive vessels that become essentially unitaskers in your kitchen? I could imagine other applications for a large wide copper pan in the kitchen, but having it unlined restricts those applications quite a bit to avoid acids, any long-cooking dishes, etc.
Does anyone have any idea for the reason behind this unusual and almost exclusive use of unlined copper in jam making?
As @caconym said, copper ions can bind to pectins, which are the gelling agents in jam.
The gelification behaviour of pectin depends on serveral factors, but for those in jams, the important ones are low water activity (which is due to the sugar content, and also the factor that prevents spoilage), and low pH. Addition of a small amount of copper ions could help making the gel firmer by crosslinking pectin chains. But as we are talking about very small amounts of copper ions, its influence compared to other factors is hard to determine.
Note that it's important that you keep unlined copper vessels very clean, with no traces of oxidation on the inside: while the metallic copper doesn't react very fast with the acids, and is thus relatively harmless for short contact times (like boiling jams), the oxididation products (e.g. verdigris, formed by contact with vinegar) will dissolve much more easily when using the vessels, which will lead to a higher copper intake (and might make your jam too solid ;) ).
But don't forget that copper is also a micronutrient, so you do need some copper in your food.
Answered by remco on December 10, 2020
After periodically coming back to the question over a few months, I think I've found some answers. Remco's answer gives part of the justification (crosslinking pectin chains), but there are other complications.
The short answer is there may be minor chemical benefits to unlined copper for preserve-making, but one can likely achieve similar benefits by just using slightly more acidic recipes for jam. And the aversion to lined copper may be partly based in problems with old corroded tin linings in copper, which would discolor some jams. (Stainless linings shouldn't have these problems.)
The only culinary resource I've found on point (which also has a good scientific repuation) is Hervé This's Molecular Gastronomy, which addresses this question on pp. 65-67.
He begins by noting there is conflicting advice about preserving pans in traditional culinary sources. Many traditional sources going back to the 1800s advocate unlined copper pans. But Henri Babinski in Gastronomie pratique (1907) recommends against them for "preserves made with red fruits," claiming unplated copper pans transmit a "sharp taste." Hervé This also notes professors at the Ecole du Cordon Bleu in the early 1900s recommended against tin for preserves: "avoid using any iron or tin-plated vessel." Lots of sources recommend using pans that have good heat response for preserves (as copper obviously does).
So, there are really two questions here: (1) are there positive advantages to unlined copper, and (2) are there disadvantages to (some?) copper linings?
To answer the first question, there seem to be at least a few possible advantages:
Hervé This focuses on the crosslinking pectin explanation. As he notes, pectin naturally contains chemical groups (carboxylic acid) that repel each other. Acidic conditions neutralize this effect somewhat and allow pectin to bond (hence one reason why some jam recipes add acid). Copper can provide positive ions that counteract the negative carboxylic ions in solution and thereby allow pectin to link a bit easier, hence "hardening preserves," as This claims.
What surprises me about that answer is that it's so little studied. If it were a significant effect, there are plenty of food science journals. Industrial jam-making is a huge enterprise, and if this effect were worthwhile, it would likely have been quantified. (In addition to the article linked in comments, there are several articles dating back a couple decades on copper sequestration effects with pectin, so this is a somewhat well-known phenomenon chemically.) But Hervé This seems to be the only source out there that even mentions this effect. How significant is it?
Other sources that claim positive benefits for unlined copper don't speak in those terms. In fact, the only other one I saw consistently mentioned is that unlined copper makes "sparkling" preserves. Oddly, yes, it's that specific adjective that I saw in several resources, both online and off. My English-language copy of Larousse Gastronomique under "Jams, Jellies, and Marmalades" claims:
Copper and aluminum [pans] should not be used as these metals react with the fruit and contaminate the preserve. (At one time, copper was favoured because the reaction between the metal and fruit produced a sparkling preserve, but this was before the risks of metal contamination were fully appreciated.)
These advantages seem to be minor enough that no serious food science studies have tackled them. But what are the objections to lined copper?
The likely culprit is again mentioned by Hervé This. Tin or silver linings themselves are not an issue. But tin and silver salts (i.e., formed through corrosion and left on pans that are not perfectly clean) will react with acidic preserve components: "Silver salts cause raspberries to whiten a bit, whereas copper ions give them a fine red-orange color. Tin ions trigger the purple tinge that has given rise to the prejudice against tin-plated pans."
However, This goes on to note: "Modern cleaning methods are superior to those in times past... and so the dictum must be amended: Red fruits should never be placed or cooked in unclean tin-plated copper pans."
A final point that is not addressed by This or any other source I could find is -- what about stainless steel linings, which are incredibly popular for copper pans these days? Since they are non-reactive, they would lack the minor advantages of copper's reactivity, but they would also avoid the disadvantages of bare pots (or tin or silver lined) which could introduce potentially poisonous salts if not cleaned properly, as well as creating discolored jam.
Why stainless-lined jam pans are basically unavailable is thus still a bit of a mystery to me. And what about the supposed benefits of unlined copper reacting to help the jam gel quickly (both through pectin crosslinking and perhaps through sugar inversion)? Well, both of these reactions can also be helped along naturally -- without copper -- in jam-making with sufficient acidity.
Thus, ironically, jam makers who buy expensive unlined copper pans and then avoid using very acidic recipes (to avoid excessive copper uptake) are actually working against the very chemical processes unlined copper might facilitate to produce better jam.
Answered by Athanasius on December 10, 2020
Just my two cents. The copper pan was traditionally used for its antimicrobial properties. The heating qualities were just a bonus. It was known that water would stay fresh longer in a copper container. Why it stayed fresh didn't matter. With additional knowledge we can fast-forward to copper plumbing. So, before water bath, steam, or pressure treatment were thought up, the finished product would have just been put in a jar. For a traditional french-style jam with minimal cooking and minimal sugar, the use of a copper pan might have had a significant impact on how long and how well the jam could be stored. (Another example of a traditional practice is that of placing a sprig of lavender blossom on top of the jam. Again, people didn't need to know why, even though now we know lavender oil discourages mold--nothing to do with the smell, taste, or beauty of the lavender. Somehow we lose sight of the fact that adding sugar to fruit has always been about food storage. The same applies to getting preserves to 'set' a skin across the top. This functioned as a sealant, just like sealing a jar with paraffin, or potting meat with a layer a fat. And now I'm thoroughly off topic. Sorry.) I don't have any scientific sources to reference and I can't prove anything about the impact of copper on health or microbes. But I do know what my grandma taught me, for better or worse. And since she lived healthy and independent for 96 years, I'm not going to worry about copper in my jam.
Answered by BT LaCroix on December 10, 2020
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