![Let’s Learn How to Take Texas’ Favorite Drink, Dr Pepper, and Turn It Into Jelly](http://townsquare.media/site/156/files/2021/12/attachment-Dr.-Pepper-Jelly-FunFoods-via-YouTube.jpg?w=980&q=75)
Let’s Learn How to Take Texas’ Favorite Drink, Dr Pepper, and Turn It Into Jelly
When it comes to jelly, I'm a strawberry guy. Nothing against grape jelly, it's good, but put the two in front of me and I'll pick strawberry. However, learning that there is a Dr Pepper flavored jelly makes me rethink that decision. This sounds great. Let's learn how to make it.
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wideopencountry.com gives us some step by step instructions on what to do to make some, too.
- Start with 4 cups of Dr Pepper poured into a pot.
- Bring the pot to a rolling boil for five minutes.
- Remove and stir in one pack of Sure-Jell.
- Add 4 cups of sugar to the pot.
- Bring the pot back to boiling for two minutes.
- While the jelly is boiling, submerge your jars in a pot of hot (not boiling) water and put on the stove to keep warm. Do the same for the jar lids.
- After two minutes of boiling, remove the jelly from the stove, let it cool slightly then pour into your jars.
- Submerge the sealed jars back into the hot water and bring to a boil.
There you have it, Dr Pepper jelly to try on your biscuit or toast. And apparently you can do this with other sodas, too. I can certainly see a Big Red jelly being really good. Maybe a root beer jelly? Okay, that might be taking it a little too far. Follow along with the video below and try it out yourself.
Being a Type 1 Diabetic, this would obviously be instant death. I wonder if using Dr Pepper Zero Sugar and maybe Splenda instead of sugar would work? Maybe that can be my weekend project. If I decide to do it, I'll let you know how it turns out.