Can you pressure can in the Ball Automatic Home Canner?
Last reviewed July 2026.
For acid foods, yes — but it is not a pressure canner. The interesting exception in NCHFP's own statement: it explicitly excludes 'the Ball Automatic Home Canner for acid foods only' from its multi-cooker concerns, because it is 'a dedicated canner' with 'proper thermal process development done' and manufacturer instructions. Acid foods only — it is not a pressure canner and cannot process low-acid vegetables, meats or fish.
The facts on file
| Verdict | Acid foods only — Acid foods only — not a pressure canner |
| Type | waterbath · electric, non-pressurized (boiling-water equivalent) |
| Capacity | Dedicated electric canner for high-acid foods; discontinued but widely owned second-hand. |
| Marketed as | “Electric canning for jams, pickles and other high-acid foods” |
Sources — read them yourself
How to read this
The line that matters in home canning equipment is who stands behind the claim. USDA process schedules were developed on stovetop pressure canners — NCHFP describes the equipment class and has stated plainly that those processes were not developed for electric multi-cookers. A manufacturer's own thermal validation can be genuine engineering and still not be an authority's recommendation — see what "meets USDA guidelines" does and doesn't mean. And a boiling-water canner is the right tool for high-acid foods and the wrong one for everything else.
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Canning Score indexes what NCHFP, USDA and university extension programs have on record about canning equipment, with attribution — we publish no process times and no safety advice. Verdicts describe the state of the authority record for an appliance class, not a guarantee about any jar. For tested recipes and process schedules, use NCHFP (nchfp.uga.edu), the USDA Complete Guide, or your state extension office — or the Seal canning guides, which work food-by-food from the same sources. If an authority publishes new guidance, the page changes — the authority always wins.
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