No, you do not need to cover the jars with water when you pressure can. There is a mark in mine that shows the minimum level of water. It can be higher than the mark, just not lower.Hmmm(with a hopeful note)......do you have to cover the jars with water for pressure canning like with water bath? Yeah, instructions say no more than 2/3 full for pressure cooking....1/2 for beans because of foaming.Diversions are quite welcome! Do you still have the instructions for your pressure cooker? When I can in my big canner I don't need to have that much water. It's a specific amount, but I don't remember how much. Too bad you're in Michigan - I'd can with you!I splurged on a nice stn stl 6qt pressure cooker a couple years ago, it's great for quickly stewing those old hens, making bone stock (way way better than a slow cooker/crock pot), and cooking dried beans in a jiffy.........wish I had gone larger so I could can meat in it too. I think even pints are too tall to can in it, given the 2/3 liquid rule for pressure cookers?Exactly! That's a big part of it, have lost a large majority of my once prodigious gumption in the last 4-5 years. Several of my personality aspects have rendered me pretty isolated as far as 'community' goes..... ...... I have asked a few people, but they don't do meat. I've done some jams and fruit in the past and have water bath equipment. Am now really keen to do chicken as I don't have much freezer capacity and no generator to save all that work from the regular power outages around here. I could invest in a large pressure canner....or invest in another freezer and a generator....canner seems to make more sense, just have to get over dipping into mortgage savings to do it....now I'm just babbling, sorry for the thread diversion bobbi-j.