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Preserving (rec.food.preserving) Devoted to the discussion of recipes, equipment, and techniques of food preservation. Techniques that should be discussed in this forum include canning, freezing, dehydration, pickling, smoking, salting, and distilling. |
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I made a cherry-raspberry jam from a recipe that didn't use commercial
pectin - just the fruit plus lemon and orange zest, plus some orange juice. It didn't set. It's the first time I've tried jamming without commercial pectin so I don't know if I did it wrong or not. Seems like I boiled it forever and it never got to the jelling stage. I would like to enter this into the fair, so I can't leave it syrupy. What's the best method to reprocess it? All the advice I find is geared towards recipes that already have pectin added. Should I just boil it down? Or, I have a rather old box of Pomona's pectin I never used...but it seems tricky to get right, and I don't have a lot to experiment with. Thanks for any advice, Cyndi |
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In article om>,
"cyndi in the desert" > wrote: > I made a cherry-raspberry jam from a recipe that didn't use commercial > pectin - just the fruit plus lemon and orange zest, plus some orange > juice. It didn't set. It's the first time I've tried jamming without > commercial pectin so I don't know if I did it wrong or not. Seems like > I boiled it forever and it never got to the jelling stage. > I would like to enter this into the fair, so I can't leave it syrupy. > What's the best method to reprocess it? All the advice I find is geared > towards recipes that already have pectin added. Should I just boil it > down? Or, I have a rather old box of Pomona's pectin I never used...but > it seems tricky to get right, and I don't have a lot to experiment > with. > Thanks for any advice, > Cyndi How long is forever? http://www.uga.edu/nchfp/how/can_07/...gredients.html I've got a recipe in an old Farm Journal book that uses 4 cups each pitted sweet red cherries, and red or black raspberries, and 8 cups of sugar. No other acid involved. It says to cook briskly for about 15 minutes (to 218 deg F); and to not cook over 20 minutes. Based on your description, it seems to me your stuff should have set to something. How ripe were your fruits? Sweet cherries or sour? Sour have more pectin. I make all my jams with added pectin; I've found that to be my preference. George uses a thermometer - maybe he'll have something to say about it. Do you know what temp you cooked yours to, Cyndi? Here's my totally unscientific suggestion for a fix. Since you've already got the sugar involved in this, I'd put the stuff back into a large kettle, bring it to a boil, and add a 3-ounce pouch of liquid pectin (Ball Fruit Jell or Certo liquid if you're in the US). Boil for a minute and jar it again and process. It's a lot of cooking for that fruit, but if you're hellbent on a Fair entry, give it a shot. If it wins a ribbon, it will make a great story. If it doesn't, you've got an out. "-) If you don't want to risk it (and I'm not sure that I would, by the way), you've got yourself some damn fine ice cream or pancake/waffle topping. Make different labels. It's all about "marketing," anyway, Kiddo. "-) Triple Sec or Grand Marnier wouldn't be a *bad* thing in that mixture, either. Which reminds me -- I should be making Boozeberry Jam. . . . . -- -Barb <http://jamlady.eboard.com> Updated 7-10-06, Rob's Birthday Lunch "If it's not worth doing to excess, it's not worth doing at all." |
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cyndi in the desert wrote:
> I made a cherry-raspberry jam from a recipe that didn't use commercial > pectin - just the fruit plus lemon and orange zest, plus some orange > juice. It didn't set. It's the first time I've tried jamming without > commercial pectin so I don't know if I did it wrong or not. Seems like > I boiled it forever and it never got to the jelling stage. > I would like to enter this into the fair, so I can't leave it syrupy. > What's the best method to reprocess it? All the advice I find is geared > towards recipes that already have pectin added. Should I just boil it > down? Or, I have a rather old box of Pomona's pectin I never used...but > it seems tricky to get right, and I don't have a lot to experiment > with. > Thanks for any advice, > Cyndi > Are you sure the recipe called for zest and not peel? I a berry jam recipe or two that call for thinly sliced lemons -- peel and all. The lemon peel is boiled first, and it supplies the pectin. (also almost overpowers the berries) I would use Certo to reprocess it. Find Certo's directions for remaking jelly and follow those directions. Cherries and raspberries and sugar will boil down to make tar before they set into jam (Someone Nameless did that once with some beautiful blackberries I'd picked to make a cobbler.) If it tastes good like it is, you could call it Cherry Raspberry Sauce (for ice cream.) Good luck, Bob |
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![]() zxcvbob wrote: > cyndi in the desert wrote: > > I made a cherry-raspberry jam from a recipe that didn't use commercial > > pectin - just the fruit plus lemon and orange zest, plus some orange > > juice. It didn't set. It's the first time I've tried jamming without > > commercial pectin so I don't know if I did it wrong or not. Seems like > > I boiled it forever and it never got to the jelling stage. > > I would like to enter this into the fair, so I can't leave it syrupy. > > What's the best method to reprocess it? All the advice I find is geared > > towards recipes that already have pectin added. Should I just boil it > > down? Or, I have a rather old box of Pomona's pectin I never used...but > > it seems tricky to get right, and I don't have a lot to experiment > > with. > > Thanks for any advice, > > Cyndi > > > > > Are you sure the recipe called for zest and not peel? I a berry jam > recipe or two that call for thinly sliced lemons -- peel and all. The > lemon peel is boiled first, and it supplies the pectin. (also almost > overpowers the berries) > > I would use Certo to reprocess it. Find Certo's directions for remaking > jelly and follow those directions. Cherries and raspberries and sugar > will boil down to make tar before they set into jam (Someone Nameless > did that once with some beautiful blackberries I'd picked to make a > cobbler.) > > If it tastes good like it is, you could call it Cherry Raspberry Sauce > (for ice cream.) > > Good luck, > Bob Ah hah! Now I'm guessing I went wrong using zest and not peel. The recipe did say peel, but having read a number of times that the white part of the peel is very bitter, I didn't think that could be what they really meant. That's what I get for using recipes off obscure internet sites. I will try re-processing using Certo. Thanks. Cyndi |
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