Showing posts with label preserving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label preserving. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Mixed Citrus Marmalade

In the room at the back of the house next to a sunny patio door lives my orangery. Two potted citrus trees.

The older is a Calamondin (Citrofortunella Mitis). This small citrus is thought to be the result of a cross between an orange and a kumquat, and its fruit are used extensively in Filipino cuisine. Its one of the commonest type of potted orange trees sold as houseplants.

The younger is a Meyer Lemon. This one is thought to be a cross between a lemon and an orange and produces lemon-shaped fruit that get a blush of orange on the skin when they ripen, and are sweeter than ordinary lemons.

A third tree waits in the wings on the kitchen windowsill. An australian immigrant - Fingerlime (Microcitrus Australasica). It is still very small - having arrived as a seedling earlier in the year - and is currently just about getting ready for its first repotting. It will be a few years before it is big enough to start flowering and producing its unusual fruit.

This year's citrus crop came to a total of about 1lb of fruit from the two fruiting trees. By themselves that would make only a very small batch of marmalade, so I padded them out by adding 6 limes and 6 oranges from the supermarket.

On the first day:

Wash all the fruit, and dry them off.

Take a large glass mixing bowl and another small bowl.

On a plate - so you can collect the juice - thinly slice the calamondins and meyer lemons, peel and all (they have quite thin peel with little pith). Put any seeds you may find in the small bowl, and then put the sliced fruit and all juice into the large bowl.

Next, cut thin strips of zest from all over the limes and oranges and add these to the bowl.

On the plate, quarter and finely slice 3 of the limes. Add the fruit and juice to the large bowl. Squeeze the remaining 3 limes thoroughly and add the juice to the large bowl. Slice up the squeezed lime halves and add them to the small bowl with the seeds.

Peel the remaining zest and pith from 3 of the oranges and put it into the small bowl, and then quarter and thinly slice the 3 oranges into the large bowl. Squeeze the final 3 oranges thoroughly and add all the juice to the large bowl. Cut up the squeezed oranges and add them to the small bowl.

Tip the contents of the small bowl - all the pips, pith and squeezed out fruit - into a muslin bag and tie shut. Put this bag into the large bowl too.

Boil a kettle and pour hot water over everything in the large bowl until the water level just covers all the fruit in the bowl. Place a small ceramic plate on top to weigh down the muslin bag and keep it under the water surface.

Cover the bowl with a clean teatowel to keep out fruit flies, and leave the fruit to soak overnight.

On the second day:

Microwave the bowl on full power until it is bubbling. Cover with the teatowel again and leave to stand.

At this point it got forgotten about for a day, so...

On the third (fourth) day:

Microwave the bowl on full power until bubbling again. Test a piece of zest to ensure that it is soft and cooked, and microwave some more if not.

Once the zest is soft, let it stand a few minutes until the muslin bag is cool enough to handle. Squeeze the juice and pectins out of the pith and pips through the muslin bag into the bowl. Get as much out as you can, then discard the contents of the muslin bag.

Weigh the fruit and juice in the bowl, and then tip it into a maslin pan. Add the same weight in sugar. Warm gently and stir to dissolve the sugar in the juice.

Once all the sugar is dissolved, turn up the heat and boil until jam setting point is reached.

Let cool for a few minutes, then stir to distribute the pieces of zest and fruit through the jam. Spoon into heated sterile jars and seal in the usual way.


Saturday, October 19, 2013

Spicy Red Tomato, Pepper and Squash Chutney

The last of the tomato and pepper plants in the greenhouse are fading now that the days are getting shorter. So we've picked what was left, ripe or no.

Time for another batch of chutney.

I've been looking at recipes for indian tomato pickles, and so whilst this recipe is based on the Red Tomato Chutney from Home Preservation of Fruits and Vegetables, I have completely changed the spices used, and substituted peppers and squash for some of the tomatoes.


Saturday, September 28, 2013

Green Tomato Chutney

Last year I made what turned out to be an excellent Green Tomato Chutney, from a recipe I found in the DK Encyclopedia of Herbs, Spces and Flavourings, of all places. I made a few modifications to the recipe as I went along, in order to increase the spiciness, and to work around running out of some ingredients.

Of course, now I need to remember what I changed in order to recreate it this year - which is one reason for writing this blog - so I remember to record my experiments!


I think this is what I did last year - we'll find out once it's cooked!

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Bramble and Apple Jam

It's time for the last autumn jam of the year.

We've been gathering brambles round the lake by work and freezing them down until there's enough for jam.

This year we've also picked some of the cooking apples from an old Bramley tree in the hedgerow, so all the fruit for this jam was free.




Sunday, September 22, 2013

Mincemeat

I have an aversion to citrus - specifically orange peel. So I have never really eaten things that have candied peel in - which includes many traditional Xmas cakes.

However, one Xmas when I was growing up, Sainsburys decided to stock citrus (peel)-free mince pies. They tasted great - but they didn't stock them again, ever.

So, if I want to have mince pies for Xmas that I can eat, then I need to make my own mincemeat. Which means that I need to get round to making it in September to give time for the flavour to mature.

Fortunately, mincemeat is so easy that it really barely counts as cooking!

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Pimms Jam

During my earlier Cucumber Lime Jam with Vanilla experiment, it occurred to me that an alcohol-favoured cucumber jam might work.

When it comes to cucumbers and alcohol, the first thing that comes to mind is the classic Pimms cocktail, in which Pimms No.1 Cup is combined with lemonade, cucumber, strawberries, oranges and garnished with fresh mint.

And so this is a jam made from that combination of fruits, and a generous slug of Pimms. With a little help from my other half for the orange wrangling.

Saturday, August 17, 2013

Cherry Plum Jam

There is a hedgerow along a cycle path beside a light industrial estate near here that is full of Cherry Plum trees. It's getting on for the right time of year for fruit, so we wandered past there last night on the way home - and found that the fruit was ripe and ready. After a quick trip home for buckets and a stepladder, we picked several kg.

This morning's first job was washing and picking over the fruit, which left us with 6.5kg for jam-making.



Monday, August 12, 2013

Cucumber Lime Jam with Vanilla

Picture of a Jar of Cucumber Lime Jam with VanilaDespite eating lots of Cucumber Raita, we still have a huge pile of cucumbers that need eating. This calls for desperate measures, namely googling to see if Cucumber Jam is a thing. And apparently it is indeed a thing.


The search turned up a couple of interesting recipes: this Vanilla Cucumber conserve recipe and this Cucumber Jam one.

Based on these starting points, I decided to try making a Cucumber Lime Jam with Vanilla.