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Expert Gardening
Advice:
Ann Somerset Miles
Converting Produce into Tasty Preserves

Setting up a store cupboard
full of your own home-produced preserves is such a marvellous way
to capture the full flavour of what you have grown that it far
surpasses anything you can ever buy in a supermarket.
Jams, Jellies, pickles and chutneys can be made as and when fruit
and vegetables come into season, in small or large batches,
depending on what is ready for harvesting on any one day. Gluts can
be quickly and easily transformed into delectable preserves: soon
all available shelf space will be full of row upon row of tempting
jars – and they make wonderful and welcome gifts.
Making preserves is not
as complicated as it may at first seem. You will need only basic
equipment for the traditional recipes that follow. Click on the
‘Jam, Preserves &
Chutney-Making’ section of this website, or look at
the equivalent pages in the latest Harrod Horticultural catalogue.
All the essentials are listed, from the heavy-duty, stainless steel
Maslin (Preserving) Pan
– good quality is essential to avoid burning, to the glass jars in which to store the
finished preserve.
Ensure you pick sound fruit and use undamaged vegetables in prime
condition. Then set to work. The beauty of the methods I
advocate is that you work in proportions of garden produce, rather
than set quantities; so it doesn’t matter how much or how
little fruit or vegetables are ready for picking, you can still get
started. Presentation is important, especially if you are
giving your produce as a gift, so make sure you have the necessary
items to seal and label your jars. The Sealing and
Labelling Accessories Kit is ideal; fabric covers add a pretty
touch.
Here are three
easy recipes to start with:
Spiced Plums
This is an occasional savoury treat,
for our plum trees do not fruit every year; damsons (or
damson-plums) are equally delicious.
You will need:
Ingredients: in the proportions
given in the method that follows – plums, damsons or damson
plums, granulated sugar, red wine vinegar and spices (cloves,
coriander seeds, allspice, cinnamon stick and fresh ginger);
Equipment: Maslin
pan, large or small preserving jars, and a jam
funnel (PRE-007 or a non-stick version PRE-008).
Method: Wipe and prick the fruit
with a fine knitting needle and place in a preserving pan. Then,
for every 1kg of fruit, place into a small vegetable pan 520gms
granulated sugar, 350ml of red wine vinegar and a salt-spoonful
each of cloves, coriander seeds and allspice, a small piece of
cinnamon stick and 10gms grated fresh ginger. Bring slowly to the
boil, stirring until the sugar has dissolved, then simmer for 5
minutes; pour over the fruit, bring back to the boil and cook for 5
minutes. Leave covered until cool, then pack fruit into warm jars.
Boil the remaining liquid until reduced and syrupy then pour over
the fruit. Seal when cold.
Mrs Baker’s Pickle
Any gardener will have a mix of surplus
vegetables at any one time; making pickles (crunchy) or chutney
(soft) means that none need go to waste. Try ‘Mrs
Baker’s Pickle’ – a recipe given me by my
grandmother’s cook in the early 1970s, though its origins are
much earlier. She made it in vast cauldrons, but I have reduced the
quantities proportionally.
You will need:
Ingredients: in the proportions
given in the method that follows – marrow, cucumber and
onions, plus salt, malt vinegar, demerara sugar, sultanas and
pickling spice.
Equipment: Maslin pan, funnel and jars as before, plus
a muslin square to hold the
spice.
Method: Take 225 gms each of
marrow and cucumber (leave the skin on) and peeled onions, or an
equivalent total weight (i.e 675gms). Cut all into small pieces,
sprinkle with 25gms salt; cover with a cloth and leave overnight.
Next day, boil 225ml malt vinegar, 125gms sultanas, 225gms demerara
sugar with 25gms pickling spice in a bag. Then add the vegetables,
drained, rinsed and dried; bring back to the boil, then
bottle.
Strawberry Conserve
As for those with a sweet tooth, why not
use late strawberries and eat delicious jam with home-made scones
and cream? I have a really simple way of making Strawberry Conserve
that is perfect for tea-time treats or dessert pastry
tarts.
You will need:
Ingredients: in the proportions
given in the method that follows – strawberries (preferably
small, whole ones), granulated sugar and lemon
juice.
Equipment: Maslin pan, jars and muslin square as before, plus a preserving
thermometer.
Method: place small whole fruit
(hulled) into a non-metallic bowl, layered with the same weight of
granulated sugar; cover with a cloth and leave overnight –
the sugar ‘draws’ the juice. Next day, tip the mixture
into your preserving pan over a low heat; stir gently so as not to
break up the fruit, just sufficient to prevent the sugar from
‘catching’. Bring to the boil, add lemon juice (half a
lemon per 900gms fruit with pips tied into a muslin square) and
boil until setting point is reached (around 105ºC/221°F); skim off
any forming scum using a slotted spoon and remove the pips. Allow
to cool in the pan, then ‘jug’ into pots. Cover with a
cloth until quite cold; add a wax disc, label and lid to each
jar.
Success with preserving is
not difficult if you use good quality produce and suitable
equipment. Whether you decide to make pickles and chutney, or jams,
conserves or jellies, you will need a preserving kettle (maslin
pan) and a few other basics. Take a look at the special Jam Making Bundle Offer
on page 10 of the Harrod Horticultural Autumn catalogue.
http://web.me.com/annsomersetmiles/annsomersetmiles/Farmhouse_Recipes.html

...and for general ideas, read Ann’s much longer article on
preserving in the July 2009 issue of Grow it! magazine (www.growitmag.com).
Text & Pictures copyright ©
Ann Somerset Miles, July/August 2009
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