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| Season to Taste Recipes and Cooking advice for transforming your crop |
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| when i do jam that needs lemons for the pectin i slice them up,put them in a clean wash tablet net,and hang it on the side of the preserving pan,it works fine,just give it a gentle press every now and then,at the end of the cooking empty it into a jug and top up with water and ice,it's a lovely drink,waste not,want not. |
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| Wish I'd found GYO mag in time for April's copy, Rhubarb & ginger jam sounds delicious and I know my brother-in-law has heaps of rhubarb (and I've got muslin - I was going to offer you some but you've already made it) - anyone know if & how I can get a back copy? |
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| I used gauze from my medicine cabinet for the ginger when I made rhubarb, pineapple, and ginger jam recently. It's really good on vanilla ice-cream. Before I learned the gauze trick, I used my white linen napkins. Check out my blog for the recipe: marigoldmemoirs.blogspot.com Last edited by marigold007; 15-06-2008 at 11:34 AM. |
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| if you are happy with just the recipe I will scan it and email to you if that helps? we are now two months on from when I first made this jam and it is getting better and better with age - like me ![]()
__________________ aka Suzie Last edited by piskieinboots; 15-06-2008 at 05:17 PM. |
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| When you use a cloth to strain out elderflowers, squeeze well, and then most of the flowers will stay together in a lump and fall off the cloth. Sluice most of them off under running water (like you would for a plate, with the water trickling over the surface) so that there are few left to get out 'in the wash'. |
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