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Pomegranate and Grape Jelly

November 2, 2010
19:48 PM

PJelly.jpg

This is I would say my last jelly or jam of the Autumn and I have made it this year later than most.

This is another one which I pinch from the hedgerows and would qualify (if sugar were free ) as A Food for Free.

Mind you it is not all pinched from the hergerows, the grapes are pinched from the vineyards- but not until abandonned by the winemaker.
Nowadays the vast majority of wine here is made from grapes which have been picked by machine.
This is done by a strange tall contraption which hoovers the grapes off their stems.
However clever it is it always leaves a few grapes after it.
If the farmer hasn’t sent out some workers to the fields to glean these within a few weeks (and they never do ) I reckon they are mine for the picking.

These I put through my faithful Mouli Legume (see previous entry) which neatly separates the juice from the seeds and skins.

I tried making a little pot of jelly from this juice but it was a bit characterless and sweet.

At the same time as I was gleaning the vinyards last year the pomegranates were reddening nicely on the hedgerows.
With these I discovered that my orange juicer (a sort of huge garlic squeezer on feet) did a superb job of juice extraction.
Jelly made from this was a little caustic for spreading on croissants.

Fifty fifty worked a treat last year , just the right blend of acidity and sugar.

This year I decided to do the same but, unfortunately the Pomegranates were slow this year so I froze my Grape Juice awaiting their partners.
This happened last week.

I mixed the juices half and half.

I had a litre of each.

In a large pot I mixed these with two kilos of special jam sugar and then heated this gently until the sugar was completely melted.
Then I divided this between two pots, put it on the heat and brought it to a rolling boil.

I boiled it for five minutes, as they said on the packet, then tested it for setting on a cold saucer-no set.
This was unusual but maybe one or other of the fruits are low in pectin.
Anyway I gave both pots another five minutes of vigorous boiling and they both showed signs of setting then.

For those not in the know I have ready a saucer, cold in the fridge.
To test for setting I put a small tablespoon on the saucer, put it back in the fridge, then after a couple of minutes I take it out.
If pushed with my finger it then should wrinkle up.

The second time I got the desired reaction so I potted the lot.
I got nine jars of a little less that a half kilo.

So that is it and the store cupboard is now nicely full of jams and jellies.

Comments

  1. PanaDoll

    on November 2, 2010

    what time do the shops open…? you may – once again – have bettered my life. I absolutely hate pressing fruit or vegetables through a sieve…

  2. PanaDoll

    on November 2, 2010

    ps: I am at present sitting at the kitchen table in Berlin, having a cup of Barry’s and a slice of delicious barm brack, made by Paul from your recipe! Thanks men.

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  Martin Dwyer
Consultant Chef