The Accidental Smallholder Forum
Growing => Fruit => Topic started by: john and helen on September 13, 2015, 10:43:21 am
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my dear wife has made some redcurrant jelly that never set and turned into a beautiful syrup…not moaning at all..it tasted wonderful with most things…now she has made elderberry and apple jelly..once again it has not set…she is following all the instructions to the word, weight and second….
once again, i'm not moaning as it will be lovely poured on meals…but she is miffed my the not setting
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Can't help i'm afraid - I have the same problem :innocent: - either that or I leave it too long and it's like toffee. :roflanim: Mine is better since I started using a jam thermometer.
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With all preserve making it is about the setting point. Timing to a certain extent is less important than testing for setting. The way to test is to put a saucer in the fridge, when you have reached the correct temperature, take the pan off the heat, put a teaspoon full of syrup on the cold saucer, wait for a minute or so and then push the cooling syrup. If it makes wrinkles, you have reached the setting point. If not setting, boil for a few minutes more then try again. I live in Ivybridge so not a million miles from you, if it would help I can come over next jam making day, as it is easier to show than to describe ! My gran taught me many many years ago!
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I've always done that too, but I have to say it's not foolproof. I agree that the temperature is crucial and as I said, when I started using my Mum's thermometer after she died it did improve. Took me years to try it though :innocent:
I've always done that too, but I have to say it's not foolproof. I agree that the temperature is crucial and as I said, when I started using my Mum's thermometer after she died it did improve. Took me years to try it though :innocent:
I'd take up the offer of a practical demo!!!
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Timing it never works for me. I use the bit on a cold plate approach, which at least provides something to lick.
Another clue is that the volume reduces, I think it's by 2/5ths, but I couldn't swear to that, as I don't use that method. You stand a stick, or the stirring spoon upright in the pot, after marking the initial level.
Another check is a change of colour - the jam/jelly goes slightly darker as it reaches setting point. It also bubbles slightly differently.
Make sure you are boiling hot enough - there should be a 'rolling boil', not just a few blops, but not so much it rises right up the pan. You need a wide jelly pan for jam making, a taller narrow pot is not ideal.
If your jelly or jam is too runny, then tip it all back in the pot and boil it a bit more.
If it's gone syrupy, then use it on ice cream.
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Also, beet sugar is bad for setting, cane sugar is best. I will second the cold plate test.
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I always use the d plate test, never owned a jam thermometer. I've been making all sorts of preserves this year - red gooseberry jam, damson jam, blueberry jelly, elderberry jelly, lemon curd :yum: :yum: . Today I used a load of tiny Victoria plums with a few sloes chucked in - I'll probably call it plum sauce ;D .
If I find anything is not setting, I either chuck in a good splosh of lemon juice, or as a last resort, a packet of pectin. Jam or preserve sugar seems to form less foam/scum on the surface - I've no idea why though.
And 1 1/2 lb of sloes went in a bottle for sloe gin. I couldn't resist filling my pockets when I checked the sheep this morning although I 'm told they are better after a frost ( the sloes not the sheep). :thumbsup:
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You can prevent that scum by pouring a very small amount of oil onto the jam, or a very small knob of butter.
Devonlady - I didn't know about the beet v cane sugar. Thank you :)
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WOW Louise…what a fantastic thing to offer.. :thumbsup: if you are ever passing, pop in for a cuppa
at the moment, we don't have a fridge, as we are living off grid….saying that..the jelly has started to set :thinking:
Helen really does want to learn as she, like me ,has never done any of this stuff before ;D
i am totally qualified on eating it though ;D
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my dear wife has made some redcurrant jelly that never set and turned into a beautiful syrup…not moaning at all..it tasted wonderful with most things…now she has made elderberry and apple jelly..once again it has not set…she is following all the instructions to the word, weight and second….
once again, i'm not moaning as it will be lovely poured on meals…but she is miffed my the not setting
What gelatine are you using animal or seaweed . If the latter it may be the recipe needs a bit of tweaking because it's an old recipe that used animal based material .
One good thing is you'll have plenty of vitamins and healing help from the syrup
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I do belt and braces. I use a jam thermometer but also do the cold plate test. I was taught in school, too many years ago, to use the plate and have done it ever since.
Some jams are a bit runnier than I would have liked and on the odd occasion a but firmer but I have never really had a failure.
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WOW Louise…what a fantastic thing to offer.. :thumbsup: if you are ever passing, pop in for a cuppa
at the moment, we don't have a fridge, as we are living off grid….saying that..the jelly has started to set :thinking:
Helen really does want to learn as she, like me ,has never done any of this stuff before ;D
i am totally qualified on eating it though ;D
John you can make an evaporative cool cabinet by using a plastic crate or a simple wooden box with a door on a stone or concrete paving slab with some plastic sheet over the crate ( if used ) to keep things dry & clean in it then add a covering of hessian carpet or heavy sacking or similar to the sides & top . Now use a watering can with fine rose spray to soak the covering and the temp will drop by three or so degrees due to the evaporating water .
if you sit it in a shade situation outside where there is plenty of air flow but no sun it works even better .
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I assume you are cooking on a calor gas hob, we have one at the field in the caravan and it definitely doesn't get anywhere near as hot as our hob at home and even there I struggle to get to the heat needed for jam making. So not Helen's fault in any way
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WOW Louise…what a fantastic thing to offer.. :thumbsup: if you are ever passing, pop in for a cuppa
at the moment, we don't have a fridge, as we are living off grid….saying that..the jelly has started to set :thinking:
Helen really does want to learn as she, like me ,has never done any of this stuff before ;D
i am totally qualified on eating it though ;D
john you can make an evaporative cool cbinet by using a plastic crate or a simple wooden box with a door on a stone or concrete paving slab with some plastic sheet over the crate ( if used ) to keep things dry & clean in it then add a covering of hessian carpet or heavy sacking or similar to the sides & top . Now use a watering can with fine rose spray to soak the covering and the temp will drop by three or so degrees due to the evaporating water .
if you sit it in a shade situation outside where there is plenty of air flow but no sun it works even better .
Or you simply stand your milk in a small amount of water, cover with a cloth so the water rises and keeps the cloth wet, by capillary action. The latent heat of evaporation lowers the temp. Keep in the shade, and make sure the water's topped up and Bob's your uncle. I come from the pre-fridge era, and we kept our milk cool in the old dairy that way for years (not the same bottles obviously :D).
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my dear wife has made some redcurrant jelly that never set and turned into a beautiful syrup…not moaning at all..it tasted wonderful with most things…now she has made elderberry and apple jelly..once again it has not set…she is following all the instructions to the word, weight and second….
once again, i'm not moaning as it will be lovely poured on meals…but she is miffed my the not setting
What gelatine are you using animal or seaweed . If the latter it may be the recipe needs a bit of tweaking because it's an old recipe that used animal based material .
One good thing is you'll have plenty of vitamins and healing help from the syrup
Gelatine? I think this is jam-type jelly, not set it into fancy shapes jelly.
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To keep food cool, two earthenware pots, one two or three sizes than the other. Put a layer of damp sand in the larger one, put the smaller one in and dribble damp sand between the two. Put in a shady place, put milk. butter etc in the smaller pot and cover with a damp towel. Keep everything damp and your food will keep fresh.
I used this method for two summers and am still alive!!
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We had an evaporative cupboard made out of limestone slabs , brass corner angles with brass bolts & a wooden door with a fly mesh let into it , the thick top slab had a 2 " bowl cut in to it ..you filled it up with the two pint jug using cooled boiled water each day.
As a 4 yr old I could hide inside it , it was that big .
We also had a factory made double chalk candle filter unit ,in a four gallon brown earthen ware split tank arrangement to filter out finer crud from the stream or old bottle well water before we boiled it for drinking .
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we just had the crock-pot you stood the milk bottle in... the water it stands in weeps through the unglazed pottery for cooling.