Strawberry Jamming Finale
So the strawberries are finally slowing down, the end of the
season is in sight... and do I feel relief that I will no longer
be chained to the kitchen counter, three nights a week,
preparing strawberries for jam? Am I sick of the sight of them,
turning into one myself, in a word, jaded? Surprisingly enough
I'm not. Six weeks of making jam and I could carry on longer.
I sneak into the larder to count the jars...have I sold too
many? Will it be enough for the family for the year and what
about Christmas presents? Two weeks ago I was merrily flogging
it at the market, secure in the knowledge I could make more. Now
friends are ringing up asking to buy jam and I'm grudgingly
parting with it but the Scrooge hoarding instinct is kicking in,
a sure sign of the end of the season.
And I never did master the thick jam versus runny jam dilemma,
the jam decided for itself what it would become, not me. So I
cannot yet claim to be a professional jam maker, not when the
jam is in charge of the process. Further experiments will have
to wait until next year, when at the beginning of the new season
I can afford to be lavish with the strawberries and if a batch
burns in the attempt to thicken it won't be a disaster, I'll be
able to use it for baking jam squares, where the caramel
overtones are a bonus.
Part of the magic of strawberries is their cheerful colour as
well as their scent. I'm going to miss the piles of fruit on the
table, waiting to be sorted for selling, in the fridge in
punnets, to be delivered in the morning, bowls of seconds for
the family to eat and containers of the rest for jam. The
youngberries will be starting soon, like blackberries, they have
their own allure and make great summer puddings, but they just
don't quite have that special something that strawberries
have...!
So what will I fill my jars with now? Well the good news is that
apricots are just starting to creep into the shops.
Unfortunately we only have one tree and this year it has very
little fruit on it, we need to plant some more trees but it will
be a few years before they produce properly.
So we check out the fruit in the shops. It's a bit like playing
the stock market. We're waiting for the price to come down, to
buy loads and jam them all, but if we wait too long and misjudge
the timing the price will shoot up again or there'll be none
left, it's a short season. So perhaps I'll play it safe and buy
a couple of kilos next week and then hope to splurge the week
after on 5 kilos as cheap as can be, but I can't risk being
caught short of apricot jam. We're on our last jar of last
year's and there'll be a family uprising if I don't get in next
year's supply.
The apricot jam recipe - very similar to the strawberry jam
recipe but less temperamental. The worst I've managed to do has
been burn it and even then it was usable in baking, just a
slight caramel added flavour!
1 kg apricots halved and stoned 750g sugar
Pack fruit and sugar in a stainless steel or enamel pan and keep
in fridge overnight. Heat slowly, stirring occasionally until
the sugar has dissolved. Turn up the heat a bit and boil rapidly
(stir occasionally to prevent burning) for about 20-30 mins.
Test a drop on a cold plate. If, after 2 minutes, when you push
your fingernail through it, the skin wrinkles, it is done. If
not test every 5 minutes till it does. Pour into hot sterilised
jam jars and seal immediately.
NB apricots have plenty of pectin, so you don't need to add
lemon juice to get the set. For more tips on jam making and the
strawberry jam recipe, look at my article Strawberry Jamming
Again.
Copyright 2005 Kit Heathcock A Flower Gallery