Attention and a little practice will
ensure excellence in such preserves as are in general
use in private families; and it will always be found
a more economical plan to purchase the more rare and
uncommon articles of preserved fruits than to have
them made at home.
The more sugar that is added to fruit
the less boiling it requires.
If jellies be over-boiled, much of
the sugar will become candied, and leave the jelly
thin.
Every thing used for the purpose of
preserving should be clean and very dry, particularly
bottles for bottled fruit.
Fruit should boil rapidly before
the sugar is added, and quietly afterwards when
preserves seem likely to become mouldy, it is generally
a sign they have not been sufficiently boiled, and
it will be requisite to boil them up again fruit
for bottling should not be too ripe, and should be
perfectly fresh; there are various methods adopted
by different cooks: the fruit may be placed in
the bottles, and set in a moderate oven until considerably
shrunken, when the bottles should be removed and closely
corked; or the bottles may be set in a pan with cold
water up to the necks, placed over the fire; when
the fruit begins to sink remove them, and when cold
fill up each bottle with cold spring water, cork the
bottles, and lay them on their sides in a dry place.
To bottle red currants pick
them carefully from the stalk, and add, as the currants
are put in, sifted white sugar; let the bottles be
well filled and rosin the corks, and keep them with
their necks downwards.
BRANDIED CHERRIES.
Put into a large wide mouthed bottle
very ripe black cherries, add to them two pounds of
loaf sugar, a quart of brandy, and a few cloves, then
bruise a few more cherries, and simmer with sugar,
strain and add the juice to the cherries in the bottle,
cork closely, and keep in a warm dry place.
QUINCE MARMALADE.
Peel, cut into quarters, and core
two pounds of sharp apples, and the same quantity
of quinces; put them into a jar, with one pound of
white sugar powdered and sprinkled over them; cover
them with half a pint of water, and put in also a
little bruised cochineal tied in a muslin. Set
them in a slack oven till tender, take out the cochineal,
and pulp the fruit to a marmalade.
Some cooks prefer boiling the sugar
and water first and scalding the fruit till tender,
and then adding them to the syrup.
DAMSON MARMALADE.
Is made in the same manner as quince,
as also apricot marmalade, which is very fine; the
fruit must be stoned, and some of the kernels put in
with the fruit, which are peeled, and apricots are
cut in pieces; they should be carefully pulped through
a clean sieve.
PRESERVED APRICOTS.
Halve and pare ripe apricots, or if
not quite ripe, boil them till the skin can easily
be removed. Lay them in a dish hollow downwards,
sift over them their own weight of white sugar, let
them lay for some hours, then put the fruit, with
the sugar and juice into a preserving pan, and simmer
till the fruit is clear, take it out, put it carefully
into pots, and pour over the syrup.
This receipt will serve as a guide
for preserved nectarines, peaches, plums, gages,
&c. A few of the kernels should always be put
in with the fruit, as they improve the flavor of the
preserve.
STRAWBERRIES PRESERVED WHOLE.
Weigh an equal quantity of fruit and
white sugar powdered, sift all the sugar over the
fruit, so that half of it shall equally be covered,
let it lay till the next day, when boil the remainder
with red currant juice, in which simmer the strawberries
until the jelly hangs about them. Put the strawberries
into pots, taking care not to break them, and pour
over the syrup.
This receipt will serve for raspberries
and cherries, which make a fine preserve.
STRAWBERRY JAM.
Bruise gently, with the back of a
wooden spoon, six pounds of fine fresh fruit, and
boil them with very little water for twenty minutes,
stirring until the fruit and juice are well mixed;
then put in powdered loaf sugar of equal weight to
the fruit, and simmer half an hour longer. If
the preserve is not required to be very rich, half
the weight of sugar in proportion to the quantity
of fruit may be used; but more boiling will be requisite.
By this recipe also are made raspberry, currant, gooseberry,
apricot, and other jams.
RED CURRANT JELLY.
Strip carefully from the stems some
quite ripe currants, put them into a preserving pan,
stir them gently over a clear fire until the juice
flows freely from them, then squeeze the currants and
strain the juice through a folded muslin or jelly
bag; pour it into a preserving pan, adding, as it
boils, white sugar, in the proportion of one pound
of sugar to one pint of juice.
If made with less sugar, more boiling
will be required, by which much juice and flavour
are lost. A little dissolved isinglass is used
by confectioners, but it is much better without.
Jams and jellies should be poured into pots when in
a boiling state.
Jellies should be continually skimmed
till the scum ceases to rise, so that they may be
clear and fine. White currant jelly and black
are made in the same manner as red. By this receipt
can be made raspberry jelly, strawberry jelly, and
all other kinds.
APPLE JELLY.
Pare, core, and cut small any kind
of fine baking apples say six pounds in
weight; put them in a preserving pan with one quart
of water; boil gently till the apples are very soft
and broken, then pass the juice through a jelly bag;
when, to each pint, add half a pound of loaf sugar,
set it on the fire to boil twenty minutes, skimming
it as the scum rises; it must not be over boiled,
or the colour will be too dark.
PEAR-SYRUP OR JELLY.
This preparation, although little
known in England, forms an important article of economy
in many parts of the Continent. The pears are
first heated in a saucepan over the fire until the
pulp, skins, &c., have separated from the juice, which
is then strained, and boiled with coarse brown sugar
to the thickness of treacle; but it has a far more
agreeable flavour. It is cheaper than butter or
treacle, and is excellent spread upon bread for children.
PLUM JAM.
This is a useful and cheap preserve.
Choose the large long black plum; to each gallon of
which add three pounds of good moist sugar; bake them
till they begin to crack, when, put them in pots, of
a size for once using, as the air is apt to spoil
the jam.