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Nows the time to forage and preserve!

Posted:18 September 2011

There is so much to be foraged in the hedgerows at the moment, including sloes, crab apples, haws, rowan berries, wild apples, plums and damsons and of course, black berries.

My favourite thing to do with my ‘forages’ is to make hedgerow jelly.  You can use all of the fruits above and just chop them up, stalks and all (wash them first) – use more apples than anything else, about 50% crab apples or cooking apples and 50% of sloes, blackberries, haws, rosehips, rowan berries etc.

The crab apple, (Malus sylvestris) often found by the roadside is sometimes rather scabby but has a very high pectin content, (that’s the stuff that helps things set).  Lots of the berries are low in pectin and so using this method will help it set well.

The reason I like to make jelly is that it’s so easy!

You can also do this with blackberry and apples – it is absolutely lovely!  A real autumn treat.

If you would like to discover the delights of how to make jams, chutneys and jellies then come along to our Preserving Workshop on Friday 28th October see our website for more details.

A favourite poem: Wormwood Jam by Tim Cresswell

Before the devil pisses on berries.

Late September Blackberrying down the

scrubs – by high high helixes of razor

wire.  Filling peanut butter pots

with black red fruit.  Brimful.  Soursharp – Inky,

Imploding sweet – squashed by over- eager

Fingers – gashing hands on brambles that could

pull the wool from sheep.  Gambling on low fruit

slashed by Shepherds and Rottweilers.

The kitchen filled with blackberry.  Cauldrons

Of red black boiling glop. I tried to catch

the setting point – risking burns and blisters –

my fingers forming surface crinkles through

bloodthick syrup on a frozen saucer.

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