Micro Plums are a thing.

I can't wait for it to be summer again.

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This morning I defrosted my windows in a rather fun and horribly cold way. With my phalanges. Also my feet. (I think I need to get out of the house.)

Pining over warmer days made me look back through a bunch of woe begotten and forgotten drafts of hobby-ish things I did last year but never got around to posting. Making plum jelly was one of them. And with the beautiful summer greens and fruit purples, I had to reminisce. 

The recipe I used was pretty much exactly the same as a previous jelly post, here, about making crabapple jelly. I even continued to use powdered pectin because I'm so great at following my own suggestions not too. 

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Really there are only two differences between the two recipes, the rest of the process is the same. The first, obviously, plums are plums and not crabapples. We hunted the plums in the BFs parents backyard. (Tiniest plums I've ever seen! Hopefully not poisonous.... I mean I've eaten a whole thing of the jelly already and not died.... So hopefully that's a good sign.) And second, you don't really need to de-stem plums. They need to be pitted. Never fear though! Tiny plums are no match for a cherry pitter (random kitchen appliance win!). After they had been successfully pitted it was the same deal as with the crabapples.

  1. Make the juice! About 5lbs of plums to about 5 cups water. Boil, mash, strain like a boss.
  2. Sterilize all the jars! Water bath canning! Yay!
  3. Take plum juice and add pectin, etc. Bring to a boil, add sugar! Stir! Boil. Ladle into jars. 
  4. Process jars for right amount of minutes (15 in Edmonton) in a boiling water bath. Remove and cool. 

After all the jellies were made, the next crucial step. Get rid of them all. Which was way easier that I thought.

I'm looking forward to canning in 2014. I think pickles are in order. Lots and lots of pickles. 

-Andrea

The Half-Assed Hobbyist

The Mashable Fruit Juice

It seems that, in the middle of winter, I harken back to the days when 10 minutes outside didn't mean potential frost bite. 

This is probably the best thing about making my own jams and jellies. Popping a seal open to sweet memories of a summer picking fruit. (Also a reminder that it does warm up.) And that it is the grace of this ridiculously cold weather that we don't have cockroaches or really big hairy spiders. 

I made this crabapple jelly last August 2013. I picked the fruit from a friend's backyard. She had just bought the house the week before and I had my eye on the two giant crabapple trees looming over her newly purchased deck. I definitely grabbed one of my friends one afternoon and raided her trees when she was working, with permission, of course.  

For my crabapple jelly I used Bernardin pectin powder product. In retro spec, I probs would have done better to get the liquid stuff as my first jelly batch was a bit cloudy because the pectin didn't dissolve perfectly. BUT! It still tasted super good! So not a huge loss. 

The recipe I used can be found on Bernardin's website here (but, again, I used the powdered pectin, meh). Pretty simple. I made the juice by boiling about 5 pounds of trimmed crabapples in about 5 cups of water for 10 minutes and then mashing them into crabapple goop. I made a pretty innovative makeshift strainer with cheese cloth and a colander. I let the juice drain overnight in the open air. I will say that we had a fruit fly problem for weeks after.... But with that much fruit it's to be expected I guess. Then it was jelly making day! I was super surprised that the juice was pink. I expected red or yellow.

As per usual, first step was to prepare all the jars (no botulism for this girl!) and then prepare all the ingredients before the juice got boiling.

The process was pretty easy. Boil with sugar, add pectin, ladle into the hot jars, and process 15 minutes in a boiling water bath.  

What was really weird was that processing the jelly made it so that even out of the boiling water bath the jars continued to boil for minutes after. I thought I'd screwed it up, but no, it was just boiling sugar liquid in jars. Very very hot.

Sideways iPhone Video! Yay! 

Anyways, outside the weather is actually frightful; and not terribly delightful; so instead I'll just stay inside; and stay alive, stay alive, stay alive. 

Cheers! And Merry Christmas or Happy Holidays or Whatever. <3

-Andrea

The Half-Assed Hobbyist

The Hunt for Red Raspberries

Summer 2013 I was unemployed. Again. So I spent most of the summer working on my hobbies. One hobby I promised myself I would pick up was canning. 

Unlike making apple pie or cooking, I had no previous experience with making jam. I think my family must have made sour cherry jelly when I was very very little but I was definitely to young to help with the process. I just remember the result: sugary sweet pinky coloured goo.  

So this past summer, the BF and I went berry picking at Horse Hill Berry Farm which, despite being late in the season, had buckets and buckets of raspberries left. We picked 13 pounds in 3 hours. It was epic. A train even honked at me! We picked three kinds of berries: Red Bounty (good for jams because the bushes are loaded with berries), Mammoth (basically really huge berries), and K-81-6 (best tasting of the bunch). After, we headed home to gorge ourselves on delicious raspberries.   

August 2013 at Horse Hill Berry Farm. I caught the attention of the train engineer and he gave me a honk =D

Now, having never canned jam before I read up on proper handling and preparing (having a background in Food Science, this was a little terrifying). There is a lot of misinformation out there and most of it is a bit scary. Basically though, pre-preperation is key. To properly can jam, everything has to be hot hot hot. The jars need to be boiled to sterilize them; the jam needs to be boiled; all utensils need to be clean; and a boiling water bath needs to be used to seal the jars.

So, first step, other than the obvious 'get raspberries', is to get jars (I used 250ml), sugar and pectin. I got all these from Canadian Tire, which is super cheap compared to getting the same stuff from a grocery store. Like 50% less. Crazy.

Second step, I washed the jars, lids and screw bands in hot soapy water. After everything was rinsed, the glass jars were placed into a big pot filled with water (cover jars with at least 1 inch water above the top of the jar) and brought to a boil. I placed the lids in a saucepan and heated the water. Not to hot though, temperate enough that you can to put your fingers in the water. I dried the screw bands (kinda... the picture makes them look wet, hah) and set them up so they are easily accessible. 

Now that the jars were all prepped, I washed all the utensils in hot soapy water as well. I used a ladle, a funnel and a plastic knife. Next, ingredient prep! I bought Bernardin Fruit Pectin. There are many different kinds of pectin you can buy or you can use the natural pectin in the fruit itself. That process takes longer and as a first time canner I wanted to follow some hard core instructions. I finished the rest of the ingredient prep, measuring out the sugar (7 cups a batch... Mmmm diabetes) and the margarine (to cut down on the foam that rises to the top of the jam after the second boil). Last but not least, mashing up all the raspberries a cup at a time. 

That was all the prep! Then it was on to making molten fruit sugar! Bringing the raspberries, margarine and pectin to a boil took a lot longer than I thought, around 15 minutes. And by boil, I mean a rolling boil. Ferocious bubbling, melt your skin off, boil. Carefully, I added the sugar and brought it back up to a boil. Stirred for a minute; then took the pot off the heat. 

Now, the rest is all timing. Everything needs to be hot hot hot. I used my life-saving jar grabber and fancy funnel to fill the jars with a ladle, leaving a 1/4 inch head space (extra room at the top of the jar incase the jam expands. You don't want it oozing out of the jar and ruining the seal). Then, after cleaning the rim of the jar with a damp paper towel, I put the lid on the jar (don't touch the underside!), and used a screw band, tightened only till fingertip tight. Fingertip tight means that as soon as you feel resistance to being tightened more, leave it. The screw band is supposed to keep the lid on BUT not too tightly because the air trapped inside the jar needs to be able to sneak out when you boil it. That's how you get a seal. After that, it was back into the boiling water. And repeat. 

After all the jars were filled, I boiled them for 15 minutes. This is to bring the jam's temperature past the point that any mirco-organism could survive. Now, the internets doesn't always agree on boiling jars. Also, my Oma doesn't ever process her marmalade. But, a curse of my degree, I would rather be sure that nothing could survive to make anyone sick than not process and be anxious forever. Depending on the altitude, the timing differs. Since I'm above sea level by over 1000m I had to add an extra 5 minutes onto the base 10 minutes. 

The rest is easy as watching a pot boil. After the allotted time, I took out the jars, keeping them level, and set them to cool for 24 hours (some people say 12 hours is fine, but meh).  About 3 minutes after I took the jars out, a faint popping noise came from each of them. Success! They had all sealed! 

It was a good first experience canning. I definitely had to go buy a bigger pot after because it was hard to keep an inch of water covering the jars while they were boiling. I flooded my stove pretty expertly. But hey, I don't call myself the Half-Assed Hobbyist for nothing. 

-Andrea

Th Half-Assed Hobbyist