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Couperwife

Gooseberry Jam

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Ive just made some jam :D

 

I picked 1.2kg of Gooseberries (and I have the scars to prove it :lol: )

stuck it in a big pan and simmered it until the fruit was soft

added 1kg of sugar

cooked it (on a low heat) until it was done :D

 

did anyone else know the Gooseberry (green) jam was a really deep pink colour?

 

its lovely, I had some on a bowl of easiyo yogurt (had to try it didnt I)

 

cathy

x

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Yes, gooseberry jam is a gorgeous red colour, no matter whether the gooseberries start off green or red.

 

I always cut my gooseberries in half so I don't get whole gooseberries and jammy bits without gooseberries. I slice strawberries for the same reason.....but that's just my take on it :D

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how have you got red Gooseberry Jam? when my nan made it it was all ways a greyie green colour (the reason i still dis like it) she used to make jam nearly every week this time of year

my mate down the allotment a just about gets it green or pink with the red ones

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erm :? I might try re-boiling it

 

the recipe book I used said that gooseberry is full of pectin so you dont need to add any.

 

hmmm, just a thought - mine wasnt set solid, it was still kind of gloopy, is yours like that, or is it very runny? I left mine at the gloopy stage, so I could spread it on toast easier

 

if you want it set, you could use lemon juice (plj or from a lemon)

 

hope this is helpful

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Thanks Couperwife. Yes, it was still runny. I've re-boiled it with some lemon juice. It has gone a very deep red like raspberry jam. I hope it will set. The taste is disappointing. It just tastes sweet - no gooseberry flavour at all, as far as I can tell. I think the gooseberries were probably over ripe. My own fault, they were ready before I went on holiday, but I didn't have time so I left them til I got back :( This is my first attempt at gooseberry jam, although I do make lots of other types. I thought gooseberries were supposed to set easily!

Think I'll stick with raspberries & blackcurrants in future.

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I'd turn this into wine. You'll have to add water at one gallon to 5lbs fruit (minus what you have already used). You should have enough sugar already. Use champagne yeast and you will have to add pectic enzyme and filter the wine at the appropriate time. Your wine should be ready by Christmas after next ( all the flavours should be rounded off nicely by then though you could try it after a year). Gooseberry wine goes brilliantly with spicy food.

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Thanks for the wine tip DA. It sounds good, but an awful faff.

Think I will probably just spoon it over ice cream and into rice pudding, or use in the bottom of steamed sponge puddings. It won't be wasted. If anyone has any other bright ideas please let me know...

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