You could pour it into a cake pan (like a 11"x 15") after you melt
it. When it firms up again, cut into squares, dust in that super
fine sugar and serve it like candy.
I once made rose hip and hawthorn jelly that turned into candy
squares. It was delightful. ;
Deb
--
(in Oregon, the pacific northWET) ;
"Kate" wrote in message
m...
I wondered if this would happen since I realised that jelly making
and
candy making aren't too different- and it did happen on at least
one
batch. My grape jelly is too hard! These particular Siberian
grapes
need pectin to gel- I cooked them for hours and they didn't gel
without it. So, I used 6 cups juice, 7 cups sugar, one packet
pectin
and the juice of one lime. (I needed acid to get it to gel too.)
one
batch is so hard that I can't get my butter knife into it. :-(
I was thinking of heating the jelly in a hot water bath until it's
liquid, pouring the jars into a pot and adding more juice. But
how
much? I don't have anymore Siberian grapes left, but I do have
access
to some sour Concords so I guess I would mix? or could I add a
bit of
apple juice? I know there's pectin in the apples but would it be
too
much?
oddly, I couldn't find any reference to "hard" jelly via
googlgroups-
maybe all you experienced call it too firm?
kate
=====
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