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Preserving (rec.food.preserving) Devoted to the discussion of recipes, equipment, and techniques of food preservation. Techniques that should be discussed in this forum include canning, freezing, dehydration, pickling, smoking, salting, and distilling. |
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Jark wrote:
> My grandmother made Quince Jelly when I was growing up (WWII). > I still have the tree, and there was a good yield from it this fall. I > sorted through the ones still on the tree, just before the big frost last > week, and found about 20 good ones. > Anyone have a good recipe for Quince Jell? > > Or does anyone have any experience with roasted quince? -- similar to > roasted apples, I guess . . . Quinces have a lot of their own pectin, centered around the core mostly. Y'all don't need added pectin at all. From 10 pounds of older fruits (on sale from the farmer), I got 24 cups of pulp, 8 cups of juice (don't squeeze the bag!). I did have to trim away quite a lot of brown bits. The quince jelly was a beautiful amber color, the butter (from the pulp) was a lovely applesaucey color. I used 3/4 c. sugar per cup of juice, making no more than 4 cups juice per batch, and 1/4 cup lemon juice per batch. Gently boil to the gelling point, 208F way up here. 214F at sea level, I think. I had no problem with the stuff firming up. The first batch I overcooked and it turned to candy in the jar. Hard as a rock it was! For 8 cups pulp for quince, made 11 cups product: I used 2 1/2 cups sugar, 1 teaspoon ground coriander, 1 teaspoon ground ginger, 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon, 1/2 teaspoon ground cloves, 1 teaspoon vanilla (or scrape a vanilla bean). Added 2 cups of water because the pulp was so thick! You might want to adjust the spices to taste, I wanted a spicy mix. I mixed up a couple other recipes, one with strawberries & amaretto & almond extract, but I liked the basic recipe best. The one with fresh ginger and pineapple juice tasted pretty wierd to me. Good luck! Edrena |
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The Joneses wrote:
>> Or does anyone have any experience with roasted quince? -- similar to >> roasted apples, I guess . . . I don't think quince are good for that purpose. I don't believe they'd soften. B/ |
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Brian Mailman wrote:
> The Joneses wrote: > > >> Or does anyone have any experience with roasted quince? -- similar to > >> roasted apples, I guess . . . > > I don't think quince are good for that purpose. I don't believe they'd > soften. > > B/ I believe that I've heard of roasted quince - an Arabian/Persian/Indian? sort of dish. Can't remember, but a google oughta get it - I just got 114,000 hits on "roasted quince." Edrena |
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Brian Mailman wrote:
> The Joneses wrote: > >>> Or does anyone have any experience with roasted quince? -- similar to >>> roasted apples, I guess . . . > > > I don't think quince are good for that purpose. I don't believe they'd > soften. > > B/ They do, but mine never turn red ( as all the books say they should) |
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