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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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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 ===== Kate, http://www.cs.colorado.edu/~kolina/a...f-formula.html Mom to Ursula (8), Sage (6), Benno (2.5) Books just wanna be FREE! See what I mean at: http://bookcrossing.com/friend/kolina http://www.blogforamerica.com/ |
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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 > > ===== > Kate, http://www.cs.colorado.edu/~kolina/a...f-formula.html > Mom to Ursula (8), Sage (6), Benno (2.5) Books just wanna be FREE! > See what I mean at: > http://bookcrossing.com/friend/kolina > > http://www.blogforamerica.com/ |
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I think the problem is too much water was boiled off.
In an earlier post in this newsgroup someone mentioned reheating the firm jelly and adding a bit of water. I got some firm jelly too but I just slice it thin and lay it on the bread instead of spreading it as I can't be bothered reheating it and adding water. ) writes: > 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 >> >> ===== >> Kate, > http://www.cs.colorado.edu/~kolina/a...f-formula.html >> Mom to Ursula (8), Sage (6), Benno (2.5) Books just wanna be > FREE! >> See what I mean at: >> http://bookcrossing.com/friend/kolina >> >> http://www.blogforamerica.com/ > > -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ William R Watt National Capital FreeNet Ottawa's free community network homepage: www.ncf.ca/~ag384/top.htm warning: non-freenet email must have "notspam" in subject or it's returned |
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