point of the day: apple and sage jelly

It was my first attempt at jellymaking , so I wanted to try it the old fashioned way by using only whole apples (with naturally occurring pectin) and sugar. Green Mitsu and a few red Cortlands gave the finished jelly a lovely blush, and helped use up a few apples that were hit by a freaky, devastating hail in Waupoos late summer.

mistsu-and-cotland

Not peeling or coring the apples before chopping them finely in a food processor was efficient and easy.

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ready-to-strain

A clean cotton pillowcase for straining the cooked apple and sage mixture.

pillowcase-jelly-bag

almost-setOne very steamy kitchen, between boiling the strained juices with the sugar, and sterilizing jars.

apple-sage-jelly

Cooling the jelly slightly in the jars, made suspending a fresh sage leaf possible before sealing…proven by the jars I was too impatient to cool having sage leaves that floated!. Verdict: I’ll use this jelly with savoury things or on scones with butter, it’s just that good.

Apple and Sage Jelly from

Letts Country Cottage Collection

8 medium green apples

2 medium red apples

40 fresh sage leaves

2 teaspoons grated lemon rind

2/3 cup lemon juice

sugar

1.Wash and dry fruit. Finely chop fruit and coarsely chop sage leaves.

2.Combine fruit, including cores and seeds, leaves (?!) and rind in a large saucepan or boiler.Cover with water, bring to a boil and simmer, covered, for 2 hour or until fruit is soft and pulpy.

3.Strain fruit through a muslin bag suspened over a bowl for 3 hours.Measure juice and return to saucepan.Add lemon juice and heat to boiling.Add 3/4 cup sugar per cup of juice.Return to the boil, stirring until sugar dissolves. Boil rapidly for 45 minutes or until setting point.

4.Remove jelly from heat and stand 5 minutes. Pour into warm, sterilized jars. Allow to cool completely. (When almost set, sage leaves may be suspended in the jelly using a clean bamboo skewer). Seal jars. When cool, label and date.

I think that cooling completely before sealing must refer to when you seal with wax. I used a hot water process, so cooled jars might have cracked (which would have been a shame after all that work!!), so I sealed them while hot.

apple-sage-jelly5

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