Originally posted by umslopogaas
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Quince
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostThey are available in my local whole food greengrocers but they are quite special and had ceps in recently.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostCeps= https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boletus_edulis perhaps. Not heard of these before.
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Originally posted by umslopogaas View PostBy the way, has anyone ever seen quinces for sale? I havent. They seem to be commercialy forgotten.
I think they're the real thing, not Japanese quince, though they're not very big. Only £1 a kilo.
Now send me some recipes!
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Originally posted by jean View Post
Now send me some recipes!
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Basic Quince jam: Peel,core chop/slice cover with water and simmer until soft, can take half an hour or more if they are unripe, reduce with the pan lid off if the mixture is too watery. Add jam sugar (ie with pectin added), I use about 3/4lb per pound of fruit and lemon juice if the quinces were very ripe, bring quickly to the boil and keep it boiling until it reaches a set. Lots of ways to check this eg use a jam thermometer and stop when it reaches around 220F.f, or drop some on a cold plate and let it cool and see if it seems to have the right consistency when cool. Rememeber to take the jam off the heat whilst you test the set!
For Quince Jelly the method is similar although you can add more water say about 6 pints to 4 pounds of fruit, bring the pulp to the boil check that it isn't too watery if so reduce further and then add the sugar, boil then strain through a jelly bag into hot sealable jars.
Fr Quince Butter (often spiced) and Quince Cheese the first steps are much as above but you need to produce a smooth pulp for both, hence either sieve it or if you prefer use an electric hand blender and for each pound of fruit add 1/2 to 3/4 pounds of sugar plus spices of choice if making butter and bring to the boil until you get a thick creamy result or for Quince cheese, add 1pound of sugar to each pound of fruit, bring to the boil and stir constantly to stop burning until a spoon drawn across the bottom of the pan leaves a clean line Thne aim is to produce a stiff texture.
Fruit Butter doesn't keep as long as Cheese unless sealed in airtight containers. I find fruit cheeses keep well in the fridge.
I hope some of this helps, they're essentially the recipes in the Domestic Preservation of Fruit and Veg Buletin 21 published years ago by the Min of Ag, Fish and Food but they work!
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Originally posted by jean View Post
Now send me some recipes!
which is full of interesting ideas.
For quinces, she [the author] has -
pickled quinces
quince and star anise jelly
quince cheese
quince ratafia
quince sharbat
... all of which look tempting
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