Wednesday, 26 December 2012

Making juice while the sun shines (hmm, actually while it rains)


27 December
The red currants have been wonderful this year – utterly glorious rubies – and we managed to cover them early enough to prevent the birds from having more than their fair share.  Rain earlier in the month plumped them up though the heat over Christmas has turned some of them into dried currants!  With just over one third of an acre planted in currants we do have rather a few but for a single household two bushes each of red and black will give you plenty.  We desperately needed rain but it could have waited until we had finished picking the currants!  The fruit is now wet so there will be a fine line between picking what is left after it starts to dry and before it goes mouldy with botrytis (great for grapes to make ‘stickies’, but not so good for other fruits).  Every year I make cordials but this year I think I will be making more than normal as the remaining fruit won’t be of such good quality any more.

Nothing beats homemade cordials for flavour. 

Red currant cordial
To every 1kg of red currants (don’t worry about de-strigging them, though remove the leaves and insects) add 600ml of water.  Cook gently until the fruit is soft.  Place all the fruit and the juice in a jelly bag and leave it to drip for at least 12 hours.

Put the juice into a pan with sugar (700g to every litre of juice), heat gently to dissolve the sugar.  If the juice does boil (try not to let it boil) skim any resultant froth off with a slotted spoon or similar.
Pour into sterilised bottles and seal. It keeps for several months in a cool dark place. Serve with soda water or add to a glass of chilled white wine.

Black currant cordial
900g blackcurrants
500g sugar
520ml water
juice and skin of 2 whole lemons

Simmer the blackcurrants, sugar and water for 5 minutes. Add the juice and skin of the lemons (use a potato peeler to get the skin off or grate the lemons), and simmer for another 5 minutes.   Place the fruit in a jelly bag and leave to drip for twelve hours.  Store in sterilised bottles.  Seal and keep in the fridge.

It is excellent made up with sparkling water or soda water, and also makes a good sauce for vanilla ice-cream or lemon cheesecake.  Stir it through yoghurt for a simple dessert or breakfast.

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