At work this week, we made some jars of mincemeat. This mincemeat, in fact...
...the plum and russet mincemeat from the River Cottage Handbook 2 - Preserves by Pam Corbin, a copy of which I have at home. Well, the cooking smells from making this mincemeat at work were sooooo bloomin’ amazing (like sticky spicy Winter sunshine in a jar) that I have decided to make a batch myself at home, in preparation for the making of the mince pies at the Christmas time! It can also be used as a filling for baked apples etc.
And this has put me in mind to go the whole hog on the preserves front and cook up a selection of the other pickle, jams and marmalade recipes I’ve seen recently and thought, ‘Oooh, that looks rather fab!’ These include : red onion marmalade, spicy carrot pickle and, because the greenhouse is bursting with almost ready chillies, some sweet chilli jam.
I think pickle, jam and marmalade making is an activity that is perfect for these increasingly colder, darker days. I’m not a fan of summer time jam making on account of the extra heat (because it is already summer) and the sodding wasp ‘n’ fly factor. In my experience, it can end up as a sweaty, bad-tempered sticky hoo-ha. No, this is definitely an Autumn job. It warms and scents the kitchen, nay the whole house, beautifully. You can have the radio on in the background, or some sing-along music. There’s no rushing the job - you become absorbed by the rhythmic chopping of veg, stirring of vast bowls and pans, adding a pinch of this, a knob of that. Stir, taste, stir again. Watch the mixes simmer and bubble. Prepare the jars.
And at the end you have a collection of magic mixtures, the colour of rich jewels, ready to add a dollop of flavoursome joy to brighten the most mundane of Winter dishes! What’s not to love?
So, on this wet, grey and chilly Saturday I am gathering my recipes. Making a shopping list. Counting my jam jars. Goodness, I might even go crazy and design a set of Damson Cottage labels for the jars! And looking forward to getting myself into a lovely pickle!
Comments
Russets are great, aren’t they Aileen? Lovely, nutty taste. And why don’t you go ahead and name your retro bungalow? Lavender Lodge sounds perfect. It has a touch of the detective novel about it. The setting for an Agatha Christie mystery, maybe?
KJ
KJ
KJ