Originally posted by Flummery
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Will a proper jam pan make a difference?
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Well I have ordered the pan reccomended by smallblueplanet on Amazon, thanks. Ordered a lemon juicer too while I was there ofcourse!
In response to recent posts, My stock pot does have a big heavy base on it, but I can only presume that the wider surface area of a maslin pan aids with evaporation and therefore setting point without having to put so much heat into the mixture that it gets a burnt bottom..... ouch!There is a war going on for your mind. If you are thinking you are winning.
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Originally posted by smallblueplanet View PostSo by reverse logic Flum, would a big heavy-bottomed stock pot not be just as good for jam?Whoever plants a garden believes in the future.
www.vegheaven.blogspot.com Updated March 9th - Spring
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I do mine in a heavy based pressure cooker pan as it doesn't tend to stick.
I do have my grannies brass jam pan- and am acquiring a copper pan- but am wondering with these pans if you need to be careful with acidic fruit - or 'normal' fruit so there isn't a residual flavour or tainting from the metals???
I was told cane sugar is the best for jam- no idea why- and I've never tried beet sugar....anyone know about this????...
I read somewhere that a little blob of butter helps reduce scum..I think it was in a strawberry recipe- but I lob it in everything except marmalade!!!....should I or is it a waste of butter???"Nicos, Queen of Gooooogle" and... GYO's own Miss Marple
Location....Normandy France
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I sometimes add butter to marmalade as well....
Preserving sugar should produce less scum that ordinary gran, and it should dissolve faster, reducing the risk of burning. I think those are the only differences. Cane or beet sugar should be much the same. Any differences are 'refined' out, unless you use Golden Gran, which adds an interesting flavour....
I liked using a real jam pan, but these days it is pressure cooker or big stock-pot (jam pan was one of the casualties of the fire 13 years ago), and things seem to work much the same. I only do a couple of batches any year (one marmalade, one crab apple jelly is typical, but it does vary) and some years I don't actually make any.Flowers come in too many colours to see the world in black-and-white.
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Originally posted by LostGoddess View PostThanks for the advice everyone. Sarzwix I was thinking that a British beet sugar could be a good alternative to organic sugar for the reason you suggested, thanks. I would still prefer to use organic if at all possible, although having to weigh the pros of organic against the cons of food miles is a tricky one that I haven't come to a conclusion on. I mean, here I am trying to make good preserves from British, seasonal, often wild ingredients and I'm then using food-mile-rich sugar with which to make it doesn't seem to make much sense! But that's a whole other debate.
As for pectin, I'm sure my gran used to save lemon pips and put them in her jam in a muslin bag for the extra pectin... or am I imagining this?Last edited by bluemoon; 04-07-2009, 07:54 PM.Into each life some rain must fall........but this is getting ridiculous.
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Originally posted by LostGoddess View PostThanks for the advice everyone. Sarzwix I was thinking that a British beet sugar could be a good alternative to organic sugar !
Back to Pans, I use an old Pressure coooker without the lid.....I have never used a thermometer...when it bubbles it is boiling then put it on a plate that has been frozen and if it crinkles it done.
I think the smaller the volume you make the more problems you get. I then to make 20lb at a time.My phone has more Processing power than the Computers NASA used to fake the Moon Landings
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Originally posted by LostGoddess View PostIs there a tasteable (is that a word?) difference between beet and cane sugar?
Their conclusion was that there was no difference, both made equally good jam.
Where my querky comes in, is that I prefer real sugar, as opposed to the ersatz stuff.
valmarg
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Sugar (sucrose) has a definite and precise chemical structure, it wouldn't matter if it came from beet, cane or was manufactured in a lab, if it didn't conform to the chemical formula and structure then it wouldn't be sugar. Both beet and cane produce sucrose, therefore it is exactly the same.Into each life some rain must fall........but this is getting ridiculous.
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