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Medlar & Apple Chutney

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  • Medlar & Apple Chutney

    Made tonnes of this today. Its a River Cottage recipe - enjoy!

    Ingredients
    3-4 tbsp sunflower oil
    4 tbsp mustard seeds
    2 tbsp crushed black peppercorns
    1 tbsp fenugreek seeds
    1 tbsp ground cumin
    2 tsp turmeric
    1 bulb of garlic, peeled and grated
    5-7cm piece of fresh ginger, peeled and grated
    6 fresh red chillies, deseeded and finely chopped
    2kg Bramley apples, cored and chopped
    500g dark Muscovado sugar
    500ml cider vinegar
    2 tbsp salt
    The left over pulp from the medlar jelly, or about 700g pears, peeled, cored and chopped

    Method: How to make medlar and apple chutney
    1. Warm the oil in a large, heavy-bottomed saucepan over a medium heat and add the spices, stirring well and frying until the mustard seeds just begin to pop. This will only take a minute or so – be careful not to scorch the spices. Add the garlic, ginger and chillies, stir well, and fry gently for few minutes.

    2. Tip the chopped apples into a large preserving pan and pour over the spices.

    3. Add the sugar, vinegar and salt, along with the left over pulp from the medlar jelly, or the pears if you are using them instead.

    4. Stir over a low heat until the sugar dissolves, then simmer for about 2 hours until thickened, stirring occasionally and adding a little water if you think it’s beginning to look too thick.

    5. Bottle in warm, sterilised jars, filling the jars really full as the mixture will shrink slightly as it cools. Seal with vinegar-proof lids.

    NB it helps to have made some medlar jelly first ( I used the RC recipe and its devine!!)
    Last edited by northepaul; 03-12-2010, 07:50 PM.

  • #2
    Sorry to resurrect this from the darkest depths but just planning my attack for the harvest. With this chutney using the leftovers form making medlar jelly, isn't the presence of the pips/seeds from the medlars going to be a bit unpleasant in the chutney or do they soften down in to an edible form?

    Comment


    • #3
      Nice one., I have no medlars, but I do have pears

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      • #4
        Actually the pips are a blessed nuisance in this recipe! I would recommend if you make it, eat carefully!!

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        • #5
          How do you make the jelly? When are Medlars ready to pick :0
          Updated my blog on 13 January

          http://www.growfruitandveg.co.uk/gra.../blogs/stella/

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          • #6
            I nearly bought a medlar yesterday, my local garden centre had a few in their reduced section. Does anyone who grows them tell me if they can be kept as a large bush with several stems/trunks as this is how the plants were being sold. They were labelled mini-medlar bushes, which I've never heard of. I always thought medlars were quite big trees.

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            • #7
              Medlars are trees, maybe the ones in the garden centre are on a dwarfing rootstock BionicBarb?
              I have one but its still a small tree, but most definately a tree and not a bush. They dont get VERY tall per se, but are quite spreading.
              Lovely trees, and they are quite long lived too.
              I love them,(the fruit) and eat them bletted!
              To make jelly Stella you need to have a mixture of bletted and hard medlars, picked around end of October or slightly later. To blett them you simply keep them somewhere dry until they start going soft.
              Simply boil them up with water until mushy and strain them through a jelly bag, over night. Then next day re boil and add sugar - as you would make any jelly.
              Hope that helps

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