Marketing #2 – Piata Matache Bucuresti

Piata Matache Bucuresti in late July means water melons, sour cherries, red currants, apricots, raspberries and blackberries…. and lots of fresh herbs…mmmmm and made the recipes below

I scooped up some sour cherries and was so overcome by the perfume of the purple basil I had to buy some. The sour cherries became a batch of sour cherry and orange jam and the basil made a truly pungent purple basil and sunflower pesto. The stones and leaves of the sour cherries I up-cycled into Cherry stone wine cooler – a delish refreshing sup for the dog days of a Bucharest summer.

Blackcurrant Jam (no added sugar)

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My grandparents had a large field of blackcurrants opposite their house and I used to imagine how many pies and tarts and jars of jam could be made from them if only the entire crop wasn’t sold to “the Ribena man”.  For thats how most kids knew blackcurrants then, as a very sweet syrup to make squash with. Luckily my Grandad had his own bushes which my Nana threw old net curtains over to ward off the birds. Lucky us.  The smell of making this heavenly jam reminded me of stewed blackcurrants and custard that was the favourite pud and swirling the midnight dark fruit through the yellow custard to create crazy patterns much to the consternation of my Grandad.

And so this morning I absent mindedly swirled the jam through my yoghurt….

The recipe works just as well the classic way so I have also given the classic white sugar measure too in case you cannot find the grape juice concentrate or apple juice concentrate which is not easy to find everywhere.

Gadgets & Gizmos

A good quality heavy bottomed pan – if you have a Le Creuset casserole for example – use it for jam. A good ladle, a metal jam funnel helps.  Washed jars and lids in bicarbonate of soda solution. A sugar thermometer if you have one. Small saucers placed in the freezer.

Do read the Jam making rules if you have time

Ingredients  for  8-10 small pots

1kg of blackcurrants taken off the stems

400g of apple puree (made by boiling up whole small unripe green apples because the pectin is in the pips and skin and passing through a mouli)

This gives 1.4kg of fruit total

The zest and juice of 1 lemon

1.2 kg sugar or 1.2 litres unsweetened grape juice concentrate

These fruits are high in pectin so you should not have any problem achieving a set.

How To

Have everything prepared including your fruit.  This is the key. Jars washed and warmed to 100C in the oven. A tray and a ladle, lids sterilised. Tea towels scrupulously clean.  Now you can begin.

Place all ingredients except the lemon zest in your pan and warm slowly until the sugar has dissolved if using sugar.  If using concentrate you can switch straight to full power.

Now switch up to full and bring to a rolling boil until you reach 104C or if you do not have a sugar thermometer you will wait some 20-30 minutes and notice smaller bubbles.  Start testing the jam by placing a teaspoon on the cold plates.  When it does not move/ noticeable wrinkles when you push your finger through it then it has set. You can see in the photo how the testing plate is held vertically.

Remove from the heat. Now gently add the lemon zest.

Pour into the hot jars and seal the lid immediately. Invert to sterilise the airspace. I also now water bath my jams, so place them in a saucepan of boiling water for 20 minutes and let cool overnight.

Cherry Stone Wine Cooler

when life gives you cherry pits….

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Half a glass of the cherry stone wine, a healthy slurp of prosecco, ice and orange slices. Delish!  This is way nicer than Sangria.

I’ve read John McEnroe’s autobiography “Serious” and in it he details the simple pleasure of chopping up breakfast fruit for his kids. I like to think he would welcome the simple frugality of this seasonal wine cooler and pour it over fresh fruit and sup it in the commentary box and shout out instead “This is the pits”…in a good way. Because if JM can mellow there is hope for all of us.  When temperatures head towards 40C its time to drink sensibly ie things with prosecco and a lot of ice and soda in.  This clever cooler has a tangy astringency because of the cherry leaves that you macerate in the wine mix.  Here is how this came into being…

Firstly there was a lot of sour cherry jam making going on…

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which meant a surfeit of cherry stones…or pits if you is American. That bothered me. I don’t like throwing food away.  Then the ladies told me about Romanian pickles flavoured with cherry leaves. Then I thought about how the stones of apricots and cherries left in liqueurs and jams permeate them with soft mellow flavours. And so this little concoction was born.

Here is how to make your own version…but follow your instincts and what you have in your spice cupboard to personalise your own summer wine cooler.

Gadgets & Gizmos

A big jar. A dose of patience – about a week. uffff

Ingredients

3 litres of quite dodgy red wine. Those semi sweet bottles that you were given as a gift and cant bring yourself to throw away are just perfect.

A slug of vodka

a couple of spoonfuls of sugar unless using the really very dodgy wine as above

quite a few red peppercorns

a big handful of cherry stones/ pits

quite a few cherry leaves (washed)

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How To

Mix all ingredients together and leave for a week

Drink within the next 2-4 weeks, with a lot of ice and a slice or two of orange.

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