Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Hot Chile Pepper and Basil Jelly


Hot Chile Pepper
and Basil Jelly




50-60 Chile Peppers (depending on size)
½ cup chopped fresh basil
1 ½ cups cider vinegar
6 ½ cups sugar
½ tsp salt
2 pouches (3 oz. each) liquid pectin
2-3 drops green food coloring

Prepare your preserving jars.

Cut the stems off peppers and slice lengthwise.  Bending them inside out will loosen the seeds and they can easily be slid out with the white membrane.  (Wear gloves while doing this.  These peppers are hot and the juice will remain on your hands for 24-48 hours even after you wash them.)

Chop peppers in food processor/chopper until fine and uniformly ground.  Measure out 2 cups. 

Combine peppers, basil, vinegar, sugar and salt in preserving pot.  Bring to a boil over high heat, stirring occasionally.  Once mixture is at a full boil, set timer for 5 minutes and stir constantly.  After 5 minutes, stir in pectin and return to a full boil.  Set timer for one minute (exactly- too long will cause very thick jelly).

Remove from heat and stir constantly for 3-4 minutes to prevent peppers from floating to the tops of the jars.  Add green food coloring.

Spoon into hot preserving jars, leaving ¼ inch head space; wipe the rims clean, and seal according to manufacturer’s directions.  Process in boiling water bath for 5 minutes

Yield: 7 8oz jars

** This jelly is perfect at Christmas time, not only for gifts, but spread cream cheese on crackers and a little dollop of jelly on top makes for a festive treat.



© Crackerberries 2012

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Fig Grape Jam




10 cups figs, stemmed and chopped and mashed
6 cups sugar
1 cup grape juice (or I used paisano wine)
9 oz grape jell-o gelatin

Combine all ingredients in preserving pot and bring to a boil. Reduce heat slightly, but keep a rolling boil and cook for 45 minutes or so; spoon into sterilized jars and process in boiling water bath 10 minutes. 

Yield: 14 8oz jars

This also works great with strawberry jello for strawberry fig jam.  Do not completely mash the figs, leave some in chunks and they will appear as strawberries.

© Crackerberries 2012