4/15/07

Making Jam In April


" What zone does she live in to have fresh plums in April? "
These beautiful plums aren't fresh. Harvesting our vegetables and fruit during my hectic first month of school always makes it hard to find time to preserve the food as the garden explodes. A friend told me she just puts her fruit in Ziploc bags and gets to it later. I took her advice last September and just discovered the plums last week in the back of the freezer. April is later I guess. My husband and I decided to thaw them in the sink and make jam. We can't remember what kind of plums these are, but we think they may be Santa Rosas. Their color is closer to red than purple and they don't taste as sweet. I actually like the flavor better for jam. Last fall when I did have the time to cook one batch of jam the following recipe intrigued me in the Ball canning cookbook. I have confessed before that I love orange in combination with other foods. This blend of plums and orange is perfect. People have loved the new tastes in this jam. All our jars are gone so as spring is budding around our property, it seemed a good time to drag out the canner, the jars, the pot, my husband as a helper, and the ingredients and make Plum- Orange Jam. If you decide to try it you may want to wait until plums are ripe in late summer. Here is the recipe:
Plum-Orange Jam
5 cups chopped and pitted plums ( about 3 1/2 pounds)
1 tablespoon grated orange peel
1 package powdered pectin
5 1/2 cups sugar
1/4 cup orange liqueur
Combine plums, orange peel and pectin in a large saucepot. Bring to a boil, stirring frequently. Add sugar, stirring until dissolved. Return to a rolling boil. Boil hard 1 minute, stirring constantly. Remove from heat. Skim foam if necessary. Stir in orange liqueur. Ladle hot jam into hot jars, leaving 1/4-inch head space. Adjust two-piece caps. Process 10 minutes in a boiling-water canner. Yield: 6 half-pints.
I usually use pectin that works for other sweeteners and have used Splenda or honey instead of sugar. This time of year I didn't have much choice of pectin. I made two batches and used pint jars instead. Enjoy!

National Poetry Month, Poem #15


A Letter from Home

She sends me news of blue jays, frost,

Of stars and now the harvest moon
That rides above the stricken hills.
Lightly, she speaks of cold, of pain,
And lists what is already lost.
Here where my life seems hard and slow,
I read of glowing melons piled
Beside the door, and baskets filled
With fennel, rosemary and dill,
While all she could not gather in
Or hid in leaves, grow black and falls.
Here where my life seems hard and strange,
I read her wild excitement when
Stars climb, frost comes, and blue jays sing.
The broken year will make no change
Upon her wise and whirling heart; -
She knows how people always plan
To live their lives, and never do.
She will not tell me if she cries.
I touch the crosses by her name;
I fold the pages as I rise,
And tip the envelope, from which
Drift scraps of borage, woodbine, rue.
-Mary Oliver
I had to find a picture online of the blue jay. It is rare to see one around my place.