Behold the beauty:
Anyway, back to those rose hips. I found a recipe in my old, old version of Putting Food By that essentially called for the berries to be simmered with a cup of water per pound of fruit until soft, after which it is mashed, sieved and returned to the pan for sweetening. Add a 1:1 ratio of sugar to fruit juice by weight, simmer until thick, and process in the water bath canner for like 15 minutes or something. Find a recipe. There are a million. Be sure to somehow get the hairy seeds out of your batch though, no matter which recipe you use. They will leave very unpleasant little slivers in your tongue (so I learned when I bit into my first raw rosehip).
The biggest snafu I hit was that simmering took longer than expected to soften my hips (the rose hips, not my body. Those are already quite soft, thankyouverymuch), and the amount of pectin in the berries caused it to thicken prematurely. Perhaps we picked them underripe and that's why it took so long to soften? Most places recommend waiting to harvest until the first frost but we also read they were fine at this time as well. By the time I mashed up the berries and tried to pass it through my chinois sans jelly bag, I had a paste that reminded me of slow-roasted tomatoes in the desert. I added an additional *6 cups of water* just to have semi-liquid product and went from there.
So I did what was next, added sugar, simmered (stirring constantly because it didn't seem to be quite enough water to dissolve the sugar) until thick, and then processed.
And.... beautiful! The photos below document half of the final reward. I think we totaled 3 pints, 3 half pints and 4 quarter pints, but I honestly cannot remember. It was a wild mix of sizes, appropriate for home and gifts. Holiday planning is in the works...
A little bit of label love (his talent, not mine).
Stay tuned for further adventures in rose hips as the season is just beginning and The River Cottage Preserves Handbook
PS. If I ever move to Portland I am adding to and taking advantage of the Urban Edibles project. So cool.
You just let me know if you need my address.....
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