The Old Farm was truely an old farm.
It appeared to be a prosperous farm in the 1800s.
The house was expanded in Victorian times from
It appeared to be a prosperous farm in the 1800s.
The house was expanded in Victorian times from
its original farmhouse.
There were old orchards; pear and apple.
A quince tree, vineyard, and black raspberries gone wild.
Walnut trees and a patch of elderberry bushes.
A quince tree, vineyard, and black raspberries gone wild.
Walnut trees and a patch of elderberry bushes.
Elderberries (Sambucus) were/are used medicinally by many.
The berries are black or very dark blue and have a sharp, sweet flavor
that makes them highly preferred for desserts, syrups, jams, jellies.
They are full of minerals, antioxidands, and vitamins.
For many years an old couple would come by in the right season
and ask to pick some berries. Of course permission was given.
That was the way in the country.
That was the way in the country.
A couple months later a bottle of elderberry wine would appear!
ELDERBERRY JELLY
(From Kraft Foods page)
(From Kraft Foods page)
3-4 lbs ripe elderberries
1/4 cup fresh lemon juice
1 packet sure jell
4 1/2 cups gran sugar
1/4 tsp butter
Place
berries in a large pot and crush with a potato masher to release
some
of the juices. Turn the heat to medium and continue to crush
as the
mixture heats up to a boil. Once the berries and their juices reach a boil,
reduce the heat to
low and let the berries simmer for 10 minutes. Remove from heat.
Slowly transfer the mashed berries and juice over the sieve (or 4 layers cheesecloth)
to strain the juice into the pot. Let strain for an hour.
You will need 3 cups of juice to make one batch of jelly if using MCP pectin,
3 3/4 cups of juice if using SureJell pectin
Place 3 cups (or 3 3/4 cups depending on your brand of pectin) of juice
into a large,
high sided, wide pot (8-quart). Add the lemon juice and
pectin.
Bring to a boil on high heat.
Add sugar and butter. Stir with a wooden
spoon.
Bring to a boil again. Watch the pot as the mixture will foam up
considerably.
You may need to lower the heat a bit to keep the foam from
boiling over the pot.
Add sugar and butter. Stir with a wooden spoon.
Bring to a boil again. Watch the pot as the mixture will foam up considerably.
You may need to lower the heat a bit to keep the foam from boiling over the pot.
Boil exactly 1 minute, ladle into jars and seal in a hot water bath, 5 minutes.
Add sugar and butter. Stir with a wooden spoon.
Bring to a boil again. Watch the pot as the mixture will foam up considerably.
You may need to lower the heat a bit to keep the foam from boiling over the pot.
Boil exactly 1 minute, ladle into jars and seal in a hot water bath, 5 minutes.
2 comments:
As a kid, I remember elderberry pie. Because they were so small it would take so many to make a pie. So, my Mom used to make apple and elderberry pie. That way she didn't need as many elderberries as would be needed for a pie of only them. I remember loving those pies!
A wonderful memory. Thanks, did not know that. I am trying to get some elderberries started, one day I will make all these delicious things!
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