Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Homemade Pear Butter

My beautiful mom brought a huge bag of pears grown in her neighbor's yard in NC. Using my apple butter recipe, we made pear butter in the crock pot! The aroma was warm and inviting while the pears slow cooked for over 12 hours with cinnamon, nutmeg and other flavors. It's the smell of fall in my house (usually apples, but pears smell the same). Since we don't have an orchard yet and there aren't any pick-your-own orchards around here, I was so grateful for the gift of the pears!

We canned about 100 ounces of preserves for the winter. Haven't even tasted it! Oh, I did lick the spoon when I was done and let me tell you...that my friends was gold in a spoon! Gold I say!

It isn't difficult to make your own apple or pear butter. The toughest part of the chore is peeling and chopping. I outsourced that part of the job to my Chief Farmhand Chris. Then I took over with the seasoning, cooking, stirring and canning. I used the pear cores and peels to start a batch of pear vinegar fermenting in my cabinet. (Oh did I tell you about the muscadine vinegar?! No? Oh my gosh, I will have to do another write-up on my homemade scrap vinegars - it's a very exciting thing to make!) I need to check on my vinegars today.

After you wash, peel, and slice your pears toss them into the crockpot with the cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice and other spices. Turn on the crockpot to low and let it go. Don't disturb it too often - opening the lid lets all the heat out and slows down the cooking process. But stir about every two to three hours. After 12 hours, mash the pears (or apples) with a potato masher. Stir. Continue cooking a few more hours until the fruit is soft and the preserves are a rich dark golden brown color. Ladle into clean, sterilized jars. Then you can process the jars for five minutes in a water bath canner OR you can simply put your jars of homemade fruit preserves in the fridge!

We haven't popped open a jar yet (we still have an open jar of muscadine jelly!) but I know that when we do those pears are going to taste so good on a piece of toast (or cooked on pork chops)! Making my mouth water just thinking about it. That will be an awesome treat later on this fall or in the winter.

A little fresh summertime love in a jar!

Don't miss our muscadine jelly article, recipe, how-to by clicking here! The Pear Butter and the Muscadine Jelly go perfectly with my copycat recipe of Bojangles Buttermilk Biscuits!

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Muscadine Jelly

I can honestly say that we really never have "store bought" jams or jellies. I've been given a few gourmet jellies in the past that we ate with gusto, but I cannot bring myself to write "jelly" on the grocery list. Why buy a jar of high fructose corn syrup with flavoring, coloring and pectin? I want fruit!
Chief Farmhand Chris picking the muscadines
Below is a list of the ingredients in a jar of Smucker's grape jelly:
CONCORD GRAPE JUICE, HIGH FRUCTOSE CORN SYRUP, CORN SYRUP, FRUIT PECTIN, CITRIC ACID, SODIUM CITRATE.
Some of the grapes from our first haul
Below is a list of the ingredients we used in our Ramsey Farms wild muscadine jelly.
  • Fresh picked, fresh smashed wild muscadine juice
  • sugar
  • 2 tablespoons of lemon juice
That is it! No corn syrup, no high fructose corn syrup, no pectin (all presumably GMO), no sodium citrate and no citric acid (lemon contains natural citric acid). Well I do add just a pinch of love and heritage to my jars, is that okay? And the taste? Oh my goodness, I cannot even begin to describe to you how this jelly tastes! It is like a muscadine flavor taste bud explosion in your mouth! It's so good you can eat it from the jar (try to restrain yourself).

[Side bar: Smucker's does have a line called "Orchard's Finest" that does not contain corn syrup or preservatives.]
Smashing boiled grapes through a chinois to get grape juice!
Growing up, my grandmother, aunt and mom spent hours making homemade jams, jellies and preserves from home grown or locally grown fruits. I honestly never recall seeing a jar of store-bought jelly at my grandparents or my childhood home. If there was, it was more of an exception I bet. So to this day I really cannot fathom purchasing a jar of flavored corn syrup at the grocery store. Just can't do it.

We spent the better part of two days picking, washing, cooking, squishing our muscadines to get juice. Boil the juice and add sugar and two tablespoons of lemon juice, bring to 220 degrees until the jelly passes the "spoon test". Ladle into clean, sterilized jars and process for 10 minutes in a water bath canner.

The first batch of jelly did not set up even after 48 hours. We fretfully wanted to avoid store-bought pectin. So I bought my very first candy-jelly-deep fry thermometer!!! (It's the little things folks. The little ordinary things that, if viewed through the right eyes are extraordinary.) We reboiled the jelly and added two tablespoons of bottled lemon juice (okay so next time I will find away around this too). Reladled the syrupy delicious smelling jelly lava into freshly cleaned sterilized jars and repeated the 10 minute water bath.
Pectin is found naturally in many fruits and is especially high in orange peel, apples, lemons and the seeds of raspberries and blackberries. Pectin has been available commercially in the US since the 1920s, obviously our great grandmothers weren't buying a pack of Sure-Jell at the Walmart. Typically they made jelly using other fruits (such as apple or lemon) to create a natural pectin.

The flavor is like summertime exploding in your mouth. Every taste bud you have will wake up alerted to the sweet-tart taste of this homemade muscadine jelly. Homemade jelly is all the flavors of childhood summers rolled into one delicious sweet concoction. You can almost feel your treehouse, smell the honeysuckles, and taste the wind in your face as you fly down deadman's hill on your bike. Yeah, homemade jelly is that good. What emotion does store bought jelly emote? What memories are conjured when you eat that?

Homemade jellies, jams and preserves tastes like Grammaw's jam. A little bit like heaven I imagine and a lot like home. ~ Ramsey

Don't miss our Pear Butter recipe. Both these fresh fruit preserves taste awesome on my copycat of Bojangle's buttermilk biscuits!

Friday, September 4, 2015

Happy Anniversary Chief Farmhand Chris

Y'all. This right here is a working man. You see them dirty jeans? You see those suntanned muscular arms? Never a harder working, faithful, selfless man. He loves his wife, his kids, Jesus, coffee, his dogs and his land. When he shoots, he hits what's aiming for every time. When he gives you a promise, he keeps it forever. When he tells you something, you can believe it like your Bible. What he sets his mind to, he achieves. What he needs to know, he learns. When he meets an obstacle, he overcomes it. What he needs to say, he says. When he says "I do", he does it every day. He is the laborer behind our dreams and the rock that keeps us grounded.

Happy 16th wedding anniversary to my Chief Farmhand Chris. Here's to many, many more!