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Straivberry and Raspberry Jam.
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prevent its sticking to the preserving-pan.
Wlien done, put it into pots, cover it with
brandy paper, and secure it closely down
with paper moistened with the white of an
egg.
To Preserve Green Gooseberries Whole.
68r. To one pound of gooseberries allow
one pound and a half of double-refined
sugar, and one pint and a half of water.
Pick off the black eye, but not the stalk,
from the largest green gooseberries you can
procure, and set them over the fire to scald,
taking care they do not boil. When they
are tender, take them out, and put them
into cold water. Then clarify a pound and
a half of sugar in a pint and a half of water,
and when the symp is cold, put the goose-
berries singly into your preserving-pan, add
the syrup, and set them over a gentle fire.
Let them boil slowly, but not quick enough
to break them. When you perceive the
sugar has entered them, take them off,
cover them with white paper, and let them
stand all night. The next day take out the
fruit and boil the syrup until it begins to
be ropy. Skim it well, add it to the goose-
berries, and set them over a slow fire to
simmer till the syrup is thick. Then take
them out. Set them to cool, and put them
with the syrup into pots. Cover them over,
and keep them in a dry place.
Strawberry Jam.
Time, one hour.
682. To six pounds of strawberries allow
three pounds of sugar.
Procure some fine searlet strawberries,
strip off the stalks, and put them into a
preserving-pan over a moderate fire ; boil
them for half an hour, keeping them con-
stantly stirred. Break the sugar into small
pieces, and mix them with the strawberries
after they have been removed from the fire.
Then place it again over the fire, and boil
it for another half hour \&xy quickly. Put
it into pots, and when cold, cover it over
with brandy papers and a piece of paper
moistened with the white of an egg over the
tops.
Raspberry Jam.
Time, forty minutes.
683. One pound of fruit; one pound of
sugar.
To every pound of raspberries use the
same weight of sugar, but always boil the
fruit well before you add the sugar to it, as
that will make it a better colour. Put the
fruit in a preserving-pan, mashing it well
with a long wooden spoon. After boiling
it a few minutes, add the same quantity of
sugar as fruit, boiling it half an hour, keep-
ing it well stirred. When done, and suffi-
ciently reduced, fill the jars, and when cold,
cover them over with white paper moistened
with white of eggs.
To Preserve Greengages.
Time, three-quarters of an hour.
684. To three pounds of greengages allow
three pounds of sugar.
Prick the plums with a fine needle, to
prevent their breaking, put them into a
preserving-pan with only sufficient water to
cover them, and set them over a gentle fire
until the water simmers ; then take them
out and set them on a sieve to drain ; add
to the water in which the plums were boiled
the above quantity of pounded sugar, boil
it quickly, skimming it as the scum rises,
until the syrup sticks to the spoon. Then
put in the greengages, and let them boil
until the sugar bubbles, then pour the
whole into a basin, and let it stand until
the next day. Drain the syrup from the
fruit, boil it up quickly, and pour il over the
plums—repeat this for four days, then boil
the fruit in it for five or si.x minutes, put
them into jars, pour the syrup over them,
and cover them over with brandy papers.
The kernels must be blanched and boiled
with the fruit.
Rhubarb Marmalade.
Time, three-quarters of an hour, if young
rhubarb ; an hour and a half if old.
685. To one pound of loaf sugar one
pound and a half of rhubarb stalks ; peel of
half a large lemon ; a quarter of an ounce
of bitter almonds.
Cut the rhubarb stalks into pieces about
two inches long, and put them into a pre-
serving-pan with the loaf sugar broken
small, the peel of the lemon cut thin, and
the almonds blanched and divided. Boil
the whole well together, put it into pots,
and cover it as directed for other preserves.
To Preserve Plums.
Time, three-quarters of an hour.
686. To every pound of fruit allow three-
quarters of a pound of sugar.
Divide the plums, take out the stones,
and put the fruit on a dish with pounded
sugar strewed over ; the next day put them
into a preserving-pan, and let them simmer
gently by the side of the fire for about
thirty minutes, then boil them quickly, re-
moving the scum as it rises, and keep them
constantly stirred, or the jam will stick to the
bottom of the pan. Crack the stones, and
add the kernels to the preserve when it boils.