Arlene Wright-Correll

When it’s Good its Berry Berry Good©



Posted: Monday, September 01, 2008

by
http://www.learn-america.com

We lost our blue berry bushes last year. However, this year the raspberry and blackberry bushes are loaded and it will be a fight between me and the birds as usual. I do not try very hard to win. Yet there is something about a blackberry or raspberry just picked, warm from the morning sun and covered with morning dew that tastes like a berry is supposed to taste. Carl and I never seem to get many back to the kitchen. Somewhere between the bushes and the kitchen they magically jump out of the bowls and into our mouths.

We do not do a lot of jam or jelly making in our old age, but we do manage to freeze a few on some cookie trays and then right into a good freezer bag for later on in the winter.

When the kids were all at home we did a lot of jam and jelly and here is one of my old recipes.

Somewhere along my long years of cooking I discovered that one pint of blackberries equals one and a half to two cups of blackberries and basically the same rule applies to raspberries depending on the size of each.

Here is my tried and true recipe for Blackberry Jelly which makes about 5 or 6 (6 ounce jars) of great jelly.

Gather up 10 cups of blackberries and you will need 5 cups of sugar and 1 package of dry pectin that contains about 1 & ¾ ounces of pectin.

Next gently wash, remove stems, drain in a large colander and crush berries in a large bowl.

The next step is to drip the berries through a jelly bag or a cheesecloth lined sieve until you get about three and a half cups of blackberry juice which will go into a 3 quart stainless steel or glass pot (no aluminum pots please!). Add your sugar and dry pectin stirring constantly and bring to a rolling boil and then boil for one minute. Remove jelly from heat and skim off all the bubbles. A rolling boil is the reason to use a large cooking container because a rolling boil cannot be stirred down.

Method for using self sealing lids: Ladle the jelly into your hot, sterilized jars, one at a time and fill to within 1/8th inch of the top if you are using self sealing lids for your jars.
Firmly tighten screw band and then invert the jar for 30 seconds and then stand upright to cool. If you want you can process in a boiling water bath for 5 minutes.

Method when NOT using self sealing lids: If not then fill to within ½ inch of the top of the jar and seal with melted paraffin spooning 1/8th inch layer of paraffin over the blackberry jelly making sure you cover it completely. Cool for 5 to 10 minutes until the paraffin hardens and then add another spoonful of paraffin on top of each jar tilting and turning the jar so the paraffin runs about ¼ inch or so up the side. Remember your jars are hot when you wipe the rims off with a clean damp cloth. Let your jars cool for 24 hours and then cover with a lid or foil.
 

"Tread the Earth Lightly" and in the meantime… May your day be filled with…

Peace, Light and Love,

 

Author's note: This article was originally written for GreenThumbArticles.com

About the Author & Artist. Arlene Wright-Correll (1935- ___), popular American award winning Artist, published author, columnist, & is the resident art instructor for Avalon Stained Glass School, at the age of 68, decided to pick up her paint brushes again after 54 years and paint.  She is a cancer and stroke survivor who is able to strive forward each and everyday to welcome the beauty of this small planet.  She also is a China & Porcelain painter, Sandblasting & Etching, Stained Glass & fused glass Artisan. She is one of the six KY Artists who worked 6 months to create the dolls for Journey Jots in 2006 and a Smithsonian Institute art exhibit in 2008. Her published books can be found here . She is also a featured writer for GreenThumbArticles.com and teaches Art Vacation Holidays at Avalon Stained Glass School and Creativity Center.

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