Hedgerow jam
Hedgerow jam

Hey everyone, it is Jim, welcome to our recipe page. Today, I’m gonna show you how to make a distinctive dish, hedgerow jam. One of my favorites food recipes. This time, I will make it a bit unique. This is gonna smell and look delicious.

a variety fruit from the hedgerow or garden: blackberries, elderberries, sloes, damsons, wild plums, haws, rosehips. This wonderful wild blackberry and sloe jam combination is one which I have been really wanting to share with you. Steve Smith, Head Chef of Michelin-starred Bohemia Restaurant, shares his hedgerow jam recipe, easily adaptable for a variety of plentiful autumn fruit, such as blackberries, sloes and elderberries.

Hedgerow jam is one of the most popular of current trending meals in the world. It’s simple, it is quick, it tastes yummy. It’s enjoyed by millions daily. They’re fine and they look fantastic. Hedgerow jam is something that I have loved my entire life.

To begin with this recipe, we must first prepare a few components. You can cook hedgerow jam using 4 ingredients and 10 steps. Here is how you can achieve it.

The ingredients needed to make Hedgerow jam:
  1. Prepare 1 kg apples - I'm lucky enough to have several trees growing along the field where i pick my other fruits and i use the eating apples in the jam and cooking apples for pies and crumbles
  2. Prepare 500 grams mixed fruit/berries (blackberries, elderberries, damson and wild plums in mine but you can also do sloes and rosehips or any Hedgerow fruit that grows locally to you or you could buy at your greengrocer if you can't get anywhere to pick your own)
  3. Get 1 kg sugar - you can use jam sugar but with this quantity of apples there should be enough pectin for setting
  4. Make ready 100 ml water

It's a relatively fuss free method of preserving autumn's bounty in a most delicious and attractive way. AD - this post contains affiliate links.. A jam funnel* makes the process of pouring a lot easier. Seal and allow to cool. "Hedgerow jam" is really a catch-all name for any jam you make using the fruits of your foraging labours - blackberries, elderberries, crabapples, rosehips, sloe, hawthorn, damsons and so on.

Instructions to make Hedgerow jam:
  1. Place a saucer in the freezer
  2. Chop up apples and place in a large saucepan or preserving pan- for true Hedgerow jam remove stalks but nothing else all the goodness is in the peel and core - I chop mine into 8 chunky pieces (I also freeze all of my fruit on the day it's picked ready for jam making another day)
  3. Add all of the other fruit and the water
  4. Bring up to the boil, then turn down the heat to a gentle simmer and leave for around 30 minutes until most of the fruit has pulped
  5. Use a hand blender to pulp the jam further and to ensure Apple skins are well incorporated - if you don't have a hand blender you could use your food processor or a potato masher/ricer, but make sure you let it cool first
  6. Now add the sugar and stir until it has all dissolved. Bring up to a rolling boil. Do not have heat any higher than it has to go. Once it comes to the boil start lowering the heat until it just maintains a boil. If you try to boil it too fast it will burn to the bottom of saucepan and the burnt sugar taste will go right through the whole batch :(
  7. How long do you boil it for? Every batch can be different so anywhere between 8 and 28 minutes and all times outside those parameters! It will be dependent upon what heat source you use, how big is the saucepan and what is it made of, what fruits did you use in what ratio. Also, how many times you stirred to stop it sticking, what brand of sugar you use, and is your water soft or hard!
  8. This is where the saucer comes in. After 8-10 minutes remove your saucer from the freezer and drop a teaspoon of jam on it. Pop it back in the freezer for 1 minute. When you take it back out use your little finger and very gently using the lightest touch, drag your finger along the top of the jam. If it wrinkles up it has reached setting point if it doesn't continue for another 5 minutes and repeat the procedure. My mix took 21 minutes to reach setting point.
  9. Turn off the heat but give it a good stir as the heat keeps it bubbling for a while and it can still burn
  10. Ladle into your jars, but be careful as the jam is so hot it WILL remove skin. This quantity should make 5-6 lb jars. I put a circle of parchment into the top of each jar and smooth down to remove air bubbles. Don't put lids on until it is cold. Fancy labels and a square of festive cloth makes a cheap and cheerful gift for a friend :)

You don't have to have a particular ratio of fruit, but with the current blackberry glut I'd suggest you pick lots of blackberries and. Containing a delicious mix of raspberries, blackberries and blueberries, our hedgerow jam is the perfect accompaniment for a delicious breakfast or afternoon tea. Material & Care + • Ingredients: Sugar, Raspberries, Blackberries, Blueberries. Description- And finally, if your hedgerow harvest is rather random then put it all in maslin pan and make wild fruit jam. A generous dollop on freshly baked bred is a real British treat.

So that’s going to wrap it up for this exceptional food hedgerow jam recipe. Thanks so much for reading. I am confident that you can make this at home. There is gonna be more interesting food in home recipes coming up. Don’t forget to save this page on your browser, and share it to your family, friends and colleague. Thank you for reading. Go on get cooking!