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To: DelaWhere
I miss a whole lot of Texas cooking... If it weren't 1,560 miles, I would slip down to Weatherford and visit my Son and get me some of that fine food!

Sounds like you need to get out some o' that canned bacon and vegetables and make some of that old fashioned comfort food tomorrow!!! That's the ticket.

I got a question. Have you ever made jelly or jam from cantaloupe? You were listing a lot on a previous post and I'm wondering because I'm about to do it without a recipe but ya never know that outcome of those things. I found recipes on the 'net but they all start with a cantaloupe. Well, I juiced my cantaloupes when I had them so I've got a gallon of cantaloupe juice. I think I'm just going to add sugar, pectin and a bit o' lemon juice, cook and wait for the jell on the spoon like other fruits. But, it would be nice if I knew somebody else had tried it successfully.

9,841 posted on 02/06/2009 7:53:24 PM PST by Wneighbor
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To: Wneighbor
Hmmm that is one I have not tried (yet).

This is one recipe I found - Cantaloupe Jam

Cantaloupe (very ripe) Chunk, cook and mash

3/4 pound (1.8 cups) granulated sugar per pound of cantaloupe

1/2 teaspoon each ginger, mace and cinnamon

If I were making it, I would increase the cinnamon (good blood sugar regulator - and I like the taste) and I would add either 1 teaspoon of lemon juice or one crushed 1000 mg of vitamin C (ascorbic acid) which does 3 things - improves color - acidifies the jam for safer storage - good anti-oxidant.

I would cook it to the jelling temperature using a thermometer (that is water boiling point plus 8 degrees F. to altitude/barometric pressure adjust, bring a pot of water to boiling and check the temp. then add 8 degrees to that. This is kind of a handy rule of thumb that has worked well for me without adding the SureJell - pectin - which is not only expensive, but I don't keep a stock of it on hand and never seem to have any when I need it. Also, I don't have to make a lot of small batches - seems to work in larger batches of jam/jelly.)

Pour it hot into the sterile jars, wipe top edge of jars and put lids on (bring lids to about a low boil in water first)tighten bands and waterbath them for 10 minutes. (note: remove them from the water - don't take the shortcut of just leaving them to cool in the water - kills some of the seals - same thing in pressure cooker too.)

9,861 posted on 02/07/2009 3:35:44 AM PST by DelaWhere (I'm a Klingon - Clinging to guns and Bible - Putting Country First - Preparing for the Worst!!!)
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