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Greengage jam recipe

 

Photo: Greengage

Photo: Greengage

Photograph courtesy of ilco

“Do you think that my greengage jam has set enough?”
The chicken lady passed me a teaspoon filled with greengage loveliness. It was excellent, not too runny. And the taste was superb.
“I used less sugar than the recipe as we don’t like jam to be too sweet.”
“I heard once that if you include some kernels it helps it to set.”
“Funny that you should say that. My grandmother always included almonds in her greengage jam.”
“Perhaps they were kernels?”

TCL had given me a haul of greengages and I couldn’t wait to get home and make jam. Greengages are my favourite fruit and they are so difficult to get hold of around here.

Pam Corbin in her book Preserves: River Cottage Handbook No.2 notes that the pectin in greengages is medium, whereas the pectin in damsons and unripe plums is high. Like TCL I like my jam to be quite tart. This means that it can be used for cooking as well as spreading on toast. So I added the juice of a small lemon (which is high in pectin) to the fruit and got a good ‘set’. If you like your jam to be very sweet just add more sugar incrementally, tasting after it had dissolved, before bringing the fruit to the boil.

Choose firm greengages and eat the soft ones as they do not make nearly such good jam.

Greengage jam recipe

Ingredients:

900g/2 lbs of greengages
675g/1.5 lbs of white granulated sugar
Half a pint/275ml of water
The juice of a small lemon

Method:
1. Wash the fruit and discard any damaged ones.
2. Put the fruit, lemon juice and water into a large heavy bottomed saucepan (or preserving pan) and simmer gently until the skins split and they are soft.
3. Meanwhile, warm the sugar in a low oven for ten minutes and add to the fruit.
4. Stir gently over a low heat until you are sure that all the sugar crystals have dissolved.
5. Turn up the heat to a medium high setting and, stirring frequently, let the fruit boil rapidly for 10 minutes (this is called a rolling boil).
6. Remove the stones with a slotted spoon during the boiling process.
7. Test for set (What is set/setting point? See tricks and tips below).
8. If the jam has not set, continue to boil rapidly and test at five minute intervals.
9. When the jam has set carefully pour into warm, sterilised jars, using a ladle or small jug. (How to sterilise jars? See tricks and tips below)
10. Cover the jars with tight fitting screw-top lids, or waxed disks and cellophane pot covers (waxed disks, wax facing downwards and plastic covers secured with plastic bands).
11. Label when cold and store in a cool, dark place, away from damp.
Tips and tricks:
Jam “set” or “setting point”:

Getting the right set can be tricky. I have tried using a jam thermometer but find it easier to use the following method. Before you start to make the jam, put a couple of plates in the fridge so that the warm jam can be drizzled onto a cold plate (when we make jam we often forget to return the plate to the fridge between tests, using two plates means that you have a spare cold plate). Take your jam pan off the heat and return the plate to the fridge to cool for approx two minutes. It has set when you run your finger through it and leave a crinkly track mark. If after two minutes the cooled jam is too liquid, continue to boil the jam, testing it every few minutes until you have the right set. The jam is far more delicious if it is slightly runny.
Sterilising the jars:
We collect jars all year round for our jelly, chutney and jam making sessions. I try to soak off labels and store the clean jars and metal plastic coated screw-top lids in an accessible place. The sterilising method that we used is simple. Just before making the jam, I quickly wash and rinse the jars and place them upside down in a cold oven. Set the temperature to 160c/140c for fan assisted. When the oven has reached the right temperature I turn off the heat. The jars will stay warm for quite a while. I only use plastic lined lids for preserves as the all-metal lids can go rusty. I boil these for five minutes in water to sterilise them. If I use Le Parfait jars, I do the same with the rubber rings.

NB Damson Jam: This recipe works well with damsons.


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26 Comments

  1. seahorse

    Brilliant, thanks 🙂

    I’ll try not thawing the victorias fully. Once bitten twice shy.

  2. Magic Cochin

    Hi Seahorse – yes they do that! Don’t know the science but in my experience as soon as they thaw and get exposed t the air they go brown and yucky.

    I added frozen (just soft enough to cut but still icy) greengages to this year’s fresh one and made jam – they were fine and jam a great success. You can use them like this in pies/crumbles with a little sugar sprinkled over – just don’t fully thaw first!

    Hope that helps

    Celia

  3. seahorse

    Hi,
    I just had a disaster with some greengage plums which I froze whole in the freezer. On thawing they were sludgy brown in colour and smelt like tea! Was there an off one in there? Can one spoil the lot? Non-plussed! And funnily, the plums I stewed first (no sugar) and froze at the same time kept their colour. Anyone had this happen?

  4. Magic Cochin

    Hi Fiona – don’t go buying one, give me a call in the autumn and we’ll find a sucker from either our trees or my Mum’s. Bare rooted ones are better that pot bound ones from a nursery 😉

    Celia

  5. Magic Cochin

    Just made 11 jars of Cambridge Gage* jam. Added some kernals too – they have lovely almond flavour.

    Like apricot jam but so so so much better;-)

    Celia

    * the best greengages in the world!

    • Fiona Nevile

      Hello Magic Cochin

      I’m going to track down a Cambridge Gage tree for the garden! Thanks for the tip, I hadn’t heard of this variety.

  6. Michelle in NZ

    Both my Grandmothers used to include a few kernals in their apricot jam to help with setting. Loving the idea of greengage jam, and of greengages.

  7. Peggy B

    Hi, my first visit to this site, whilst seeking a recipe for blackberry cordial. I have a small orchard and 2010 is definitely a plum year! I’ve stewed them, made jam, eaten far too much crumble and swapped pounds and pounds for tomatoes and courgettes. And still they keep coming! Anyway, that aside, I was a tad worried about the instructions in the jam recipe – the wax side of the disc should be downwards ie the heat of the preserve melts the tiny amount of wax and forms a seal. (I’m a WI preserves judge and spend my summers sitting in a tent eating jam and pickled onions – how sad is that?)

  8. After reading this, “2lb of greengages please” I said to the market stall keeper, so I guess I’ll search out some more jars this eve…. Yum!

  9. My (Yorkshire) grandfather’s view was that when the jam goes ‘glug glug’, it’s ready! Not sure how scientific this is as a method, but my Mum said it always worked. Love greengage jam, my absolute favourite.

  10. Magic Cochin

    Heavenly nectar!!!

    Yum! Swoon!

    C

    Can you tell? – I LOVE greengages!

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