The Cottage Smallholder


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Rosehip and Apple Jelly Recipe

Rosehips in our garden

Rosehips in our garden

Rosehips are ripening and perfect for picking now. Some people wait until after the first frost, when the rosehips will be soft. We start picking from the first week in September. They need to cook for longer but we know that they’re really fresh. They’re high in vitamin C and a great asset for the self sufficient smallholder. As a child, I remember my Mother giving us rosehip syrup (a dessert spoon daily). It was rather good. Nowadays, we make apple and rosehip jelly.

The rosehip flavour combines well with the apple. This is a delicate jelly with a fuller taste than plain apple jelly; good with toast for breakfast and excellent served with chicken, pork or a mild cheese.

Incidentally, I recently heard that rosehip concoctions are good for sore throats. Perhaps we should all toy with a spoonful when we’re next in bed with a bug.

Rosehip and Apple Jelly recipe

 

Ingredients:

 

  • 2 lb/900g rosehips
  • 4 lb/1800g of sweet eating apples. We use windfalls as they won’t keep
  • Zest of half a lemon (add to the apples)
  • Juice of half a lemon (strained). Half a medium lemon equates to one tablespoon of juice.
  • Sugar – 1pt/600ml of strained juice to 1lb/454g of white granulated sugar
  • This recipe makes 14 half pound jars. So adjust accordingly.
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Method:
As the rosehips can take longer than the apple to soften I always cook them separately. In this way both are cooked for their individual optimum time. I cook the rosehips on one evening, straining it overnight, and then cook the apples on the next evening. The juice will keep well in the fridge for a couple of days, in covered containers. Split over three evenings, the jelly is not a palaver and can be easily fitted into a busy routine.

 

  1. Remove stalks from the rosehips and place in a large pan. Don’t use an iron or aluminium pan as this will strip away the vitamin C. A large glass or enamelled saucepan is ideal. I use a large non stick, stainless steel stock pot or Maslin pan. Barely cover the hips with water and bring to the boil and simmer gently until the hips are soft. This can take quite a while if the hips are still firm (when I was making this jelly, the hips took a good hour and a half to soften). Keep an eye on them, stirring from time to time. Top up with water if necessary. (I mashed them gently with a plastic potato masher to hurry them along). If you are using my three evening method, strain the rosehips through sterilised muslin (see points 3 and 4 below)
  2. Wash the apples, cut out bad bits and chop roughly. There is no need to peel or core the apples. Add water to cover of the fruit – they should just be floating. Add the lemon zest. Bring slowly to the boil and simmer very gently until all the fruit is soft and squishy. (This can take anything from 20 minutes to an hour, depending on how ripe the fruit is.)
  3. Pour the cooked fruit through sterilised muslin into a large clean bucket or bowl (how do I sterilise muslin/the jelly bag? See tips and tricks below). The muslin is often referred to as a “jelly bag”. We use tall buckets to catch the drips from the jelly bags. Rather than hang the bags (conventional method-between the legs of an upturned stool) I find it easier to line a large plastic sieve with the muslin. This clips neatly onto the top of a clean bucket. The sieve is covered with a clean tea cloth to protect against flies.
  4. Leave the jelly bag to drip overnight (or about 12 hours).
  5. Measure the juice the next day.
  6. Pour the juice into a deep heavy bottomed saucepan and add 1lb/454g of white granulated sugar for each 1pt/570ml of juice.
  7. Add the lemon juice.
  8. Heat the juice and sugar gently stirring from time to time, so as to make sure that that all the sugar has dissolved before bringing the liquid slowly to the boil.
  9. As there are apples (high in pectin) in this recipe only continue to boil for about 10 minutes before testing for a set. This is called a rolling boil. Test every 3 to 5 minutes until setting point is reached. (What is testing for a set? See tips and tricks below).
  10. Tossing in a nugget of butter towards the end will reduce the frothing that can occur.
  11. When jelly has reached setting point pour into warm sterilised jars using a funnel and ladle. (How do I sterilise jars? See tips and tricks below).
  12. Cover immediately with plastic lined screw top lids or waxed disks and cellophane tops secured with a rubber band.
  13. If you don’t think that the jelly has set properly, you can reboil jelly the next day. The boiling reduces the water in the jelly. I have done this in the past. Ideally you should try for the right set the first time.
  14. Label when cold and store in a cool, dark place. Away from damp.
  15.  

Tips and tricks:

  • What is a jelly bag?
    A jelly bag is traditionally a piece of muslin but it can be cheesecloth, an old thin tea cloth or even a pillowcase. The piece needs to be about 18 inches square. When your fruit is cooked and ready to be put in the jelly bag, lay your cloth over a large bowl. Pour the fruit into the centre of the cloth and tie the four corners together so that they can be slung on a stick to drip over the bowl. Traditionally a stool is turned upside down, the stick is rested on the wood between the legs and the jelly bag hangs over the bowl. We experimented and now line a sieve with muslin, place it over a bucket and cover the lot with clean tea cloths (against the flies).
  • How do I sterilise muslin/the jelly bag?
    Iron the clean jelly bag with a hot iron. This method will also sterilise tea cloths.
  • Jelly “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 jelly, 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). 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 jelly, testing it every few minutes until you have the right set. The jelly is far more delicious if it is slightly runny. It does get firmer after a few months.
  • How do I sterilise the jars and lids?
    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 use 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 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.
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  Leave a reply

139 Comments

  1. Fiona Nevile

    Hi Kate

    Thanks for dropping by. I love foraging and so few people do it around here!

  2. Kate Jam Queen

    Love the recipe – thanks very much. Mine was very syrupy after the first cook so I boiled again very rapidly and it has set wonderfully!

    Great use for a hedgerow fruit that not many people pick and I get to forgae too – what could be better?!

  3. Will try a stainless steel one I think. Thanks for recipe advice. What a great site-good luck with your venture

  4. Fiona Nevile

    Hi Heather

    No the copper will leech the vitamin C.

    We have a great recipe for crab apple jelly here https://www.cottagesmallholder.com/hot-crab-apple-and-chilli-jelly-recipe-2-470

  5. Can I use a copper pan for making rosehip jelly? Any recipes for crab apple jelly please. I have a new tree with 23 crab apples on!!!

  6. This is such a good site!

    But I remember always being given hot rosehip syrup (in water), when my parents made tea in the morning, for donkey’s years as a child. I absolutely loved it. Although some people still have hot ribena now, that seems to have died out. But it’s gorgeous!

    But re the aluminium pan thing, I don’t the issue is anything to do with the vitamin C leaching out, the issue in respect of aluminium leaching in is much more significant. I hate to say this, but one really shouldn’t still be using aluminium pans at all, and certainly not with anything remotely acidic. If you want to see the issue demonstrated, try cooking a bit of rhubarb in an aluminium pan. But don’t dream of eating it, because that bright shiny metal left is from the acid having stripped it into the juice. Really not good!

    But thank you hugely Indigo, above, for the reference to the site telling one about what to do with haws. though. And associated as well. I have long been curious as to what one can do with them. I will have to try now!

  7. thefrenchgeraghtys

    Silly, yet again. Jelly? Gelatine?!! I wonder if you could just add the gelatine if you didn’t want to alter the taste? Then my question would be: how much gelatine to one pint of juice?

  8. thefrenchgeraghtys

    Oh, silly me. I always read too quickly. First, combined juices so, yes you did use apples, and secondly, your wise one gave you the tip. There you are! Proves my point!! Blokes just don’t have good ideas!! Seriously though, I am off to read the packet of one jelly I have had in the cupboard for years to see what it was that did the trick.

  9. thefrenchgeraghtys

    Well done, Steve!! What as brilliant idea. I am very impressed because blokes don’t often have good ideas!!!!!!!!!! Sorry!! Love the ramble – wonderful picture in head!!

    Did you use just rosehips or did you combine with apples? I have reboiled mine three times now and added more water – it’s still more than jelly but hey, who cares? It tastes lovely!! If you used apples, I think you get too much water from them because you don’t have to cook them anywhere near as long as the rosehips. It would make sense to me that that is the problem. If I am wrong, I am sure I will be corrected!

    The weird thing was that each time I added more water to the reboil, I assumed I would end up with more jelly. No, it was either the same or even a little less. Bizarre.

  10. steve h

    Well I attempted to make this jelly today,that is after yesterdays absolute disaster whilst collecting the rose hips! – everybody must be making something with them this year, as all the bushes are stripped to tippy-toe height! I did however find quite a thick and bushy bush that was still quite laden at the top, so stood on the top strand of a barbed wire fence to pick them, only to “get a wobble – on” and fall right into the middle of it ;-( I emerged cut, shredded,and with my jumper in tatters, only to find that my other half had just managed to get some given off her friend who had loads to spare! Bah!. Any way I digress, some how ended up with 4pints of combined juices, and although i added the correct ratio of sugar,and boiled for ages, this brew just wouldn`t set!! My wise one suggested adding a Strawberry jelly, as i had nothing to lose I did, and Hey Presto! it worked! it set to a lovely soft but firm jelly, with just a hint of strawberry taste.
    Just thought this tip was worth passing on, sorry for the ramble beforehand.

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