Preserves: A beginner’s guide to making jams and jellies, chutneys and pickles, sauces and ketchups, syrups and alcoholic sips
Реклама. ООО «ЛитРес», ИНН: 7719571260.
Оглавление
Jill Nice. Preserves: A beginner’s guide to making jams and jellies, chutneys and pickles, sauces and ketchups, syrups and alcoholic sips
Preserves
Jill Nice
Dedication
Contents
THE DIFFERENT TYPES OF PRESERVES
THE KEY INGREDIENTS USED IN PRESERVING
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Copyright
About the Publisher
Отрывок из книги
A Beginner’s Guide to Making Jams & Jellies, Chutneys & Pickles, Sauces & Ketchups, Syrups & Alcoholic Sips
Steve, Vivien, Nick, Jessie, Ols and the B.B.
.....
An important and endlessly useful spice, ginger is completely universal, being used in everything from flavouring cakes to spicing fish. Coming originally from south China, ginger is the root of Zingiber officinale. The fresh root, also known as green ginger, when grated or pounded has a much better flavour than dried root and powdered ginger. Dried ginger goes into all pickling spices and is widely available. Powdered and dried ginger comes from Jamaica and West Africa and neither of them keep their unique taste well. Ginger is used an enormous amount in making preserves and you should always remember that you will only get the best out of your spices if they are fresh. To keep green ginger fresh, put it into a small, clean, dry jar and cover with dry sherry. If the jar is well sealed, this should keep for a long time – the first sign of it deteriorating will be a slight mould.
The delicate, golden filigree blades of mace are the dried aril or net surrounding the nutmeg, which in turn is the stone of the peach-like fruit Myristica fragrans. Blade and ground mace are both expensive, but they provide a distinctive taste which is necessary to many pickles.
.....