18 Feb 2008 04:38:22 | Kit Heathcock
Latest news from the strawberry jam front - the tide of
strawberries is advancing, threatening to engulf me in a wave of
strawberries waiting to be processed, taking up whole shelves of
the fridge, lurking in corners just when I thought I'd done the
last batch. Heaving a sigh of relief as the last pot is filled
and sealed, I turn around only to find the kitchen table
groaning under a fresh sea of newly picked strawberries waiting
to be sorted.
There is no more room on the larder shelves for jam - what I've
got there already will probably last us a decade at the current
rate of consumption, I've used up all the jam jars and am down
to oddly shaped mustard jars, coffee jars and outsized sauce
jars and there are still a good few weeks of strawberry season
to go.
I have to start selling the jam..............memories of a film,
where ex-city career woman, moves to country with baby in tow,
starts making apple puree baby food and ends up with a full
scale business employing half the village, flit through my head.
Country baby was her label, with a cute picture of baby,
designed to appeal to other city people looking for the good
life. Mind you she was a PR person, so had a head start on
promoting things and I'm not a business person at all, just
someone with too much jam on their hands, larder shelves and
everywhere else in the house.
So, I take a stall at the local market and arrive with a basket
of jam, a few jars of marmalade for variety, a table and chair.
I discover a few things - people smile when they see strawberry
jam, people like strawberries, there is a high feel-good factor
about them, they conjure up summer and celebration and treats.
It's not a hard product to sell, people are predisposed in its
favour; the price just has to be not too scary. Some people are
more attracted by the pretty fabric covers on the lids and
choose one to match their kitchen décor...I'll have to work on
the pretty aspect. No I'm not about to become a strawberry jam
millionaire, but I did sell ten jars.
After thinking I'd got the jam consistency sorted, producing
reliably runny but not too runny jam, I suddenly turned out
several batches that set completely - thick solid
stand-up-your-spoon-in jam. Now I know it's all about pectin and
how much there is in the fruit, but why now? I did leave it
soaking in the sugar longer because I didn't get round to
cooking it till the afternoon, but does that do anything to
pectin levels?
Anyway, I now have two varieties of strawberry jam - thick and
runny, both have a good flavour - and both sorts have their
aficionados. But now the dilemma is, am I able to reproduce the
thick jam to order or will it only happen by accident? We're a
long way from scientific laboratory controlled conditions
here.... a wing and a prayer is more like it. So prayer it'll
have to be, if my market customers return demanding thick
strawberry jam!
Copyright 2005 Kit Heathcock
About Author :
Sometime flower photographer, keen observer of the resonances of
life and fulltime mother. Born in the UK but now living on a
farm in the southern hemisphere. Contributor to the creation and
maintenance of A
Flower Gallery one of the homes of chakra flower art.