Hello, dear ones! We’ve been all over New England, visiting friends in
New Hampshire, Maine, and Rhode Island. Oh, vacation! I love it. Motor boats, sailboats, and ferries.
Lakes, oceans, and salt ponds. Lobster, lobster, and ice cream. Heaven on earth. Lobster.
And also, to cherries, so good and so cheap that I had to make
jam even before we’d finished unpacking. I’ve never made cherry jam before,
even though it’s one of my favorites, because I can’t get sour cherries, and I’ve
never really seen the point of Bing cherry jam. But I was wrong.
Because this
jam? It is black and sweet, tart and bitter, fruity and almondy and gorgeous. I
recommend bothering with the pit kernels, because that’s what will give the jam
its incomparable almond flavor, and because it’s fun to crack the pits with a
hammer—but if you really have too much laundry, then try adding a half teaspoon
of almond extract. And if canning the jam just gives you a total heart attack,
make freezer jam instead. Peach here, any-berry here. Those are especially good, because the fruit tastes better if you cook and sweeten it less than you need to for canning. But cherries and grapes lend themselves to long cooking and lots of sugar, I think.
Ours came out a tiny bit runny, which is perfect because we mostly eat it on waffles and pancakes and ice cream. |
Black Cherry Jam
Makes 5-6 half-pint jars
Takes forever
Adapted from the beautiful, canningly pornographic The Blue Chair Jam Cookbook. This recipe
is crazy involved, but the kids wandered in to help, and we really enjoyed
ourselves. I can’t say I fully understand the whole rigmarole with the cooking
of some cherries separately and straining out their syrup, but since I’d never
made cherry jam before, and since I wasn’t in a hurry and the only extra
washing-up it added was a sieve, I did it. I used the spent cherries to make
dark and wonderful popsicles, which I recommend.
3 pounds plus 1 pound pitted cherries, pits reserved
1 ¾ pounds (3 ½ cups) plus 7 ounces (1 cup) white sugar
¼ cup water
5 ¾ ounces (2/3 cup) freshly squeezed lemon juice (Optional:
stir 2 tablespoons maraschino liqueur into the lemon juice.)
Figure out how you’re going to deal with your jars and lids
and set up a clean canning station with a clean dishtowel, a paper towel for
wiping jar rims, a clean funnel, and a clean ladle or measuring cup for
transferring jam to jars. I sterilize my jars either in the dish washer (leave
them in there and pull them out, still hot, when the jam is ready to can) or in
a large pot of boiling water for half an hour. However, Rachel Saunders has
this really cool method of sterilizing her jars in a hot oven: Place the
perfectly clean jars and clean, unused lids on a baking sheet in a preheated
250 oven and leave them for 30 minutes. Remove them when you need them. (If
they’re too hot—which you’ll know because the jam will bubble or boil in the
jar, let the cool for a few moments before filling.) After you have filled
them, leaving a quarter inch of head room wipe the rims with a clean, damp
cloth, put the lids on and screw on the rims until just tight, then replace the
jars in the oven for 15 minutes to ensure that they’re sterilized. Put them on
a cooling rack; don’t jiggle them around; they’ll seal as they cool. If they
don’t seal, freeze the jam or store it in the fridge and eat it. Now, that
explained, I have never tried this method. I use boiling-hot jars which I pull
out one at a time for the pot of boiling water and dry briefly with a super
clean dish towel. I fill a jar with the funnel and wipe its rim with the damp
paper towel, then I put on the lid (which I put in the boiling water for just a
minute, and which I fish out with a magnet stuck to the bottom of a ladle) and
screw on the rim. IS THIS TOO SCARY? First of all, it’s not. But second of all,
feel free to scoop the jam into clean jars, leaving plenty of headroom, and
then freeze it. {note: You will still need to follow some other instructions, as I do not take this to be a thorough explanation of the canning process, and I don't want you to somehow manage to be the only person on earth to ever get botulism from jam. Also, just because my English mother doesn't process her canned jam doesn't mean you don't have to.}
Now make the actual jam. Put a handful of cherry pits inside
a clean dish towel on the floor. Use a dish towel you’re happy to stain! Now
tap them gently with a hammer, through the cloth, until you hear them crack.
This is oddly satisfying. Open up the dish towel and remove the plump almond-like
kernel from inside each pit and reserve; discard any shriveled ones and shake
out the shell fragments. Do this in batches until you have 1 ½ tablespoons of
kernels, then tie them up in a small piece of cheesecloth or put them in a
fine-mesh stainless-steel tea strainer and set aside. (Note: in lieu of all
this pit-cracking hoo-ha, you could stir a half a teaspoon of almond extract
into the finished jam after you take it off the heat.)
Put a saucer with five metal teaspoons on flat place inside
your freezer for testing the jam later.
Combine 3 pounds of the cherries with the larger amount of
sugar in a large heatproof mixing bowl.
Put the remaining cherries and sugar, along with the water,
in a very large heavy-bottomed non-reactive pot. It will boil up, so the pot
really does need to be larger than you might think. Cook over low heat,
stirring constantly with a heatproof rubber spatula (or a wooden spoon!) and
inching the heat gradually up to medium, until the mixture boils, then cook 7
minutes more until the liquid has become thick and syrupy and the cherries look
greatly the worse for wear. Immediately pour the cherries through a metal
strainer so that the syrup drains into the bowl with the raw cherries. Press
down on the cooked fruit to extract all of the juice. “Discard the cooked
cherries” if you are clinically insane! Otherwise, blend them with 1 cup of limeade, then freeze to
make popsicles.
Add half the lemon juice to the cherry mixture, stir well,
then scrape it all back into your pot, and add the pit-kernel bag.
Bring the mixture to a boil over medium heat, gradually
increasing the heat to high. Boil rapidly, stirring every minute or two, for “10
to 15 minutes.” How will you know which? I didn’t, so I went for 12 ½ minutes,
sensible girl that I am. Monitor the heat closely as you stir, and turn it down
a little if the jam feels like it’s sticking. Between stirrings, use a
stainless-steel spoon to skim the foam carefully off the top of the mixture.
Again, maybe I don’t get out enough, but I find this oddly satisfying. Also, I
always eat all the foam.
After 10-15 minutes, turn the heat off and let the mixture
rest for a minute without stirring. Scrape all the rest of the foam off of it,
then stir in the rest of the lemon juice.
Return the jam to medium-high heat and continue to cook,
stirring frequently. Lower the heat as needed to prevent scorching. After 5
more minutes, you should start to test the jam for doneness. To do this, turn
the heat off and fill one of your frozen teaspoons half full of jam liquid.
Return it to the freezer for 3 minutes, then test it: tilt the spoon vertically
to see whether the jam runs; if it is reluctant to run, then it is done. If it
runs very quickly, cook it for another few minutes, stirring, then test again.
Repeat until it’s done (mine took another 5 minutes), then turn off the heat and remove the pit-kernel bag.
Pour the jam into sterilized jars and process as above
and according to the manufacturer’s directions.
We still have black fingernails from the cherry juice. |
Pit Boss Birdy. Smashing pits is so much fun! Better even than punching an inflated clown. |
The pit kernels in a bag. Please don't mention in the comments about how they have cyanide in them and we're all going to die. |
Lemon juice. |
Boiling jam, pre scum-skimming. |
Our very huge canning pot. |
Spoons in the freezer. |
That looks amazing! Wish I could get sour cherries. I do have a giant bag of three different freestone peach varieties and a bag of prune plums for your plum cake.
ReplyDeleteWOW that seems rather difficult...Any chance we could talk you into a givaway? :-)
ReplyDeleteI'm not a professional, but from what I've read canning in the oven isn't considered safe :(
ReplyDeleteI kid you not, we bought 10 lbs of black cherries at the orchard last week. We have about 1/3 of them left, and they are starting to get soft. I was just going to use my good friend google to see what recipes I could find, but before I did, I checked google reader, and VIOLA - Catherine Newman saved me again. I'd like to say that it is uncanny how you always know when I have too many cherries, or pickling cukes, or rhubarb, but I guess that's just the coincidence of eating what is in season. Thanks for the recipe!
ReplyDeleteI like the new font! Very readable!
ReplyDeleteBirdy could be a lip model!!
ReplyDeleteTotally!
DeleteAfter reading your thoroughly enjoyable description of canning cherry jam, I have decided that I will absolutely never take this on myself. But I like that you did! I am more the instant-gratification type. And also the scared-of-botulism type. Your jam looks so tempting, and I love the idea of sticking it to the man by making my own, but I know it's not going to happen.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you enjoyed your vacation. And your lobster.
Wow. I enjoy canning and do it fairly regularly, but this is a bit too involved for the lazy canner that I am!
ReplyDeleteThat being said, I'm sure I'll attempt it anyway!
I'm newly in love with black cherry jam having made some last week. Mine was a bit runny as well despite using liquid pectin. I cooked the pitted cherries with sugar and used an immersion blender. Wish I had used some of the pits for flavor! Also made some strawberry cherry and brandied cherries. Thanks for the idea on the pits --next time!
ReplyDeleteLooks fabulous and today it looks like too much work. But you never know - sometimes I surprise myself with an urge to do an insane amount of work in the kitchen for something that only I will eat.
ReplyDeleteWhat I really wanted to tell you is that cherry jam is fabulous with cheese and crackers (at least with Ritz and cheddar, in my experience).
Me too, except with blueberries. We just returned from a trip to Michigan where my husband picked 46 pounds of them. Because he thinks it's fun. So I did laundry and made 33 half pint jars of blueberry jam. We're very blessed in that we have a generous neighbor with a sour cherry tree so we'll see if the cherry & blueberry jams will last through the winter.
ReplyDeleteI am even fancier with my labels - I write with a Sharpie right on the lid. This helps me for so many reasons: 1) I never have to find tape; 2) I can always tell that I have used a jar lid and don't try to process it a second time; and 3) I don't have to scrub labels off jars.
ReplyDeleteWe have an ornamental cherry (I think cherry they are very small and round) full of fruit. I want to make jelly but am concerned about poisoning my family. Any thoughts on ornamental trees and the fruit??? The tree is a beautiful pink in the spring.
ReplyDelete