Sunday, March 30, 2008

Old Dani's Chinese Plum Sauce


Isn't plum the most beautiful colour? You could wear it. Actually I did at a few points during the process, as did the kitchen walls; it was a little sad wiping them down.

A big bowl of plums has been resting on the bench, waiting for this recipe. Yesterday we finally squeezed it into a space and there are 3 big jars of red sitting where the plums were. It's delicious, thanks Dani :)

The school asked us to bring a box of collage material next week, so while it simmered away I sorted through a tea chest of fabric scraps... and time slipped away until the faint smell of burning filtered through my fabric daydreams. Oops. A bit burnt on the bottom, but the burn hadn't tainted it so it was rescu-able.


~Chinese Plum Sauce~
8 cups plums, pitted, halved
1 cup onions, chopped
1 cup water
1 teaspoon ginger, minced
1 clove garlic, minced
3/4 cup sugar
1/2 cup rice vinegar or cider vinegar
1 teaspoon coriander, ground
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/4 teaspoon cloves

*In large saucepan, bring plums, onions, water, ginger and garlic to boil over medium heat; cover, reduce heat to low and simmer, stirring occasionally, until plums and onions are very tender, about 30 minutes.
*Press through sieve and return to pan; stir in sugar, vinegar, coriander, salt, cinnamon, pepper and cloves.Bring to boil, stirring; reduce heat to low and simmer until mixture reaches consistency of applesauce, about 45 minutes.
*Fill and seal jars.Makes about 4 cups

I doubled the garlic and ginger :)


For more food inspiration go visit Dani at http://www.thekitchenplayground.com/

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Sweet Chilli Sauce



This recipe is from a Charmaine Solomon's Gourmet Barbeque book; I add more sultanas. It's sweet and hot enough to zing but not hot enough to burnyour tastebuds off. I've been making it for a long time and I love it; we made another batch this week. I like it with lime over chicken and prawns. And snags and chops. And mixed with sour cream on anything.


~Sweet Chilli Sauce~
250g fresh red chillies
750g sugar
750ml white vinegar
400g sultanas
3 garlic cloves, crushed with salt (below)
1 tab salt
1 tab finely grated fresh ginger

*Split the chillies lengthwise and discard seeds and membrane (unless you like it hot).
*Chop the chillies roughly, then place in a food processer or blender with enough vinegar to cover. Blend till fine.
*Place all ingredients in a large saucepan and bring to the boil. Simmer gently until the sultanas are very soft and the sauce has thickened.
*Cool then puree with FP or a hand blender (or rub through a seive if you like smooth sauce).
*Pour into sterilised jars and seal.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Fig & Ginger Jam

Grandma's southern garden grew ancient fig trees; imagination wrapped in the gnarled branches. They were fascinating plants to my northern eyes; trees didn't drop their leaves in our winter and very little in my childhood world resembled European fairytales.

She made fig jam each year. Our occasional visits south were punctuated by fig jam experiences; luscious chunks of fig in syrup with thick cream on fresh bread.

Figs do grow in the North, albeit for only few years before they die, as I found when we lived in the Top End. Each year the roadside F&V stalls outside Darwin would sell figs for a few brief weeks, so one year on the way home from "town" I bought a bag and rang Grandma for her recipe. This is what she told me :

"Use 3/4 pound of sugar to each pound of prepared figs. About 6 pounds of fruit takes half a cup of vinegar, and you can add 2 tablespoons of sherry or brandy if you like. Boil the fruit in a bit of water, then add the sugar when it starts to thicken - about an hour. Take off the stove and add the vinegar and sherry, then boil until it's thick enough - test in a saucer. Bottle it while it's hot."

We live further south now, where fig trees are plenty. Ours is only two feet high, but we are blessed with neighbours who are over-figged, so they've given us a few bags this season already.

Last night we had Dani's Fig, Feta & Bacon Salad http://kitchenplayground.wordpress.com/2008/03/11/while-the-cat-is-away/ and it was good :)

And we've made a version of Grandma's jam :


~Fig & Ginger Jam~
2lb prepared figs - trimmed and quartered
1 1/2 lb sugar
1/6 cup apple cider vinegar
1 tab sweet cream sherry
2 tsp grated fresh ginger
2 tab glace ginger, finely chopped

Cover the figs and gingers with as much water as you like - I prefer a runny fig jam with plenty of syrup to soak into the bread, but if you like thick jam you can cut into cubes (like the store-bought stuff), then use less water and add some Jamsetter with the sugar.

Bring to the boil, then add the sugar (and Jamsetter if you are using) and simmer until the syrup starts to thicken. Add the vinegar and sherry, then simmer until it jells - use a saucer in the freezer to test.

Let it cool a few minutes before bottling in sterilised jars.

The amounts above made 3 medium sized jars.

eta March 2009
Since this seems to be a popular page in search engines, I need to add that my mum advises to add lemon juice to help set the jam. And I've found it doesn't keep indefinitely in the pantry; needs refridgerating after a few months.