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Episode: 2366
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Title: HPR2366: Making Bramble Jelly
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2366/hpr2366.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 01:45:51
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---
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This is an HBR episode 2,366 entitled Making Bramble Jelly and in part of the series Cooking
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It is hosted by Tony Huma, Tony H1, 212 and in about 11 minutes long and Karina Clean Flag
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The summer is, this is a show on Making Bramble Jelly
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15
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That's HBR15
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Hello, how could public radio listeners? This is Tony Hughes in Blackpool in the UK.
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Good to be back for another show. It's that time of the year when I turn my hand to foraging
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and making jelly from local wild blackberries or brambles what we want to call them.
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The season started early this year here in the UK so I've already produced over 60
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jars of bramble jelly this year with more to come. Thankfully I have people who donate old
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jam jars for reuse during the year which I store for this very time.
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Not had any problems with jars for storage of the jelly once it's been made yet.
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First off on an issue of hygiene before filling all the jars
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they've been delabeled and on the day of production they're given another wash in hot soapy
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water, rinsed to clean off the soap and placed in the oven and cooked for at least 15 minutes at
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250 degrees centigrade which is about 300 Fahrenheit to give them a sterilization.
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I also put all the lids into a pan with water and bring these to the boil and then keep them
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at a high temperature until just before use for exactly the same reason. So all the lids and the
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jars are sterilized at least once generally a couple of times. So in making the jelly the first
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thing you do is once I've got the collected fruit it gets a wash to remove any bits of debris and
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any wildlife that might be hiding in it. Some people say washing a little bit of the
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saline solution but I just use fresh water. That seems to be the trick.
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Put way the fruit and just to give me an idea how much fruit I've got and put it in the pan
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with just about 50 mils of water for each kilo of fruit. Give it a mash with a vegetable mash
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and add a lemon for each kilo of and a half of fruit. This is for the acidity and the
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pectin that you get out the pith. So I cut the lemons in half, throw them in the pan and bring
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all the fruit to the boil to break it down. You can add and I sometimes find wild plums so you can
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add other fruit. Plums are particularly rich in pectin so sometimes you've got a source of wild
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plums. I had about 10% of the mix of plums so that that can also give a pectin rich juice.
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But generally if I haven't got access to plums it's lemons. Once the fruit's boiled down and
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leave it to cool a bit. Remove the lemon skins and make sure you scrape out all the
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pith from the inside of the skin to get all that nice pectin and then put that in the pot.
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Now once you've done this the fruit needs to be strained it might you might want to bring it back
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just warm it up a bit because that thing's it out a little bit to help you strain it but you can
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do it from cold. You can use a, now professionals would use a jelly bag. I tend to just use a very fine
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strainer and I'm not worried about it not being dead clear and see through it so I actually use
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something to push the juice through the strainer to get the juice out. But if you're going to do it
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properly and you want a nice clear jelly and you get a jelly bag I'm sure you can go on the
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internet and find the sources of jelly bags and you pile all the mixture into a jelly bag over a big
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pan and leave it for as long as 12, 18 hours for all the juice to come out. And then once you've
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got this the juice you can reduce the juice by about just to concentrate it a little bit.
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You then measure the remaining juice to calculate and what sugar you're going to need to make the jelly.
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I use the equivalent of 1 kilo of sugar to about each liter of juice or if you're in US
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be 1 pound of sugar for a US pint of juice. Basically the weight of the liquid is about the same
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weight as the sugar that you're putting in. Now find a pan big enough that when you put the juice
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and once the sugar's added the liquid will only come up to about half way
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because once the juice starts boiling it expands and you don't want it boiling over on your stove.
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Bring the juice back up to the boil and at this stage add the sugar stirring until
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the sugar's dissolved. This cools down the liquid again so you've got to once you've got all
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the sugar in and dissolved you're going to have to continue to heat it and bring it back up to
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the boil. At this stage you need to keep the juice boiling until it's come up to jam temperature
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which is around about 105 degrees C or 220 Fahrenheit. If you have if you have one you can use a
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jam for the monitor but I don't so I use a mixture of visual clues and that is when the boiling
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you get a rolling boil with lots and lots of small bubbles on the surface and I also keep
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a plate in the freezer to test the jelly as it cooks. Once you've got it up to jam temperature
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cook it for about 10 to 15 minutes and then do your first test to see if you've got a setting point
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and like I say you put a small blob of the jelly onto a cold plate that you've had in the freezer.
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Leave it for about a minute and then run one of your fingers through it to create a little gap
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in between the juice as you go and if it wrinkles up at the end and the juice that's on either side
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of where you've created the gap doesn't to roll in to kind of fill the gap up. You pretty well where
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you've got a you've got a you've got up to setting point. If it doesn't if the juice starts to
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come in to close that gap and it doesn't quite wrinkle up nice and go quite high at the end then
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carry on boiling for another five minutes and repeat it until you've got a setting point so
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each stage after the five minutes test it again if it's ready then you can switch it off if not
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another five minutes. So once you've got up to a setting point remove the pan from the heat
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and allow it to cool for about 10 minutes. During this time you can get your lids ready. I
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drain the lids from the hot water and I lay them out on a clean towel with the inside of the lid
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upwards so that it's not being contaminated by anything that's on the on the towel and if you
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using preserving I use lids jars and lids that are from store bought jams and chutneys and things
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and these tend to have the little pop up seal in them but if you're using preserving jars
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just follow the instructions on how to sterilise them and what to do when you when you put in them on
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and sealing in the jelly. As it's jelly you don't need a fancy jam fun always it pulls really well
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from a jug just ensure that you've got a jug that's clean and dry as the heat from the jelly will
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still be quite high or ensure that it's sterile when you use it but if you paranoid about infection
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just sterilise it and make sure it's a heat proof jug and sterilise it in the same way as you
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prepare the jars for putting the jelly in. So all that remains now is to remove a few jars from
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the oven at a time filled with the jelly liquid and I've given the panister before you fill the
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jug so that you get already packed in evenly distributed in the jelly and you've not got
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some thin juice and some thick juice. Put the lids on the jars as soon as you've filled them up
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ensuring that they're unfairly tightly you'll need to have some kind of heat proof glove or
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something as you tighten because the jars will be very hot and if you've used store bought
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jars and lids then you'll possibly have the little security pop up thing that once the jars
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open it pops up and you can feel a bounce on it. Now this will still be bouncing when you first
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put it on but as the jelly cools that will pop down and that shows that you've got a good seal
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on the jar and that your jelly is good to store for quite a while. I've had jelly the
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jellies and jams and chutneys that I've made the last well over a couple of years
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and with certain things like chutneys the longer you store them the more mature they get and
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the better the taste is. So once you've filled your jars put the lids on, place the jars somewhere
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to cool and then once they've cooled you can label up with a date of you made it and what it is
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and you set to enjoy your own homemade jelly until it runs out or as I do because I make
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so much I give some of it away as homemade gifts to friends and family. Obviously this is just my
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experience of making jelly or jams. If you want more info about about this these loads and loads
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of YouTube videos out there so just go on to YouTube and have a look. So good luck we're making
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your own jelly. Bye for now.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio. We are a community podcast
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network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows,
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was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast
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then click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was
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founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicon computer club and is part of the binary revolution
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at binwreff.com. If you have comments on today's show please email the host directly, leave a comment
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on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise status, today's show is
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released on the creative comments, attribution, share a light, 3.0 license.
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