Making Fruit Butters and Fruit Cheeses at Home
The same equipment is required as for jam marking, with the addition of a fine nylon or plastic sieve.
Fruit butters are soft and spreadable. They are a particularly useful way for dealing with a glut of wild fruits and, as less sugar is required for this sort of preserve, it is very economical.
Fruit cheeses are made from a stiff fruit puree. This is a good way of preserving fruit which has a lot of pips or stones. They use a larger proportion of sugar to puree than fruit butters.
General Method for Making Fruit Cheeses and Butters
- Clean and roughly chop large fruits, discarding any parts that are bruised or diseased. Small fruits may be used whole.
- Place the fruit into the preserving pan and just cover with cold water. Simmer until soft, adding lemon juice or citric acid to fruits low in acid.
- Rub the softened fruit through a nylon or plastic sieve to produce a fine pulp. Weigh the pulp and pour it into a clean preserving pan or saucepan.
- To make a cheese add a similar weight of sugar to the pulp and stir until dissolved. Simmer for 1 hour or until the cheese thickens, stirring the mixture consistently.
- To make a fruit butter boil the pulp until it is thick, then stir in half the pulp’s weight of sugar, plus spices if required. Simmer until the mixture is thick and creamy.
- Fruit cheese is ready when a spoon drawn across the pan leaves a clean line. Fruit butter is ready when no free liquid is visible and the surface is creamy.
- Pour cheeses into clean, hot, dry sterilized small wide-necked jars or moulds that have been greased with glycerine. Pour fruit butters into clean, hot, dry sterilized jars as when making jam.
- Wipe the jars or moulds clean and cover immediately whilst still hot.
- Leave to cool and label with contents and date made.
Fruit cheeses can be turned out in one piece and cut with a knife in place of cheese or, cut into small pieces, as a sweetmeat. They are also useful as a condiment to cold meat or poultry. Cheeses can be stored for up to 4 months and are often better if left to mature for 2 months before using.
Fruit butters, due to the lower sugar content, generally have a storage life of only a few weeks and, once opened, should be eaten with a few days. Below is a list of the latest recipes posted on the site in the preserves section.
Latest Recipes for Fruit Cheese & Fruit Butter
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