Please stop sniggering long enough to read this very serious post on jelly making! Mr CC and I went to a local antiques fair last month and I was delighted to find a ceramic cone jelly mould. Once I’d checked it over for cracks and found none, I was so excited I almost forgot to haggle. Almost! My vintage mould cost me £12, which seems ridiculously cheap.
Making a jelly with damsons as beautiful as these cannot result in anything less than deliciousness!
Ceramic, like glass, can be a nightmare for turning out jellies therefore I made this jelly much firmer set than I usually would. Also, this mould is tall and tapers towards the top making it far less stable than a lower, rounder jelly. I gave the very tip of the mould a squirt of cake release spray and I think this helped (you don’t taste it).
Turning out a jelly is always a heart in your mouth moment but thankfully, this one came out perfectly. As you can see, it suffered a little with “Brewer’s droop” but that didn’t matter as it caused mirth all round...a little too much mirth perhaps, we reverted to 5 year olds. And yes, I am fully aware of what it looks like!
Damson plums have such a lovely fruity flavour that they are perfectly suited to jams and jellies. Didn’t it come out a pretty colour?
Ingredients
Note – this is the basic quantity for the jelly – you can scale it up as required but allow extra setting time. For my mould I used 1.5x the quantities.
8 leaves gelatine
750g damsons – washed, but no need to stone
225g caster sugar
600ml cold water
To serve: cream
Method
Start by soaking the gelatine leaves in cold water until they are soft.
Place the damsons, sugar and water in a saucepan and heat gently until the sugar has dissolved.
Simmer further and mash the damsons with a spoon or – and I found this really productive – the masher you’d use to make mash potato.
The stones will naturally come out of the fruit and be captured in the next stage.
Pass through a sieve and return the liquid to a clean pan.
Heat gently and then remove the pan from the heat.
Squeeze all the water from the gelatine and whisk into the damson juice – it will dissolve very quickly.
Leave the jelly to cool a little.
Pass through a sieve into your chosen mould – sieving again will strain out any bits that passed through first time.
Chill until set – I left overnight.
Turn out of the jelly mould any way that you find works for you! For this ceramic mould we stood it in warm water for a minute then gave it a vigorous shake!
Serve with cream.
Bask in the glory of the wonderful thing you have made.
Eat.
I'm speechless - no matter what comment I start to write it sounds like innuendo!!
ReplyDeleteLaughing and so impressed at the same time!
ReplyDeleteIt looks like an elves hat to me ... I can't imagine what you think it looks like!!!!!
ReplyDeleteI think it looks like the sorting hat from Harry Potter films. Looks good whatever it reminds you of...
ReplyDeleteI love vintage finds like these, I do love the comical shape. After all it's better to be an interesting shape than the normal boring ones?
ReplyDeleteI'm loving all your damson posts at the moment. I haven't sniggered at the jelly, honest!
ReplyDeletei am with BrownievilleGirl! i thought it looks like an elves hat:) very cute. what a cool vintage find..
ReplyDeleteThat really made me laugh! Looks like a great dessert though. I obviously have an innocent mind, it just looks like floppy jelly to me....
ReplyDeleteI actually snorted out loud at this photo...brilliant!
ReplyDeleteBrilliant post. I will refrain from inappropriate commments :) seriously damson jelly sounds great and a great find with the jelly mould!
ReplyDeleteHehehe I couldn't help but smile when I saw this. Its such a gorgeous colour too! Love your jelly mould, not seen one quite like this before.
ReplyDeleteI multi-tasked and read the delicious recipe whilst laughing my head off. Brewer's droop! He he he!
ReplyDeleteI was reading this on the train yesterday on my phone and was getting incredibly strange looks from people as I lol'd at it. I have a filthy mind!
ReplyDeleteOmg , this is super cuteeee!
ReplyDeleteLook amazinh and fun, yes like Haprry Potter film! nice! gloria
ReplyDeletethank you for making me smile tonight :)
ReplyDeleteHe he he! What a jelly!
ReplyDeleteBombas and Parr and Heston Blumenthal, eat your heart out!
ReplyDeleteJust saw this on Twitter, I chuckled all the way to the bottom! Part of me think it looks like a worm though! I'm trying to imagine what it'll be like watching it wobble
ReplyDeleteresearching how to use a newly acquired ceramic jelly mould and I came across this site: http://www.historicfood.com/Jellies.htm Looking at your mould, it could have been one part of a two part mould?
ReplyDeleteHi Anonymous
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comment - I love Ivan Day's site. I first saw my mould at an event with Ivan, never dreaming I would ever find one at a boot sale/antiques fair and it is a one-piece mould. I covet those 2-piece sets though and would love one!
Happy jelly making!