Butter Gem recipe question
Sierra
6 years ago
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Sierra
6 years agoRelated Discussions
questioning a recipe I found online for blueberry butter
Comments (5)here are the full instructions, found at foodinjars.com Slow Cooker Blueberry Butter makes approximately 3 1/2 pints of butter 8 cups of pureed blueberries 2 cups sugar 1 lemon, zested 2 teaspoons cinnamon 1/2 teaspoon grated nutmeg "Put the pureed blueberries in a slow cooker. Place a lid on the pot and turn it on to low. After about an hour, give it a stir. At this point, you want to use something to prop the lid a bit. I found that laying a wooden spoon across the rim of the cooker and then placing the lid on gave it just enough room to let the steam evaporate. My blueberry butter spent about six hours in the slow cooker (from 5:30 p.m. when I got home from work, until 11:30 p.m. when I canned and processed it). At the beginning of hour five, I added the spices and the sugar, removed the lid completely and turned the heat up to high, in order to speed the cooking down. Once itÂs cooked down sufficiently*, pour into jars (leave a good 1/2 inch of head space), wipe rims, apply lids and screw on bands. Process in a boiling water canner for 10 minutes. Eat on fresh scones and store unopened jars in a cool, dark place. *When the cooking process is done, you can puree with an immersion blender or (carefully) in a regular blender, for a smoother product." Linda Lou - I did not heat it to a boil (was in the crockpot), I had set the timer for th 10 min recommended, but didn't get them out immediately, and no, I didn't let them sit before removing them... Should I open the jars and bring it to a boil, and then process again? I just processed them last night, so wouldn't think they were bad yet... thanks...See Morepumpkin butter recipe...not for canning
Comments (9)This is a recipe I have posted here before but it's quicker to re-post than to look it up. Because it's an old recipe, canning instructions are included. I added a note to refrigerate or freeze instead. Pumpkin butters, like pumpkin puree, will freeze very well. Spiced Pecan & Pumpkin Butter Pumpkin is one of the few things put up in cans that can be commended to even the fussiest cook. The butter is delectable on toast or any hot bread, or on pancakes, waffles, of French toast in place of syrup. It's also delicious over ice cream or frozen yogurt. If you have a fresh "pie" or sugar pumpkin-not a jack o' lantern variety, which will be both watery and stringy after cooking-prepare it by paring, cubing, and steaming until very tender (this can be done in a covered casserole in the oven), then pushing the flesh through a sieve or the fine disk of a food mill. If the pureed pumpkin is too moist-which it is if liquid quickly seeps from a sample spooned onto a plate-line a colander with cheesecloth and drain the puree for a hour or so. To make enough puree for this recipe, start with a good-sized pumpkin, say 5 pounds. Hard-fleshed winter squash (Hubbard, etc.) can be used instead of pumpkin; prepare it in the same way. Zest (outer peel only, no white pith) of 1 orange, or zest of 1/2 orange and 1/2 lemon, removed in wide strips with a swivel peeler 1 large can (29 ounces) solid-pack pumpkin plus 1/2 cup water, or 3-1/2 to 4 cups pumpkin puree prepared from scratch (see the headnote) 2 cups (packed) light brown sugar or 1-1/2 cups (packed) light brown sugar plus 1/2 cup mild honey or light corn syrup 3 tablespoons strained fresh orange juice 3 tablespoons strained fresh lemon juice 1-1/2 teaspoons ground cinnamon 1/2 teaspoons salt 1/4 teaspoon ground allspice 1/4 teaspoon ground ginger Pinch of ground cloves 1/3 cup pecans or walnuts, lightly toasted and grated or very finely chopped Makes about 5 cups 1. Simmer the orange zest in 2 cups water in a sauce pan for 10 minutes, then drain it and mince it to a fine pulp. Measure out 1 tablespoon and reserve. 2. Combine in a heavy-bottomed stainless-steel or other nonreactive saucepan the pumpkin (and water, if canned pumpkin is used), orange zest, sugar, orange juice, lemon juice, cinnamon, salt, allspice ginger, and cloves. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat, stirring constantly; lower the heat and simmer the mixture, stirring it very often with a wooden spatula, until it has become very thick, about 15 minutes. Sample the butter and add a little more of any or all of the spices, if you like (remember, the flavors will blossom in storage). Add more sweetening if your tastebuds request it. 3. Stir in the nuts and continue to cook for another 2 or 3 minutes. Ladle the boiling-hot pumpkin butter into clean, hot half-pint canning jars, leaving 1/4 inch of headspace. Seal the jars with new 2-piece canning lids according to manufacturer's instructions. Process the jars for 10 minutes in a boiling-water bath. Cool, label, and store for up to a year a cool cupboard. [Note: Instead of canning refrigerate or freeze for long-term storage.] From: The Good Stuff Cookbook by Helen Witty Carol...See MoreBread and Butter Pickle Recipes
Comments (8)Barbara, This one might be close, but it doesn't have onions in it. Other than that, it seems like it might be what you're looking for. It is from the book "The Joy of Pickling", and the author calls it "Bread and Butter Pickles, My Way" About 3 1/2 lbs. 3" to 5" pickling cucumbers 1/4 cup pickling salt 4 teaspoons whole yellow mustard seeds 1 teaspoon whole celery seeds 1 teaspoon hot pepper flakes 2 cups cider vinegar 2 cups water 1/2 cup sugar 1 teaspoon ground tumeric 1. Slice the cucumbers 3/16" thick, discarding both ends. You should have 2 quarts of sliced cucumbers. In a large bowl, toss the cucumber slices with the salt. Top the cucumbers with ice cubes from two ice trays. Let the cucumbers stand at room temperature for 3 to 4 hours. 2. Drain the cucumbers well. Toss them with the mustard seeds, celery seeds, and hot pepper flakes. Pack the cucumbers into 4 pint mason jars. 3. In a saucepan, bring the vinegar, water, sugar and tumeric to a boil. Pour the hot liquid over the cucumber slices, leaving 1/2" headspace. Close the jars with the 3-piece lids. In a boiling water bath, process the jars for 10 minutes. Now, here's the one that most closely matches the recipe you're looking for. It also is from "The Joy of Pickling" and is called "Old Fashioned Bread and Butters". It also is the recipe that, when eaten, reminds me almost exactly of my grandmother's bread and butter pickles. 6 lbs. 4 to 5" pickling cucumbers 2 lbs. small onions, sliced into thin rounds 1/2 cup pickling salt 4 1/2 cups cider vinegar 3 cups sugar 2 teaspoons ground tumeric 2 teaspoons whole celery seeds 2 tablespoons whole yellow mustard seeds 1. Slice the cucumbers crosswise 3/16" thick, discarding both ends. In a large bowl, toss the cucumbers and onions with the salt. Empty 2 trays of ice cubes over the vegetables and let them stand at room temperature for 3 to 4 hours. 2. Drain the vegetables. In a large nonreactive pot, bring the remaining ingredients to a boil. Add the vegetables and slowly return the contents to a boil. Add the vegetables and slowly return the contents to a boil. With a slotted spoon, transfer the vegetables to pint mason jars, leaving 1/2" headspace. Divide the liquid evenly among the jars. Close the jars with the two-piece caps. In a boiling-water bath, process the jars for 10 minutes. 3. Store the cooled jars in a cool, dry, dark place for at least one month before eating the pickles. After opening a jar, store it in the refrigerator. If neither one of these is "it", let me know and I'll look in some of my other cookbooks. Dawn...See MoreAnyone have a recipe for a butter almond thin cookie?
Comments (31)At the risk of being tagged a "troll", here's my two cents on this old thread. I've had an empty box of Jules Destrooper's Almond Thins on my computer desk for several months to remind me to look again to see if anyone has developed a recipe and put it online. (I tried it a couple of times myself at first but the results were, well, disappointing.) I found this thread on today's Google search. I don't know anything about Trader Joe's similar cookies, as we don't have that supermarket chain in the New Orleans area, but the list of ingredients in the Destrooper butter almond cookie is clearly different from the "Destrooper" recipe linked above at Yahoo! Answers: INGREDIENTS: WHEAT FLOUR, BROWN SUGAR, BUTTER, ALMONDS, SALT. (Listed in that order.) Of note: no egg, no vanilla. The only sources of moisture in the genuine Destrooper's are the brown sugar and the butter and I'm guessing I could try a dozen more times before I figured out the proportions and baking technique that would work. (I'm an OK cook but not that much of a baker.) Perhaps "WHEAT FLOUR" is how folks in Belgium refer to "whole wheat flour" but I'm not thinking this is the critical difference, at least vis-a-vis Destrooper's (versus Trader Joe's). I'm thinking that adding egg and vanilla and omitting the molasses flavor of the brown sugar would tend to make a very different cookie, regardless of the proportions of other ingredients and the baking technique. I'll let you know if I ever figure it out......See Morelindac92
6 years agoSierra
6 years agoSierra
6 years agoUser
6 years agoSierra
6 years ago
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