Step-by-Step Guide to Make Award-winning Rosehip and Apple Jelly

Rosehip and Apple Jelly
Rosehip and Apple Jelly

Hey everyone, I hope you are having an amazing day today. Today, I will show you a way to make a distinctive dish, rosehip and apple jelly. It is one of my favorites food recipes. For mine, I’m gonna make it a little bit unique. This will be really delicious.

The rosehip flavour combines well with the apple. This is a delicate jelly with a fuller taste than plain apple jelly; good with toast for breakfast and excellent served with chicken, pork or a mild cheese. Incidentally, I recently heard that rosehip concoctions are good for sore throats. Sweet, tart and wonderfully autumnal, Rosehip and Apple Jelly is full of the flavours of the fall.

Rosehip and Apple Jelly is one of the most popular of recent trending meals on earth. It is simple, it is quick, it tastes yummy. It’s enjoyed by millions daily. They are nice and they look wonderful. Rosehip and Apple Jelly is something which I have loved my whole life.

To get started with this recipe, we must prepare a few components. You can cook rosehip and apple jelly using 5 ingredients and 15 steps. Here is how you cook that.

The ingredients needed to make Rosehip and Apple Jelly:
  1. Prepare 1300 g rosehips
  2. Make ready 1 kg apples
  3. Make ready 800 g sugar
  4. Take 2 L water
  5. Prepare 6 jam jars

You can leave the seeds in if you want, or remove them; they will get strained out if you don't remove them before cooking. Place apple slices into a deep cooking pot, cover with warm water, and let stand overnight. Fresh apples won't do because their abundance of pectin would turn the jelly into rubber. The next day, add rose hips (whole or chopped) into the pot and cover with warm water.

Instructions to make Rosehip and Apple Jelly:
  1. Wash the rosehips and remove and leaves and stems. Bag up and freeze.
  2. After 2 days defrost the rosehips. This freezing makes them easier to break down.
  3. Put the hips in a pan and cover with water. Bring to a boil and start crushing the hips with a potato masher until they are all broken.
  4. Keep on a simmer for an hour, then allow to cool. We will now try to separate the liquid from the seeds.
  5. Pour the liquid through a sieve. You may need to do this in batches. Try and push through as much of the red paste as you can using a spoon. You will end up with a cloudy red liquid. Throw away the seeds.
  6. Clean the sieve and layer it with cheesecloth/muslin. Pour the red liquid back through the sieve. This time the cloth will capture the rosehip puré and you will be left with a clearish liquid. You can set aside this puré and use it like apple puré.
  7. Wash and dice the apples. Put in a pan and add the rosehip liquid. Bring to a rolling boil and mash the apples. Reduce to simmer for 30min.
  8. When cool enough to handle, pour the contents of the pan through the sieve to get the apple/rosehip liquid.
  9. Return the liquid to the pan with the sugar. Keep on a boil and monitor the temperature. A white foam / scum will form that you will want to scoop out to get a clear jelly.
  10. Prepare 6 jam jars. Wash clean, and rinse with boiling water.
  11. Reduce the liquid by letting it boil away. The jelly will be darkening and thickening. The temperature needs to reach above 104C but you really want to ensure that when cool the jelly is set.
  12. Put metal spoons in the freezer. Every couple of minutes towards the end, take out a spoon and with your stirring spoon, put a small drop of jelly on the cold spoon. It should form a film and solidify to the point where it doesn't run when inclined. If runny, keep boiling.
  13. Remember that boiling jam/jelly is incredibly hot so be very careful at this stage.
  14. Pour the jelly into the jam jars. It can be easier to pour into a plastic jug, and then use that to fill the jars. This creates more washing up though.
  15. Using oven gloves hold the jam jars and screw on the lids. The jam jars will be very hot. Allow to cool. Label the jars. When cooled the air inside the jar will shrink in size and pull down the popping/clicking part of the lid. This is why open jars click, and unopened ones do not.

Fresh apples won't do because their abundance of pectin would turn the jelly into rubber. The next day, add rose hips (whole or chopped) into the pot and cover with warm water. Thoroughly wash the rosehips and apples. The rosehips will take much longer to cook, so put them in a pan with water to generously cover and bring to the boil. CanningCraft Creates: Rose Hip-Apple Jelly Allison gathering her rose hips Beach roses are a common sight here in coastal Maine, and I've always had a fondness for them - they remind me of salty air, sand, and the ocean.

So that is going to wrap this up with this exceptional food rosehip and apple jelly recipe. Thank you very much for reading. I’m sure you can make this at home. There’s gonna be interesting food at home recipes coming up. Don’t forget to save this page on your browser, and share it to your family, friends and colleague. Thanks again for reading. Go on get cooking!