The Cottage Smallholder


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Blackberry and apple jam recipe

blackberry detailIt was Anne Mary that pointed out that apple and blackberry jam would be full of blackberry pips.
“They’d get stuck in your teeth and drive you mad. Stick to bramble jelly.”

I love jelly. We make loads of jelly every year. More often than not it is used as a base for a sauce rather than dolloped on a plate of roast lamb or pork.

Imagine my delight when I found this recipe for Blackberry and Apple Jam in my aunt’s ancient handwritten cookbook. As it is sieved there are no seeds and the jam is delicious, spread on hot buttered toast in the morning.

Blackberry and Apple Jam recipe

Ingredients:

  • 1k (roughly 2lb) of blackberries
  • 350g (12ozs) of apples (eating apples, windfalls are fine)
  • Water
  • White granulated sugar

Method:

  1. Core and roughly chop the apples (skin on).
  2. Put the apples, cores and blackberries in a large preservaing pan or large heavy bottomed saucepan. Add just enough water to cover and simmer until soft.
  3. Sieve the softened fruit and weigh the sieved pulp (discard the skins and seeds left in the sieve). Add 450g (1lb) of sugar for each 450g (1lb) of sieved pulp.
  4. Put sieved pulp and sugar into a large heavy bottomed saucepan (or preserving pan) and heat very gently until the sugar has dissolved.
  5. Bring the jam to the boil and continue to boil very rapidly for about 8-10 minutes until the jam reaches setting point. (What is setting point? See tricks and tips below).
  6. When the jam has set, carefully pour into warm, sterilised jars, using a ladle or small jug (How to sterilise jars? See tricks and tips below)
  7. Cover the jars with tight fitting screw-top lids, or waxed disks and cellophane pot covers (waxed disks, wax facing downwards and plastic covers secured with plastic bands).
  8. Label when cold and store in a cool, dark place, away from damp.

Tricks and Tips:

  • Jam “set” or “setting point”:
    Getting the right set can be tricky. I have tried using a jam thermometer but find it easier to use the following method. Before you start to make the jam, put a couple of plates in the fridge so that the warm jam can be drizzled onto a cold plate (when we make jam we often forget to return the plate to the fridge between tests, using two plates means that you have a spare cold plate). Return the plate to the fridge to cool for approx two minutes. It has set when you run your finger through it and leave a crinkly track mark. If after two minutes the cooled jam is too liquid, continue to boil the jam, testing it every few minutes until you have the right set. The jam is far more delicious if it is slightly runny.
  • Sterilising the jars:
    We collect jars all year round for our jelly, chutney and jam making sessions. I try to soak off labels and store the clean jars and metal plastic coated screw-top lids in an accessible place. The sterilising method that we used is simple. Just before making the jam, I quickly wash and rinse the jars and place them upside down in a cold oven. Set the temperature to 160c/140c for fan assisted. When the oven has reached the right temperature I turn off the heat. The jars will stay warm for quite a while. I only use plastic lined lids for preserves as the all-metal lids can go rusty. I boil these for five minutes in water to sterilise them. If I use Le Parfait jars, I do the same with the rubber rings.

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237 Comments

  1. It has now set and is truly delicious so thank you for the recipe.

  2. URGENT HELP! Have just spent about 4 hourse making this recipe with hand picked brambles and shop bought apples. After sieving the mixture i added the suger and boiled rapidly for over an hour, testing for the setting point all the time. Finally i saw a crinkle in the jam so put it in my sterilised jars. They are still hot but the contents seem too runny – will it set further when cool? and what can i do if it hasn’t set enough? my brambles were frozen and i did add some lemon juice but where could i have gone wrong?

    • Fiona Nevile

      Hi Tracy

      It will firm up when it gets quite cold. Leave for at least 24 hours before panicking.

  3. The blackberry and apple jam recipe is just the best recipe I have come across – especially since I have been able to pick the blackberries and apples from the roadside! It is my families favourite jam, and never ever lasts long in the cupboard. Had to hide the last jar! Just made a batch with frozen berries, including a few blackberries and raspberries, but mostly blueberries. I added another apple and a dessertspoon of lemon juice – and it has come out a winner – again! Thanks for sharing this wonderful recipe.

  4. thanks Judy,
    I’m going to try a pumpkin and apple this afternoon using this recipe – my jam is delicious!!!!

  5. Hi Vicky, maybe the tinned strawberries but thought I would let you know that I cant remember a time when I didn’t put lemon juice into a jam or preserve. I always use what is to hand in the storecupboard, a good thing to improvise, like you did with your tinned fruit.

  6. i had to put in lemon juice to help my jam set, and it took about 25 minutes longer to set – could this be because i used tinned strawberries?

  7. mrs costigan

    Hi, can I freeze the blackberries and defrost later to make blackberry and apple jelly? as usual,time has run out and the working week is again upon us! managed to find a good lot of berries but no time really to do the jelly till later in the week.

    • Fiona Nevile

      Hi Mrs Costigan

      Yes you can freeze balckberries for making jam, jelly, wine and crumbles etc. Sometimes life just steamrollers my plans too.

  8. Darn it, another male idea shot down, 😀

    Was just a thought, just trying to get every drop from the fruit.

  9. Could you use a stick blender before you sieve, to try and get all the juices from the fruit?

    • Fiona Nevile

      Hi Neil

      If you used a stick blender it would break up the pips and these would go through the sieve. When you sieve or mouli (the latter is quicker and better I reckon) juice is extracted too.

  10. hello
    am making this jam right now…….
    and was wondering
    how long does it take for the fruit to go soft?
    i’ve been simmering for nearly an hour and the apple is still attached to the skin which makes me think it will be difficult to sieve?!!
    thank you
    lindsay

    • Fiona Nevile

      Hi Lindsay

      It shouldn’t take much more time. The apple will go ‘puffy’ when it’s ready.

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