GLACE FRUITS
1 pound of fruit
4 1/2 cups of sugar
1/2 cup of corn syrup
Prepare the fruit: Pit cherries and prick them with a pin to allow the syrup to penetrate the skin; peel core and quarter or slice apples, apricots, plums, pears, peaches; peel and core pineapple and cut it into rings or cubes; slice citrus fruits thinly (no need to peel them).
Place the fruit in the bottom of a saucepan, cover with water, and simmer gently until almost tender. Cook the fruit in batches, if necessary. Lift the fruit out with a slotted spoon and place in a shallow dish. Pour out all but 1 cup of the cooking water (or add enough to make 1 cup), add 1/2 cup of sugar and the corn syrup. Heat it to dissolve the sugar, bring to a boil, and pour over the fruit to cover. Leave it overnight.
Next day, pour the syrup into a pan, add a half-cup of sugar, heat to dissolve, bring to a boil, pour over the fruit and leave overnight. Repeat again for the next five days. On the next day, pour the syrup into a pan, add the half-cup of sugar, and boil, then reduce the heat, add the fruit and cook gently for three minutes. Pour the fruit and syrup into the dish and leave it to soak for two days. Repeat once more. At this point, the syrup should look like runny honey. Leave the fruit to soak for 10 days to three weeks and take a vacation!
At the end of the soaking period, remove the fruit from the syrup and arrange it on a wire rack over a tray. Dry in a warm place, in the oven at the lowest setting, or in a dehydrator until the surface no longer feels sticky.
If you haven t done enough work by this point, you can also plunge each piece of fruit into boiling water for an instant and roll it in granulated sugar to coat the surface. Store in an airtight canister, tin, or jar in a cool, dark place.
Source: Ochef
GLACE FRUITS
Board: Canning and Preserving at Recipelink.com
From: Linda Lou,WA 5-4-2004
1 pound of fruit
4 1/2 cups of sugar
1/2 cup of corn syrup
Prepare the fruit: Pit cherries and prick them with a pin to allow the syrup to penetrate the skin; peel core and quarter or slice apples, apricots, plums, pears, peaches; peel and core pineapple and cut it into rings or cubes; slice citrus fruits thinly (no need to peel them).
Place the fruit in the bottom of a saucepan, cover with water, and simmer gently until almost tender. Cook the fruit in batches, if necessary. Lift the fruit out with a slotted spoon and place in a shallow dish. Pour out all but 1 cup of the cooking water (or add enough to make 1 cup), add 1/2 cup of sugar and the corn syrup. Heat it to dissolve the sugar, bring to a boil, and pour over the fruit to cover. Leave it overnight.
Next day, pour the syrup into a pan, add a half-cup of sugar, heat to dissolve, bring to a boil, pour over the fruit and leave overnight. Repeat again for the next five days. On the next day, pour the syrup into a pan, add the half-cup of sugar, and boil, then reduce the heat, add the fruit and cook gently for three minutes. Pour the fruit and syrup into the dish and leave it to soak for two days. Repeat once more. At this point, the syrup should look like runny honey. Leave the fruit to soak for 10 days to three weeks and take a vacation!
At the end of the soaking period, remove the fruit from the syrup and arrange it on a wire rack over a tray. Dry in a warm place, in the oven at the lowest setting, or in a dehydrator until the surface no longer feels sticky.
If you haven t done enough work by this point, you can also plunge each piece of fruit into boiling water for an instant and roll it in granulated sugar to coat the surface. Store in an airtight canister, tin, or jar in a cool, dark place.
Source: Ochef
GLACE FRUITS
Board: Canning and Preserving at Recipelink.com
From: Linda Lou,WA 5-4-2004
MsgID: 208623
Shared by: Halyna -- NY
In reply to: ISO: glace cherries 14 day recipe
Board: Canning and Preserving at Recipelink.com
Shared by: Halyna -- NY
In reply to: ISO: glace cherries 14 day recipe
Board: Canning and Preserving at Recipelink.com
- Read Replies (1)
- Post Reply
- Post New
- Save to Recipe Box
Reviews and Replies: | |
1 | ISO: glace cherries 14 day recipe |
Kathy Florida | |
2 | Recipe: How to Make Glace Fruits - 2 recipes |
Halyna -- NY |
ADVERTISEMENT
Random Recipes from:
Preserving - Fruit
Preserving - Fruit
- How to Can Berries
- Freezing Berries, Christine, Mass
- Cinnamon Applesauce (using cinnamon red hot candies) (canning recipe)
- Redoing apple-butter
- Lemon Lime Curd
- Canned Lemon Curd (including freezing instructions)
- Blueberry Syrup (canning recipe)
- freezing bananas for over 3 wks
- Canning Fruit with no Sugar
- Fruit Honey
UPLOAD AN IMAGE
Allowed file types: .gif .png .jpg .jpeg
Allowed file types: .gif .png .jpg .jpeg
POST A REPLY
Post a Request - Answer a Question
Share a Recipe
Thank You To All Who Contribute
Post a Request - Answer a Question
Share a Recipe
Thank You To All Who Contribute
POST A NEW MESSAGE
Post a Request - Answer a Question
Share a Recipe
Thank You To All Who Contribute
Post a Request - Answer a Question
Share a Recipe
Thank You To All Who Contribute