I looked out at my Hawthorn tree yesterday, and seeing it was loaded with berries I thought to have another go at hawthorn fruit leather.
So I picked a load, de-stalked them, and set to it.
I made some a few years ago using the cold process squeezing out the goo per Ray and Gordon on Wild Food, but I didn't really yield much leather from the resulting goo, so this time I have opted for the stewed fruit method, and see how that goes. More 'kitchencraft' than bushcraft but hey-ho
The last lot was rather bland too, so I am adding a few flavours but not much - I still want hawthorn leather primarily.
The raw haw flesh this year seemed reasonably moist, and the taste definitely reminded me of eating the tiny young leaves in spring, and not tart/bitter.
Ingredients :
500 grams of de-stalked haws
2 apples
A generous glug of honey, about 100ml I guess.
Process :
I chopped up the apples to smaller bits
Add haws and apples to a big pan with 150ml of water
Medium-high heat with the lid on
Stir occasionally
When the water got low they started to stick so I added more water a splash at a time to keep it wet
The haws refused to split open even after 20 minutes, so I helped them by squishing them with a wooden spoon
(avoided crushing any seeds, don't want that in the mix - I think there are traces of cyanide in them)
Gently stewed the lumpy goo for about another 10 minutes
I then tried to put it through a sieve to refine my goo, but it was too dry and wouldn't part with a drop
So, back in the pan, more water and a bit more simmer for 10 mins. I added probably 500ml of water all told, which seemed a lot but I figured I could evaporate it back out in the drying phase.
Anyway, the wetter lumpy goo was then quite happy to be sieved, pressing it with my wooden spoon to squeeze out as much as possible.
In the back of this photo is the squeezed dry lumpy remnants, and the runnier goo in the small pan.
I then added the honey, and brought it slowly to a simmer stirring all the time.
It seemed to be thickening slightly, which I figured was a good thing
Set the fan oven at about 50C
I poured the refined goo into a baking tray, and spread it out. It was probably about 3 or 4mm thick over the whole tray.
In the oven to dry...
So all that ^ was last night
And this is this morning, after about 10 hours drying, I can peel up a corner :
It's still a bit stuck towards the middle of the tray, so I put it back in the oven and will have another look in a few hours.
So far so good
So I picked a load, de-stalked them, and set to it.
I made some a few years ago using the cold process squeezing out the goo per Ray and Gordon on Wild Food, but I didn't really yield much leather from the resulting goo, so this time I have opted for the stewed fruit method, and see how that goes. More 'kitchencraft' than bushcraft but hey-ho
The last lot was rather bland too, so I am adding a few flavours but not much - I still want hawthorn leather primarily.
The raw haw flesh this year seemed reasonably moist, and the taste definitely reminded me of eating the tiny young leaves in spring, and not tart/bitter.
Ingredients :
500 grams of de-stalked haws
2 apples
A generous glug of honey, about 100ml I guess.
Process :
I chopped up the apples to smaller bits
Add haws and apples to a big pan with 150ml of water
Medium-high heat with the lid on
Stir occasionally
When the water got low they started to stick so I added more water a splash at a time to keep it wet
The haws refused to split open even after 20 minutes, so I helped them by squishing them with a wooden spoon
(avoided crushing any seeds, don't want that in the mix - I think there are traces of cyanide in them)
Gently stewed the lumpy goo for about another 10 minutes
I then tried to put it through a sieve to refine my goo, but it was too dry and wouldn't part with a drop
So, back in the pan, more water and a bit more simmer for 10 mins. I added probably 500ml of water all told, which seemed a lot but I figured I could evaporate it back out in the drying phase.
Anyway, the wetter lumpy goo was then quite happy to be sieved, pressing it with my wooden spoon to squeeze out as much as possible.
In the back of this photo is the squeezed dry lumpy remnants, and the runnier goo in the small pan.
I then added the honey, and brought it slowly to a simmer stirring all the time.
It seemed to be thickening slightly, which I figured was a good thing
Set the fan oven at about 50C
I poured the refined goo into a baking tray, and spread it out. It was probably about 3 or 4mm thick over the whole tray.
In the oven to dry...
So all that ^ was last night
And this is this morning, after about 10 hours drying, I can peel up a corner :
It's still a bit stuck towards the middle of the tray, so I put it back in the oven and will have another look in a few hours.
So far so good