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#1
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Sloes/damsons (slightly OT)
Might damsons trees in a hedgerow have the odd thorn or two? This morning we
picked what we think are fruits -too -big to- be -sloes but there were a few long thorns on some of the branches. I plan to jam them but if they are sloes they may not yet be sweet enough so they may have to be "ginned" instead! Sue W. -- Derby, England. Don't try to email me using "REPLY" as the email address is NoSpam. Our email address is "thewoodies2 at ntlworld dot com" |
#2
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Sloes/damsons (slightly OT)
In article , "Sue" writes: | | Might damsons trees in a hedgerow have the odd thorn or two? This morning we | picked what we think are fruits -too -big to- be -sloes but there were a few | long thorns on some of the branches. I plan to jam them but if they are | sloes they may not yet be sweet enough so they may have to be "ginned" | instead! Yes, but I am afraid that you are confused. They are likely to be bullaces - the 'wild' damson (and ancestor of modern plums) - probably introduced by the neolithic farmers. But there is no need for fruit to be sweet to be good for jam - both sloes and Chaenomeles make very good jam, and you can make good jam with unripe fruit. Equally well, you can make a good gin cordial with bullaces and suitable damsons, though I haven't done it myself. Or cheese, which I have, and chutney, which my wife has :-) Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#4
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Sloes/damsons (slightly OT)
In article ,
says... In article , says... In article , "Sue" writes: | | Might damsons trees in a hedgerow have the odd thorn or two? This morning we | picked what we think are fruits -too -big to- be -sloes but there were a few | long thorns on some of the branches. I plan to jam them but if they are | sloes they may not yet be sweet enough so they may have to be "ginned" | instead! Yes, but I am afraid that you are confused. They are likely to be bullaces - the 'wild' damson (and ancestor of modern plums) - probably introduced by the neolithic farmers. But there is no need for fruit to be sweet to be good for jam - both sloes and Chaenomeles make very good jam, and you can make good jam with unripe fruit. Equally well, you can make a good gin cordial with bullaces and suitable damsons, though I haven't done it myself. Or cheese, which I have, and chutney, which my wife has :-) Regards, Nick Maclaren. Nick - are these sloes? I've had a look at some images on Google and think they are. We've got several of these shrubs in the hedgerow around our property, laden with fruit. I'd like to have a go at a jam recipe but a second opinion would be good before discovering I've made woody nightshade jam or some such poison! Photos: A sloe bush? http://www.avisoft.co.uk/Hpim5809a.jpg Close up including my hand for scale: http://www.avisoft.co.uk/Hpim5810b.jpg Sorry, I mucked up the links: http://www.avisoft.co.uk/Photos/Hpim5809a.jpg http://www.avisoft.co.uk/Photos/Hpim5810b.jpg -- David in Normandy. (The free MicroPlanet Gravity newsreader is great for eliminating rubbish and cross-posts) |
#5
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Sloes/damsons (slightly OT)
-- Derby, England. Don't try to email me using "REPLY" as the email address is NoSpam. Our email address is "thewoodies2 at ntlworld dot com" "David in Normandy" wrote in message ... In article , says... In article , says... In article , "Sue" writes: | | Might damsons trees in a hedgerow have the odd thorn or two? This morning we | picked what we think are fruits -too -big to- be -sloes but there were a few | long thorns on some of the branches. I plan to jam them but if they are | sloes they may not yet be sweet enough so they may have to be "ginned" | instead! Yes, but I am afraid that you are confused. They are likely to be bullaces - the 'wild' damson (and ancestor of modern plums) - probably introduced by the neolithic farmers. Regards, Nick Maclaren I wondered about bullace but isn't a bullace more of a greeny colour? (outside I mean). I am just about to jam them now anyway. Sue W. Sue W. |
#6
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Sloes/damsons (slightly OT)
"Nick Maclaren" wrote in message ... In article , "Sue" writes: | Equally well, you can make a good gin cordial with bullaces and suitable damsons, though I haven't done it myself. When I were a lad, like, my grandparents would send me out to pick sloes in the hedgerows around the village. It was always cold and miserable and I hated the job. One year, I found what I thought were large sloes and thus filled the basket much quicker. They wouldn't use them but gave them to an uncle who reckoned that they made the best "sloe" gin he'd ever had. They were probably bullaces. I also had to help make the liqueur which was another chore since GF made a dozen bottles and GM mad another dozen that GF didn't kmow about. Each sloe had to be pricked. BTW, they rarely drank it but gave it away as gifts. Graham. |
#7
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Sloes/damsons (slightly OT)
In article , Jennifer Sparkes writes: | The message | from "Sue" contains these words: | | I wondered about bullace but isn't a bullace more of a greeny colour? | (outside I mean). I am just about to jam them now anyway. | | IIRC this came up this time last year and surprised me. | | If you look at Bullace in Google Images they show both colours ... That would figure. Clapham, Tutin and Warberg says that they are usually blue-black or purple - with the implication that they sometimes aren't. As they are ancestral to all modern plums (including greengages etc.), it isn't surprising if they have a similar range of colours. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#8
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Sloes/damsons (slightly OT)
In article , David in Normandy writes: | | Nick - are these sloes? I've had a look at some images on Google and | think they are. We've got several of these shrubs in the hedgerow around | our property, laden with fruit. I'd like to have a go at a jam recipe | but a second opinion would be good before discovering I've made woody | nightshade jam or some such poison! | | http://www.avisoft.co.uk/Photos/Hpim5809a.jpg | | http://www.avisoft.co.uk/Photos/Hpim5810b.jpg Yup. To check, the stone will be obviously plum-like, with a kernel with a strong bitter almond flavour (don't eat too many) and the flesh plum-like and greenish. The taste will screw your mouth up. There aren't any plants I know of other than other Prunus species that you can confuse them with, which have naturalised themselves in the UK. Just remember to avoid the laurels, not to eat too many kernels, and you are quite safe. The fruit structure of that section of Prunus is very distinctive, and can be confused only with some tropical fruits. And those leaves are exactly right. I advise making jelly - removing sloe stones is hell. Also, use 50/50 apple and sloe juice (or even 75/25), as pure sloe jelly is too fierce even for me. Taste the juice once you have extracted it. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#9
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Sloes/damsons (slightly OT)
In article ,
says... In article , David in Normandy writes: | | Nick - are these sloes? I've had a look at some images on Google and | think they are. We've got several of these shrubs in the hedgerow around | our property, laden with fruit. I'd like to have a go at a jam recipe | but a second opinion would be good before discovering I've made woody | nightshade jam or some such poison! | | http://www.avisoft.co.uk/Photos/Hpim5809a.jpg | | http://www.avisoft.co.uk/Photos/Hpim5810b.jpg Yup. To check, the stone will be obviously plum-like, with a kernel with a strong bitter almond flavour (don't eat too many) and the flesh plum-like and greenish. The taste will screw your mouth up. There aren't any plants I know of other than other Prunus species that you can confuse them with, which have naturalised themselves in the UK. Just remember to avoid the laurels, not to eat too many kernels, and you are quite safe. The fruit structure of that section of Prunus is very distinctive, and can be confused only with some tropical fruits. And those leaves are exactly right. I advise making jelly - removing sloe stones is hell. Also, use 50/50 apple and sloe juice (or even 75/25), as pure sloe jelly is too fierce even for me. Taste the juice once you have extracted it. Regards, Nick Maclaren. Thanks Nick. I've just eaten a few berries and yes they are quite bitter but with a definite plum taste / texture. Crunching a kernel I could also definitely taste marzipan/almond. So it looks like a 100% match to your description. My mouth is still quite dry now, several minutes after eating them. They are quite moorish in a strange savoury sort of way. So it just leaves the question of whether to pick them now or let them ripen a bit more. They seem "nearly" ripe being quite flesh but they resist being pulled. I guess leaving them longer would probably mean the birds eating them first. -- David in Normandy. (The free MicroPlanet Gravity newsreader is great for eliminating rubbish and cross-posts) |
#10
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Sloes/damsons (slightly OT)
In article , David in Normandy writes: | | Thanks Nick. I've just eaten a few berries and yes they are quite bitter | but with a definite plum taste / texture. Crunching a kernel I could | also definitely taste marzipan/almond. So it looks like a 100% match to | your description. | | My mouth is still quite dry now, several minutes after eating them. They | are quite moorish in a strange savoury sort of way. They have that effect - now join the very select club of people who like to eat sloes raw :-) | So it just leaves the question of whether to pick them now or let them | ripen a bit more. They seem "nearly" ripe being quite flesh but they | resist being pulled. I guess leaving them longer would probably mean the | birds eating them first. Maybe. The birds typically don't go for them until quite late, as they don't contain much carbohydrate. I would pick them as and when convenient - traditionally, they were left until the first frost, but that isn't essential. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#11
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Sloes/damsons (slightly OT)
In article ,
says... The message from "Sue" contains these words: I wondered about bullace but isn't a bullace more of a greeny colour? (outside I mean). I am just about to jam them now anyway. IIRC this came up this time last year and surprised me. If you look at Bullace in Google Images they show both colours ... HTH ... Jennifer Someone last year posted a link to a site with dozens of varieties of bullace and damsons and the various species involved, needless to say I can not now remember what I did with it! -- Charlie Pridham, Gardening in Cornwall www.roselandhouse.co.uk Holders of national collections of Clematis viticella cultivars and Lapageria rosea |
#12
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Sloes/damsons (slightly OT)
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#13
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Sloes/damsons (slightly OT)
On 23 Sep, 18:12, (Nick Maclaren) wrote:
In article , David in Normandy writes: | | Thanks Nick. I've just eaten a few berries and yes they are quite bitter | but with a definite plum taste / texture. Crunching a kernel I could | also definitely taste marzipan/almond. So it looks like a 100% match to | your description. | | My mouth is still quite dry now, several minutes after eating them. They | are quite moorish in a strange savoury sort of way. They have that effect - now join the very select club of people who like to eat sloes raw :-) | So it just leaves the question of whether to pick them now or let them | ripen a bit more. They seem "nearly" ripe being quite flesh but they | resist being pulled. I guess leaving them longer would probably mean the | birds eating them first. Maybe. The birds typically don't go for them until quite late, as they don't contain much carbohydrate. I would pick them as and when convenient - traditionally, they were left until the first frost, but that isn't essential. Regards, Nick Maclaren. Pick them now if they are just slightly fleshy feeling - they don't just fall off the bushes like plums or apples, you have to actually pick them. I get mine near Melrose and I've never in 30 years seen them so good. On making sloe gin, the accepted technique in this day and age is to put them in the freezer and let them unthaw slowly - that breaks the skins and enables the juice extraction. If you are prepared to pick enough (2 of us picked over a dozen pounds in under an hour the other day), a good wine can be made with sloes - a bit of extra fruit is required to enhance to the flavour. The recipe I found starts off with 60 lbs of sloes !! Rob |
#14
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Sloes/damsons (slightly OT)
In article . com, Rob G writes: | | On making sloe gin, the accepted technique in this day and age is to | put them in the freezer and let them unthaw slowly - that breaks the | skins and enables the juice extraction. Or just don't bother. Given a reasonable passage of time, the gin will absorb the juice without needing to do anything. But slicing them with a knife or freezing them certainly speeds things up. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#15
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Sloes/damsons (slightly OT)
"Nick Maclaren" wrote in message ... In article , "Sue" writes: | | Might damsons trees in a hedgerow have the odd thorn or two? This morning we | picked what we think are fruits -too -big to- be -sloes but there were a few | long thorns on some of the branches. I plan to jam them but if they are | sloes they may not yet be sweet enough so they may have to be "ginned" | instead! Yes, but I am afraid that you are confused. They are likely to be bullaces I agree. - the 'wild' damson (and ancestor of modern plums) - probably introduced by the neolithic farmers. But there is no need for fruit to be sweet to be good for jam - both sloes and Chaenomeles make very good jam, and you can make good jam with unripe fruit. Equally well, you can make a good gin cordial with bullaces and suitable damsons, though I haven't done it myself. I have and it's very, very good. Or cheese, which I have, and chutney, which my wife has :-) I haven't made chutney but the cheese is wonderful - such an intense flavour .... drool ... our little tree doesn't produce many fruit so I have to use them for something special. The cheese is special - there's nothing like it in my experience. Mary |
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