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Old 16-07-2008, 12:09 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Brian Mitchell View Post
Is there any way of reducing the acidity of fruit other than by
smothering it with pounds of sugar? I'm wondering if there's any cooking
method or other treatment available to the ordinary person. I like the
very tart fruits like gooseberries, blackcurrant and rhubarb (nominal
fruit) for desserts and jams but worry about the amounts of sugar I take
in.

Secondary question: I notice most of the low- or no-sugar jam recipes
emanate from the US and call for frozen apple juice concentrate. I know
this is widely available over there but I've never seen it in this
country, does anyone know if it's available here?
As you say, adding sugar merely adds another taste which "balances" the acidity, but doesn't actually reduce it. The only ways you can actually reduce acidity are to dilute it (which is not helpful), or to add an alkaline substance to counteract it by chemical reaction. But adding alkali to reduce acidity generally only works in very specific ways in cooking. The main alkali used in cooking is sodium bicarbonate, which will fizz, a technique used for raising cakes, but probably not helpful in fruit tart. The "lye" used to pickle herrings is also alkaline, but you don't want that.

My mother cooked with less sugar than most other people. You get used to it and will soon prefer it like that, like getting use to tea without sugar. I hate other people's over-sweetened (to my mind) gooseberries and blackcurrants.

Apple juice concentrate is of course high in sugar. It may be fruit sugar rather than sucrose, but it is still sugar. So thinking you are making something "low sugar" because you are using apple concentrate rather than cane/root sugar is not true.


 
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