it was a dark and windy night, soon after the horizon overtakes the sun and the sky becomes gloomy with defeat. a lone fox sat underneath the apple tree. teeth shining from behind curled canine lips, head bobbing, bits of apple flesh released, falling to the ground.
a glass of wine in hand, a basket of plums on the counter. a can jam deadline looming. she lifted the glass to her lips, the movement of his jaw was hypnotizing and her eyes grew heavy.
the sky deepened until the only thing left was the glint of moving teeth. in seconds that too faded. her cue. she swirled the last sip of wine and stood up, chair scraping, to the sound of wood on wood.
plum noir jam
4 pounds dark plums3 bay leaves
10 black peppercorns
4 green cardamon pods
1/2 teaspoon fennel seeds
1/2 cup water
juice of one lemon
5 cups sugar
pint, 1/2 pint, or smaller mason jars
yield: approximately 4 pints
1. prepare jars and lids for hot water bath canning. let the unfilled jars boil for 10 minutes to sterilize. put 2 or 3 small plates in the freezer for testing set later.
2. pit and chop plums, place them in a non-reactive pot with 1/2 cup of water and lemon juice. heat on low, covered, until the skins soften all the way through - about 15 minutes. heating plums before the sugar is added will ensure soft skins and will aid against fruit floating in the finished jars.
3. as the plums are softening in the pot prepare the spices. break open the cardamom pods and take out the black seeds, discard the green shells. powder the cardamom seeds, peppercorns and fennel seeds in mortar & pestle. i cannot stress enough how important it is to buy whole spices and powder only when needed, they last so much longer and taste so much stronger.
4. when the plums have softened keep the heat on low and add the ground spices, bay leaves (please make sure they are not old and you can actually smell the sweet spice of bay - otherwise you might as well add a couple of post-it sheets) and the sugar. keep the heat on low until the sugar dissolves and then turn up the heat and bring to the boil.
5. boil until sufficient set is reached - about 15 minutes. to test the set add one teaspoon to a frozen plate and place plate in freezer for 30 seconds. slide your finger through the jam and if it wrinkles underneath even slightly the jam is set.
6. fill hot jars and hot water bath process for 5 minutes.
tigress' can jam september: stone fruit - success!
i love a good plum jam, even straight up it's always full of flavor. it's the perfect beginning jammer's fruit - you can hardly go wrong with the set. the warming spice adds a definite serious note. and even though i'll never say no to jam for breakfast, i imagine this as the perfect accompaniment to a soft cheese plate just after dinner.
learning: making jam is the perfect thing to do on a dark and windy night.
How very chic to work in monochrome. But of course, I would expect nothing less from you Tigress. Plum jam round your lips and sticky spoon in hand is the perfect way to land back into reality. And more yummy jam for the pantry - win win! Love it.
ReplyDeleteOoh, this jam is down right sexy. I'll definitely be trying this one on for a fall evening. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteOh my gosh this sounds FABULOUS!! Just want to say thanks for putting all these WONDERFUL things together. I am soooo glad to have found you!!
ReplyDeleteLove this artsy foray. Plum with cardamom is the jam. It was my second try at canning--and when it clicked "this is easy and awesome."
ReplyDeleteGorgeous! I can't wait for the round-up!
ReplyDeleteI can now see the bright side of a serious finger cut that brought my canning to a grinding halt - the can jam will show me wonderful new ideas for the 25 lbs of plums waiting in my freezer. This looks awesome!
ReplyDeleteI saw this and immediately thought it was plum and pinot noir and got very excited. I see that this isn't that, but I now have a new idea... just need to track down some affordable plums!
ReplyDeleteThat looks seriously amazing. I have to find some plums right now!
ReplyDeleteI have some plums and toyed with jamming them, but got skeered. Till now. This sounds fabulous!
ReplyDeleteI guess it's not very noir of me to say: OMG, that's beautiful and inspired! I love the peppercorns, bay and fennel. Lush.
ReplyDeleteLooks delish, but like Zaydia I also thought plum/Pinot when I read this. Maybe some experimentation is in order. . .
ReplyDeleteMade this tonight. Wow. I was a little worried when I measured out the fennel that the anise flavor would be too strong, but it just adds a little something in the background. Beautiful!
ReplyDeleteLove this post! Hope you weren't caught up in the NYC tornado....
ReplyDeletezadia & hippieingeeksclothing - i actually thought of that too when i was writing this. definitely worth looking into! what can go wrong with fruit & booze? i pickled pears with shiraz (and vinegar) last year and they were quite delicious!
ReplyDeletebrooke in oregon - welcome!
anonymous - so glad you made it! the fennel is lovely isn't it?
mom - i'm safely up in the berkshires right now, thanks!
everyone - make plum jam! :)
Those black and white pics look nice, but that last color picture is marvelous! What a beautiful jam!
ReplyDeleteAfter a summer where anything with limbs and leaves denied me fruit, I have a few plum trees honoring me with a pound or two of sweet gems. So into the pot they go, thanks to this fine recipe. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteI'm late to the September canjam dance! But it did allow me to peruse some delish recipes (including your's!_ and call it out in my post. http://www.canningwithkids.com/blog/2010/10/brandied-peach-preserves.html
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to october!
Just made 2 batches with last of the wild plums from the farmers market. It is deep dark and delicious...thanks for that recipe!
ReplyDeleteI had a literal handful of almost too shriveled plums chillin in my fridge and as soon as this recipe popped up, it was STUCK in my head. My tiny half pound batch, making 1/2 pint and a few tablespoons, is incredible. It's making me want to go out and grab more plums! I looooove a unique jam and this fits the bill. Imagining it on meats, as sauces, and just straight on bread. Yum.
ReplyDeleteI made a plum wine out of my plums this year!
ReplyDeletethe big red 67 - sounds delicious!
ReplyDelete