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Sloe cheese? Ping Nick Maclaren & Mary Fisher
There was a thread a month or two ago about sloes. Nick and Mary both
mentioned making a delicious sloe cheese. Would you mind sharing your recipes please? Now we've had our first frost, I've spent hours today picking sloes and have 11 pounds to play with, so I'm experimenting making sloe jelly and sloe gin (I've found good recipes for those via Google) but the cheese seems to be a bit more of a mystery? Interesting that some of the ripe, wrinkly, sloes aren't bitter at all now but others turn my mouth inside-out. -- David in Normandy. (The free MicroPlanet Gravity newsreader is great for eliminating rubbish and cross-posts) |
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Sloe cheese? Ping Nick Maclaren & Mary Fisher
In article , David in Normandy writes: | | There was a thread a month or two ago about sloes. Nick and Mary both | mentioned making a delicious sloe cheese. Would you mind sharing your | recipes please? Mabey "Jams, jellies and chutneys". Or several old cookery books. The summary is to make a not-very-sweet jam (I would recommend half apple and half sloe), by cooking and sieving the fruit. When it is close to jam, put it in a shallow tray in a cool oven and dry it out, stirring regularly. When approaching solidity, put it into another, oiled, tray. When cool, cut it up and possibly dry it further. | Interesting that some of the ripe, wrinkly, sloes aren't bitter at all | now but others turn my mouth inside-out. Yes. I don't know why. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
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Sloe cheese? Ping Nick Maclaren & Mary Fisher
"David in Normandy" wrote in message ... There was a thread a month or two ago about sloes. Nick and Mary both mentioned making a delicious sloe cheese. Would you mind sharing your recipes please? Now we've had our first frost, I've spent hours today picking sloes and have 11 pounds to play with, so I'm experimenting making sloe jelly and sloe gin (I've found good recipes for those via Google) but the cheese seems to be a bit more of a mystery? Interesting that some of the ripe, wrinkly, sloes aren't bitter at all now but others turn my mouth inside-out. -- Here's my grandparent's recipe that made their SG a sought after present. Put one cup of pricked sloes and one cup of sugar in a gin bottle and fill the bottle with gin. Briefly invert the bottles every day until the sugar has dissolved and leave for several months before drinking (at least 4, preferably 9+). Their cup was whatever was handy but I think a standard 250ml cup would be about right. Graham |
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Sloe cheese? Ping Nick Maclaren & Mary Fisher
"graham" wrote in message news:hM4Ti.113426$th2.63987@pd7urf3no... "David in Normandy" wrote in message ... There was a thread a month or two ago about sloes. Nick and Mary both mentioned making a delicious sloe cheese. Would you mind sharing your recipes please? Now we've had our first frost, I've spent hours today picking sloes and have 11 pounds to play with, so I'm experimenting making sloe jelly and sloe gin (I've found good recipes for those via Google) but the cheese seems to be a bit more of a mystery? Interesting that some of the ripe, wrinkly, sloes aren't bitter at all now but others turn my mouth inside-out. -- Here's my grandparent's recipe that made their SG a sought after present. Put one cup of pricked sloes and one cup of sugar in a gin bottle and fill the bottle with gin. Briefly invert the bottles every day until the sugar has dissolved and leave for several months before drinking (at least 4, preferably 9+). Their cup was whatever was handy but I think a standard 250ml cup would be about right. Graham Why not try vodka and/or brandy as well. Graham |
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Sloe cheese? Ping Nick Maclaren & Mary Fisher
In article , Nick Maclaren says...
In article , David in Normandy writes: | | There was a thread a month or two ago about sloes. Nick and Mary both | mentioned making a delicious sloe cheese. Would you mind sharing your | recipes please? Mabey "Jams, jellies and chutneys". Or several old cookery books. The summary is to make a not-very-sweet jam (I would recommend half apple and half sloe), by cooking and sieving the fruit. When it is close to jam, put it in a shallow tray in a cool oven and dry it out, stirring regularly. When approaching solidity, put it into another, oiled, tray. When cool, cut it up and possibly dry it further. | Interesting that some of the ripe, wrinkly, sloes aren't bitter at all | now but others turn my mouth inside-out. Yes. I don't know why. Regards, Nick Maclaren. Thanks Nick. -- David in Normandy. (The free MicroPlanet Gravity newsreader is great for eliminating rubbish and cross-posts) |
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Sloe cheese? Ping Nick Maclaren & Mary Fisher
In article mN4Ti.113401$Da.27521@pd7urf1no, graham says...
"graham" wrote in message news:hM4Ti.113426$th2.63987@pd7urf3no... "David in Normandy" wrote in message ... There was a thread a month or two ago about sloes. Nick and Mary both mentioned making a delicious sloe cheese. Would you mind sharing your recipes please? Now we've had our first frost, I've spent hours today picking sloes and have 11 pounds to play with, so I'm experimenting making sloe jelly and sloe gin (I've found good recipes for those via Google) but the cheese seems to be a bit more of a mystery? Interesting that some of the ripe, wrinkly, sloes aren't bitter at all now but others turn my mouth inside-out. -- Here's my grandparent's recipe that made their SG a sought after present. Put one cup of pricked sloes and one cup of sugar in a gin bottle and fill the bottle with gin. Briefly invert the bottles every day until the sugar has dissolved and leave for several months before drinking (at least 4, preferably 9+). Their cup was whatever was handy but I think a standard 250ml cup would be about right. Graham Why not try vodka and/or brandy as well. Graham Yes, good idea, I've plenty of sloes to experiment with. -- David in Normandy. (The free MicroPlanet Gravity newsreader is great for eliminating rubbish and cross-posts) |
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Quote:
Somewhere I saw a suggestion that one could make fruit cheese from what is left after liquid had dripped out during the jelly making process. Not tried it though. |
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Sloe cheese? Ping Nick Maclaren & Mary Fisher
Granity writes
Presumably the wrinkly ones being sweet is a form of noble rot, which makes grapes very sweet? Or they are simply more mature and with higher sugar levels? -- Kay |
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Sloe cheese? Ping Nick Maclaren & Mary Fisher
In article , K writes: | Granity writes | | Presumably the wrinkly ones being sweet is a form of noble rot, which | makes grapes very sweet? | | Or they are simply more mature and with higher sugar levels? Nope. Sloes are not even particularly sour at any stage; the mouth- wrinkling effect is something like a tannin. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
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Sloe cheese? Ping Nick Maclaren & Mary Fisher
On Oct 24, 12:39 pm, (Nick Maclaren) wrote:
In article ,K writes: | Granity writes | | Presumably the wrinkly ones being sweet is a form of noble rot, which | makes grapes very sweet? | | Or they are simply more mature and with higher sugar levels? Nope. Sloes are not even particularly sour at any stage; the mouth- wrinkling effect is something like a tannin. Regards, Nick Maclaren. I presume it's the same transformation as applies to khakis. Those taht grow in S France's gardens are too astringent to come anywhere near until the frost has worked its magic on their chemical structure. I presume enzymes and all sorts of other magical stuff are involved. The flesh turns from firm to gloopy, from golden yellow to a deep deep amber orange and from frightfully astringent (turn mouth- inside-out effect) to velvety sweet and gorgeous. I don't ask questions, then, I just scoff with a spoon :-) Cat(h) |
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Sloe cheese? Ping Nick Maclaren & Mary Fisher
In article . com, "Cat(h)" writes: | | Nope. Sloes are not even particularly sour at any stage; the mouth- | wrinkling effect is something like a tannin. | | I presume it's the same transformation as applies to khakis. ... Could be. The astringency of sloes and persimmons tastes very similar to me. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
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Sloe cheese? Ping Nick Maclaren & Mary Fisher
On Oct 24, 12:39 pm, (Nick Maclaren) wrote: In article ,K writes: | Granity writes | | Presumably the wrinkly ones being sweet is a form of noble rot, which | makes grapes very sweet? | | Or they are simply more mature and with higher sugar levels? Nope. Sloes are not even particularly sour at any stage; the mouth- wrinkling effect is something like a tannin. Must have missed something - I thought it was the sloes being wrinkly not the mouth -- Kay |
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Sloe cheese? Ping Nick Maclaren & Mary Fisher
In article , K writes: | | | Presumably the wrinkly ones being sweet is a form of noble rot, which | | makes grapes very sweet? | | | | Or they are simply more mature and with higher sugar levels? | | Nope. Sloes are not even particularly sour at any stage; the mouth- | wrinkling effect is something like a tannin. | | Must have missed something - I thought it was the sloes being wrinkly | not the mouth You need more raw sloes in your diet - fresh fruit is good for you :-) Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#14
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Sloe cheese? Ping Nick Maclaren & Mary Fisher
"Nick Maclaren" wrote in message ... In article , David in Normandy writes: | | There was a thread a month or two ago about sloes. Nick and Mary both | mentioned making a delicious sloe cheese. Would you mind sharing your | recipes please? I've been in deepest Wales for over a week, which is why I haven't replied to this. I use the same weight of sugar as fruit but would never put apple in with sloe, I want the full flavour! Nor do I sieve the fruit, we like the texture of skin. I leave fruit and sugar in a LARGE pan overnight then very slowly heat the pan, with the lid on, stirring occasionally. Juice will flow from the fruit and pips released. I pick off the pips as they rise to the surface. A faff? Yes, but I don't mind. I suck them before putting them on a plate :-) Cook the mixture gently until it begins to leave the sides of the pan, this can be a long time if you have a lot of mixture. Leave it to cool in the pan. If, by next day, it's as solid as you wanted heat it gently and pour it into whatever mould you want. I don't bother oiling the mould, I've never had a problem turning out the cheese but usually do it in many small moulds. If I run out of small ones I put it in a larger one and cut it into squares when it's cold, then wrap each one in Clingfilm. The idea of contaminating the beautiful cheese with oil is anathema, if you don't have confidence that it will release from the mould use butter. NOT 'spread'! But all that's just my method, others have their own favourites. Sloe, bullace, damson or even plum cheeses in small moulds make lovely and acceptable unusual presents. Mary |
#15
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Sloe cheese? Ping Nick Maclaren & Mary Fisher
In article , "Mary Fisher" writes: | | I use the same weight of sugar as fruit but would never put apple in with | sloe, I want the full flavour! Gosh, someone who out-Maclarens me :-) | Nor do I sieve the fruit, we like the texture of skin. | | I leave fruit and sugar in a LARGE pan overnight then very slowly heat the | pan, with the lid on, stirring occasionally. Juice will flow from the fruit | and pips released. I pick off the pips as they rise to the surface. A faff? | Yes, but I don't mind. I suck them before putting them on a plate :-) I sieve the fruit as the easiest way to get rid of the stones; as I rub the fruit through the sieve, most of the skin gets through (in very small pieces). Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
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