O–Toro OAC Ruby Gold Potatoes Oak Lettuce Oak Root Fungus Oat Bran Oat Flakes Oat Flour Oat Groats Oat Milk Oat Sprout Milk Oat Sprouts Oatmeal -- Brose Oats Oats -- Instant Oats -- Quick Oats -- Rolled Oats -- Steel-Cut Oats --Groats Oaxaca Cheese Obelix Potatoes Oca Occitane -- À la Ocean Clams Ocean Sunfish Oceania Potatoes Oceanic Bonito Ochlockonee Blueberries Ochro Octavia Potatoes October Beans Octopus Octopus Salad Oden Odika Odori Ebi Previous | Next | Jelly© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedJelly is a sweet preserve made from fruit. It differs from jam in that jellies are clear with no fruit pieces in them. Jelly needs to be clear, and firm, firm enough to hold its shape when cut, without being so firm that it won't wobble. Good Jelly can be made from high pectin fruits such as apples, blackberries, crabapples, cranberries, gooseberries, grapes, plums, red currants, and quinces. Jelly is also a good use for problematic fruits such as mulberries, whose stems are very hard to remove: juice the berries, and strain out the stems and fruit. Mulberries, however, are very low in pectin and will need a lot of added pectin. The problem with adding a lot of pectin to a jelly is that it can dilute the fruit taste. Cooking Tips Also called: Gelée (French); Gelee, Sulz (German); Gelatina (Spanish); Gelea (Portuguese)
Other entries for:JellyBar-Le-Duc Jelly, Cane Jelly, Konnyaku Jelly, Maple Jelly, Pea Jelly, Quince Paste Other entries for:PreservesJams, Mostarda di Cremona, Olives, Pickles |
|

