Hey! I know this stuff! My brother lived in Groningen for a couple of years and I had it when I visited. My girlfriend who doesn’t like mustard even liked it. We liked it so much that we’ve occasionally made it ourselves. I prefer it with onions more than the leeks.
It looks good! Thanks for sharing! I’m still trying to wrap my head around what this would taste like. Like I’m picturing creamy bacony oniony but with some horseradish notes.
I saw the original thread and was wondering if it used prepared mustard or dry mustard - I had guessed dry. I was also guessing there would be cheese in or on it. Wrong on both counts.
I’d probably squeeze the juice and freeze it. Then use the skins for chimia (a type of jelly - see further info below*). Here’s the recipe:
3 cups of grape skins. Don’t include seeds, they get bitter.
2 cups of water.
1/2 cup of sugar.
1/2 cup of lemon or lime juice.
Cook the skins in the water. Let it boil for ten minutes or so, on low fire, then drain the excess water.
Add sugar and lime juice. Keep cooking it on low fire and stirring it. The skins should fall apart on their own and thicken the jelly, but if you want use a blender to speed up the process. Keep in mind that the final result will be thicker when cold, so don’t cook it too thick.
That’s it. If preserving it put it inside pots while still boiling hot, and they should outlast the thermal death of the Universe.
*further info: @FuglyDuck mentioned that the distinction between jam and jelly depends on the country for English speakers. Well… when you speak Portuguese it varies regionally in Brazil (and likely in Portugal, too), and it might have one to three categories. I grew up with three:
geléia or geleia - jelly made with whole fruits, either heavy on pectin by themselves or with added pectin (e.g. from the white part of lemons). It sets hard, with a gelatinous consistency.
doce - the word means literally “sweet”, and it’s used for stuff like dulce de leche (doce de leite) or desserts, but when it comes to fruits it’s usually “jam”. No pectin added, so it’s usually runnier
chimia - at least I see it as a type of geléia/jelly, but a lot of people see it as a third thing, aside from the other two. It’s traditionally made with pomace, as a way to reuse leftover skins from wine production; because otherwise the drunkards would make graspa aka bagaceira (grape pomace spirit) out of it.
That’s basically as far north as Paraná though. Norther than that (São Paulo) and people don’t use the word “chimia”; go further north and they take “geléia” and “doce de frutas” as synonymous.
Chimia sounds really interesting. I’ve never heard of it before. Thanks for the recipe!
Very interesting about the different types of jellies and jams. I knew about the whole jelly/gelatin thing (I’m from the US so I don’t refer to gelatin as jelly).
that sounds delicious. gonna have to give a go the next time I have too many grapes. Usually I go with blackberry jam boil the black berries until they’re easily mashed, mash through a fine strainer to get rid of the seeds, then add sugar, a little lemon zest, some cinnamon. some conrstarch. add some water to help things mix, and reduce to the right consistency.
It, ah, also makes an awesome topping for vanilla ice cream, if you add some whole berries back in while it’s reducing.
I’m a bit biased because I grew up with this sort of stuff, but I think that it is delicious. Just don’t skip the first step (boiling then straining the water), specially with darker grape varieties, otherwise the tannins get a bit too strong.
It, ah, also makes an awesome topping for vanilla ice cream, if you add some whole berries back in while it’s reducing.
That’s an amazing idea. And I think that blackberries are in season now here (it’s usually late Feb, early March in the S. Hemisphere), might be worth checking the neighbourhood for some.
This is a nice way of using the leftovers from making blackberry jam. We get about a gallon of blackberries from our back yard each year. I’m gonna give this a whirl.
Although it was too long ago to remember, I did make a rhubarb and grape pie. With cinnamon, butter, flour, and sugar. I mixed the fruit, flour, cinnamon, butter, sugar in a bowl. Filled a pie shell, and baked for about 45 minutes.
The only things I can remember from all the pies I made from that time is I liked every single one of them, and the grapes, I sliced in half before using them.
I forget what it's called right now, but the 3.5 cup KitchenAid food processor gets a lot of use here. I generally don't like to use food processors just because they're so loud, but this one isn't too bad. It's quick! But it is small, so it has limited uses.
I would get that plus a cheap immersion blender. That'll cover basically all of your needs for what you're talking about.
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