This year we had loads of wild blackberries, AKA brambles, growing wild in the green spaces around where we live, so we grabbed a couple of bags and went foraging in the hedgerows while the sun was out. We ended up with so many I simply washed them and froze them in weighed batches for future use, and this was one such occasion.
Jam is something I always remember my Gran and Mum making, because Grandad and Dad both had allotments and there were plenty of places to go foraging as well. Jams and chutneys are a traditional way of preserving fruit and veg for those lean months of winter when not a lot grows above ground, and simply spread on some buttered toast is my favourite way to eat it. However it also works brilliantly as a filling for a sponge cake or for jam tarts, which mum also made lots of to use up any of last year’s jams before she started making the new batch.
Blackberries are typically in season from mid-August, but tradition states that you should never pick them after Michaelmas – 29th September. The story goes that on that date, the archangel Michael fought and defeated Lucifer and banished him from heaven. The devil (he lost his angelic name at this point) landed in a thorny blackberry bush and was so angry he spat on the bush and cursed its fruit. While many neo-pagans don’t follow a path that involves Lucifer/the devil, those on a more Traditional path might well incorporate such festivities, and I believe it’s no coincidence that this date, so important to medieval society, coincides with both the autumn equinox and the fruit harvest.
I didn’t make as much as this recipe suggests, simply because I didn’t have enough jam jars, so if you need to halve the amounts, I can verify it is easy to do. This recipe originally came from the BBC Good Food website.
Blackberry Jam
Ingredients
- 1.8 kg blackberries
- 1.5 kg jam sugar
- 1 lemon juice and pips
- Fingertip size knob butter (optional)
Instructions
- The night before, layer the blackberries and sugar in a big bowl, then cover it and set it aside at room temperature. This allows the sugar to start dissolving in the fruit juices and gives you a head start so you don’t overcook the fruit or burn everything. When you’re ready to start making your jam, just give everything a stir before you start.
- Take a saucer or small plate and place it in your freezer to cool. Grab your preserving pan or your largest wide-based pan and tip in the blackberries and sugar, making sure to scrape out all the sugary juices. Stir in the lemon juice and then collect all the pips, which contain more pectin, and secure them in a muslin square or a tea-leaf ball and add them to the pan.
- Over a low heat, gently warm the blackberries until all the jam is completely dissolved, then bring the pan to the boil and simmer for 5 minutes. Remove the pan from the heat and spoon a little hot syrupy jam onto your chilled saucer. Give it a minute or two to cool, then push it with your finger. If it wrinkles a bit it has reached its setting point and it’s ready; if not, put the saucer back in the freezer and the pan back onto the heat and boil the jam for 2-3 minutes then remove from the heat and try again.
- Skim off any excess scum that will have formed and stir in the knob of butter to dissolve any that remains. Leave the jam in the pan for 15 minutes before ladling into sterilised jars; this pause allows the fruit to settle in the jam and prevents it from sinking to the bottom. Carefully wipe the necks of the jars and fit the lids or seal with a circle of waxed paper and a fabric square tied on with string. The jam will keep in a cool dark place for at least six months, and should be refrigerated once opened.