I want to make more jam to eat and use for holiday gifts.
Since some of my jam may be gifts, I’m on the hunt for something a bit
different from the traditional jam recipe. The
Columbus Dispatch’s Raspberry Pinot Noir jam recipe was a good candidate, especially as gifts for foodie friends.
Then I bought the wrong wine. That will teach me to double
check the ingredients before I make
my grocery shopping list, not after.
No big deal. I tweaked the recipe and made Raspberry Moscato
Jam.
I think the sweeter wine works well if not better with the raspberries than the Pino Noir.
If you follow me on Instagram @condoblues you might have seen this photo already
Raspberry Moscato Jam
Makes approximately six 8-ounce jars of jam
Ingredients
3 cups (24 ounces) of raspberries
3 cups sugar
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 bottle of Moscato wine
1 packet of dry pectin
Make it
1. Stir the sugar, lemon juice, and Moscato together in a
pot on the stove over low heat until the sugar dissolves and the mixture begins
to boil.
2. Remove the mixture from the stove and let it cool.
3. Add the whole raspberries to the mixture and allow the
fruit to marinate in the refrigerator for at least 24 hours or longer.
4. Mash the pectin into the mixture with a potato masher
over medium heat on the stove until the jam boils for approximately 15 minutes
or longer if you want thicker jam.
Raspberry Moscato
Freezer Jam Method
1. Ladle the jam into clean sterilized jars. Leave
approximately ¼ inch of room from the filling to the lid of the jar.
2. Wipe any excess jam from the outside of the jar. Cap the
jar with the lid to fingertip tight.
3. Allow the jam to sit at room temperature for 24 hours.
4. After 24 hours, place the jars in the freezer.
Raspberry Moscato
Canning Jam Method
1. Ladle the jam into clean sterilized jars. Leave
approximately ¼ inch of room from the filling to the lid of the jar.
2. Wipe any excess jam from the outside of the jar. Cap the
jar with the lid to fingertip tight.
3. Place the jars in a stockpot or canning pot full of
boiling water. Make sure the water covers the top of jars by at least 1 inch.
5. Remove the jars from the water bath. Hold your breath
until you hear the lids seal with a pop!
The alcohol in the wine boils out of the jam but if it is a
concern, mark the jar for grown ups only!
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Comments
Thanks so much for sharing this at The DIY Dreamer... From Dream to Reality!
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