
I've been immersed in jam cookbooks lately. Here are brief reviews of three.
Blue Ribbon Preserves
You can see where Blue Ribbon Preserves would be a conceit. As in, here is how to make preserves that are worthy of a blue ribbon, although, of course, you will not actually be entering them in a jam competition to win a blue ribbon.
There could be a cookbook out there with that conceit. But this is not it. This book is actually a guide on how to make jams that will — when you actually enter a jam competition — win a blue ribbon. There are long passages on exhibition rules, tips on how to label your jars, and an exploration of the Danish and American systems of scoring.
But there are also many, many good recipes and a lot of solid information on how to improve your jams. I can recommend this cookbook as a good supplement to the standby, the Ball Blue Book of Preserving.
Also, while author Linda J. Amendt is passionate about her jams and preserves, she does not appear to be insane. You will see why this is important in a moment.
The Jamlady Cookbook
Jamlady is crazy. How do we know that Jamlady is crazy? Jamlady refers to herself in the third person throughout The Jamlady Cookbook. Jamlady's full name is Beverly Ellen Schoonmaker Alfeld. So you can see why she does not refer to herself as Beverly Ellen Schoonmaker Alfeld in each recipe. But still.
Here are but a few examples of what I am talking about. (Notice my deft use of the first person.)
Jamlady has included this rhubarb-nutmeg recipe to illustrate rhubarb jam made with powdered pectin.
and
Jamlady has not fully investigated chestnut jams or chestnuts preserved in alcohol, as she cannot can chestnut jam in a RWB so that it can be sold at market and she has no liquor license to sell alcoholic products at market.
An RWB, for those of you unfamiliar with Jamlady's terminology, is a rolling water bath. It is what many of us would call boiling water. And again: Jamlady, for those of you unfamiliar with Jamlady's terminology, is Beverly Ellen Schoonmaker Alfeld.
Earlier, I stated that Jamlady is crazy. I need to revisit that. She may not be — she is probably not! — crazy. She's probably a very nice lady. (Jamlady, call me.) This book has so much good information and so many interesting recipes that I almost want to recommend it.
But it is extremely disconcerting to read a recipe — let alone an entire book — in which the writer refers to herself in the third person.
It's enough to make you lose your mind.
Take it from Fruit Slinger.
Mes Confitures
Though ordinarily I might hesitate to recommend a cookbook that I cannot pronounce, I enthusiastically recommend Christine Ferber's Mes Confitures. This is the book from which the strawberry-raspberry preserves with balsamic vinegar and black pepper were taken, and it's the book that inspired the black raspberry and wild strawberry with chocolate preserves that I made today.
This is probably not the first jam cookbook that you want to own, but it is a devastatingly beautiful and inspirational work.
If you're getting at all serious about jam-making or want something to which to aspire, you want this book on your shelf.
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This isn't really the sort of blog where I talk about the restaurants I go to.
However.
The other night my friend Sarah was in town. For dinner, we went to Carnivale.
The food was fantastic. The hospitality was unbeatable. It's been a long time since I'd eaten that well.
Beyond the commitment to sustainability and locally sourced ingredients, what struck me in nearly everything we ate was the olive oil.
It brought to mind standing at a public telephone in Seville, Spain. I was there with my mom. A few years before, I had spent my junior year in college there.
Being there in college changed me. One of the ways in which it changed me was introducing me to olive oil.
Now, a few years had gone by and I had brought my mom there.
It was raining a lot and my mom and I weren't seeing much of the city, unfortunately. I was at the public telephone because I was dialing directory assistance. I asked for the number of an olive oil factory in Baena, a town about 200km away. That's where my favorite olive oil was made. The name of the company was Nuñez de Prado. I got the phone number and when I was connected, I asked if they gave tours. Not really, I was told, but I was welcome to visit.
My mom and I showed up. We got a tour from Francisco Nuñez de Prado. It was great.
Somewhere in a photo album in a closet is a photograph of me standing in front of a stark white wall with the Nuñez de Prado sign over my shoulder. I'm grinning like an idiot.
It's the same look I had at Carnivale.
* * *
It is regrettably churlish to mention that you can still contribute to this blog's Kickstarter project — a Kickstarter project that is to my genuine surprise and utter delight overfunded. But there are only a few days left and so I am mentioning it one last time. What does an overfunded fruit blogger spend the money on? The same camera, actually. A macro lens. A flash.
Really, at this point, I'm not asking for money. But I'm telling you that if you wanted to contribute, there are only a few days left.