And Hubby loves it three, he takes many, many bird photos from this window, much better photos than these.
My Mum was a tee-totaller, had taken "the pledge" at her Confirmation, and never drank when the pledge ran out (at age 18). However, in baking, she believed in adding lots of alcohol to fruit cakes, liberally soaking the Christmas cake in whatever she could lay her hands on! Her excuse was that it helped preserve the cake (but her cakes never lasted very long anyway, whatever we didn't wolf down would be eagerly eaten by the many visitors who called for a cuppa).
Anyway, I have adopted her philosophy, and liberally add alcohol to cakes and preserves, and I use her excuse too. You can decide for yourself.
PLUM CHUTNEY WITH WALNUTS AND HAZELNUT LIQUER
(The liquer is one I bought on a visit to Montserrat a few years ago, and I was just looking for an excuse to use it! The walnuts were added for my diabetic brother, to slow down sugar hit, but they work really well- turning it into a kind of confection).
600g Plums
1.75 Kg Apples,chopped in small pieces - either cooking or eating, if using cookers you'll need to increase the amount of sugar slightly
500g onions, chopped
225 g (or thereabouts, this was one packet here) raisins or sultanas
500ml vinegar (preferably cider vinegar)
1 teaspoon coriander seeds, crushed (see tip at end)
1 teaspoon ground ginger or finely chopped ginger root (see tip at end)
Half teaspoon salt
500g sugar (any kind)
125g walnuts, halved or chopped, your call (this was one packet here)
3 tablespoons (or you decide how much!) hazelnut liquer- or any other liquer that you fancy, play around with it, let me know how you get on!
The method is easy peasy - put everything except the walnuts and liquer in a saucepan and cook slowly for 2 or 3 hours. Add the walnuts , then cook for another hour. Add the liquer at the end, and stir in- you don't want the alcohol boiled off!
Notes: 1. I don't bother peeling the apples and the peel disappears in the mixture.
2. Instead of the coriander seeds or the ground ginger, you can use essential oils, but there are two cautions: you must be sure of the quality (one way is by making sure the Latin name is on the bottle,
Coriandrum Sativum is coriander and
Zingiber Officinalis is ginger, and
Myristica Fragrens is Nutmeg, Nutmeg features in the next post
Green Tomato Chutney with Vodka), and you must use only the amount stated; even though it seems very little, these oils are strong. You dissolve 2 drops of each in either a tablespoon of sugar or the hazelnut liquer (if using) and add it at the end of cooking, mix in well.
And these sad photos are the plums that I didn't get to pick. There really were soooo many and, well, there was Porto and Madrid...
some even rotted on the branches, which made me very sad...and that just teaches me that I can't have everything
Sorry I haven't been around this week- been sick.