5 Ingredients or Fewer

Fresh Fig and Strawberry Jam

August 30, 2009
4
4 Ratings
  • Makes 4 1/2 pint jars
Author Notes

It's all in the ingredients, isn't it? In Middle Tennessee we get small sweet Brown Sugar Strawberries and they work beautifully in jam. Combine them with fresh figs, Harvey's Bristol Cream and orange zest and you have a jam that, well, rocks! —Feeding Groom

What You'll Need
Ingredients
  • 1 pound fresh green figs, stemmed and cut up
  • 2 cups quartered strawberries
  • 2 cups vanilla sugar
  • 3 tablespoons Harvey's Bristol Cream
  • grated zest of one Valencia orange
Directions
  1. Place figs, strawberries, vanilla sugar and Harvey’s in medium stainless steel or enamel saucepan. Cover and let stand for 1 hour stirring occasionally.
  2. Bring to a boil over high heat, reduce heat to medium and boil rapidly, uncovered until mixture will form a gel about 15 minutes, stirring frequently. Remove from the heat.
  3. Use the freezer test to see if it’s gelling. Put a couple of small plates in freezer. After 15 minutes, put a spoonful of the jam on plate and return to freezer for two minutes. (take jam off the heat while you wait so it doesn’t overcook.) Then take the plate out and rotate it. The jam should move slowly as you rotate it. If it throws itself off the plate onto the floor, keep cooking and try again in five minutes with the other plate. You’ll get a feel for this.
  4. To prepare the jars, fill a large stockpot with enough water to cover the jars and place the jars in the water. Start heating over medium. About 10 minutes before you’re ready to fill the jars, put the tops in. Fill the jars, leave about a half inch from the top for airspace, wipe the rim and side so the jars will seal well. Put the filled jars back in the hot water. Place the pot over high heat, cover and bring to a rocking full boil. Once it boils, set timer for 10 minutes. At the end of 10 minutes, turn off heat, take off top and leave jars in water for five minutes. Then lift out and place on heat safe surface. I put mine on a kitchen towel on a cake rack out of the way. Don’t touch or dry jars for 12-24 hours. Be sure all are sealed. (You’ll hear them pop and when you punch the tops they don’t make a sound. If they don’t seal for any reason, refrigerate them.
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