Rhubarb and Apricot Jam

Jam must contain a certain percentage of fruit and sugar in order to be called jam. In Canada for instance fruit jam must have at least 45% fruit. In the EU it’s 35% for jam and 45% for extra jam. So what’s the remaining 55% if it’s not fruit? In most cases it’s a gelling agent (pectin), an acidifying agent (citric acid), a preservative (potassium sorbate) and sugar. Lot’s of sugar! For instance Waitrose’s Essential Strawberry Jam contains (per 100 grams) 63 grams of sugar and it’s made with 45 grams of strawberries. See picture.

If the combination contains less sugar, then it’s no longer jam. Fior di Frutta (as produced by Rigoni di Asiago) uses organic fruit, apple juice and natural pectin to make a fruit spread. Their strawberry not-jam is made with 60% strawberries and contains 36 grams of sugar per 100 grams. The sugar is not added, it’s natural sugar (strawberries and apples). A very tasty and huge improvement, but we can do better by making our own. The trick is not to make too much, store it in the refrigerator and enjoy within a few days.

What You Need
  • 4 Apricots
  • 1 small Orange
  • 2 Rhubarb Stalks
  • 1 tablespoon of Sugar (or less)
What You Do
  1. Wash and dry the apricots and the rhubarb
  2. Slice the rhubarb (0,5 cm or 0.2 in)
  3. Remove the stone of the apricots and cut the apricot in small pieces
  4. Add orange juice to the pan
  5. Add apricot and rhubarb
  6. Heat until boiling, reduce heat
  7. Close the lid and leave for 5-10 minutes
  8. Check if the rhubarb is soft
  9. Pulse once or twice with a blender to smoothen some of the mixture
  10. Add sugar
  11. Mix well
  12. Taste and adjust if necessary
  13. Transfer to 2 very clean jars (2*250 grams)
  14. Close the jars and transfer to a bassin with cold water
  15. Will keep well for a limited time in the refrigerator
PS

Combining rhubarb with strawberries is also a great idea!

Rhubarb and Strawberry Crumble

The combination of rhubarb and strawberry is delicious. It’s sweet, sour, tangy and tart with a touch of bitterness. The seasons of rhubarb and strawberries overlap for only a few weeks (late spring, early summer) so don’t wait too long if you want to make jam or this dessert.
The crumble brings warmth and depth to the dessert, thanks to the use of allspice, cinnamon and nutmeg. Filling and crumble are complementary with regard to texture, flavour and aroma.

What You Need
  • Filling
    • 4 stalks of Rhubarb
    • 400 grams of Strawberries
    • 1 tablespoon of Lemon Juice
    • 2 teaspoons of White Sugar
  • Crumble
    • 40 grams of Unsalted Butter
    • 40 grams of Light Brown Sugar
    • 30 grams of All Purpose Flour
    • 70 grams of Almond Flour
    • 1/2 teaspoon of Cinnamon
    • dash of Nutmeg
    • 3 finely ground Allspice berries
What You Do
  1. Pre-heat your oven to 180 °C or 355 °F (traditional)
  2. Wash and dry the rhubarb and the strawberries
  3. Slice the rhubarb in 1 cm (0,4 in) slices
  4. Slice smaller strawberries lengthwise in 4, bigger ones in 6
  5. Combine sugar, flour, almond flour, cinnamon, nutmeg and allspice
  6. Cut the butter in small cubes
  7. Use your hands to combine butter and the mixture until you have a crumbly dough
  8. Combine rhubarb, strawberries, lemon juice and sugar
  9. Add the fruit mixture to a ceramic oval oven dish
  10. Top with the crumble
  11. Transfer to the oven for 25 minutes
  12. The crumble is ready when the colour is golden brown and the fruit is bubbly around the edges
  13. If the fruit needs more time, reduce the heat to 150 °C or 300 °F
  14. Serve at room temperature with a scoop of vanilla ice cream
PS

As many other we thought allspice should be spelled ‘all spice’ and that it is a mixture of various spices. It isn’t. Allspice is the lightly fermented and dried unripe berry of a tree called Pimenta Dioica. Best to buy berries and ground these in a mortar.
A few days later we added ground allspice to a beetroot salad. A winner!

Rhubarb and Strawberry Crumble ©cadwu with allspice, nutmeg and cinnamon
Rhubarb and Strawberry Crumble ©cadwu