Archive for December 3rd, 2015

Pineapple Guava jam

Thursday, December 3rd, 2015

My house has several cool things around it. One is the blueberry trees I’ve mentioned before. I’ve had those berries on my cereal, or in yogurt, and even made jam and gave it away because there were so many of them. Nice to have them, but it’s even nice to share them.

We also have a tree that grows this strange little fruit that we didn’t recognise. One of our neighbors told us one day the tree is a pineapple guava tree and the fruit was good for eating.

Well, we tried to eat the fruit. There’s a ton of stuff out there, but just because it’s edible doesn’t mean I want to eat it. This fell into that category for me, too.

Until the same neighbor recommended I try making jam with the fruit.

It does take a considerable amount of time, but the steps are very simple.

Cut them fruit in half, spoon out the fruit into a pan. Heat the pan for about 30 to 40 minutes on medium heat (don’t add water – but stir constantly).

The next step was to put it into the blender. I tried this once just using my hand mixer, but it didn’t make the fruit smooth enough. This time, I went all in and used the blender. It’s very heavy, so you have to be careful not to overload the blender, but it worked great.

Back in the pan, add a teaspoon of lemon juice, a tablespoon or so of cinnamon, and one cup of sugar for each 2 cups of fruit. (some recipes I saw called for lots more than this, but this was great for me).

Keep stirring for 30 minutes on medium heat.

Take it out, let it cool, then refrigerate it – eat it soon, on toast. There are no preservatives so it won’t keep long and even a couple dozen fruits only makes a couple of cups of jam, so if you’re going to eat it, just refrigerate it. If you want to keep it longer, make smaller portions and freeze it.

The consistency and taste are unique. Maybe it’s like a mixture between a crisp apple and a pear?

Definitely better than just tossing them away again and again and again. 😉

Here are a few photos of the process and the results: