News5 mins ago
jelly with raspberries
7 Answers
My wife has problems when she makes a jelly as per the packet instructions, half a pint of boiling water poured over the broken up jelly cubes, still till disolved and add just under a half a pint of cold water. she then adds a few raspberiies to set with in the jelly. The problem is it never seems to set properly. with out adding the raspberries it sets perfectly. Would any person out there be able to advise on solution. Thanks in advance. Dave.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by dave_trigg. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Perhaps the instructions on the Institute of Food Research's website will help?
http://www.ifr.ac.uk/...ision/jellyfacts.html
Chris
http://www.ifr.ac.uk/...ision/jellyfacts.html
Chris
Hi Dave, the problem is two fold
1.All fruit contains acid, the acid in the raspberries breaks down the gelatine that sets the Jelly.
2. by adding fruit you increase the volume to more than 1/2 pint.
You need to do 1 of two things and a few more cubes of jelly or add less water.
Also shop around and look for jelly crystles in stead of cubes it tends to be a better product.
Just a bit of trivia, geletine is generaly made from pigs troters and savoury jelly (like inside pork pies) is called aspic.
Hope that helps
Chris
1.All fruit contains acid, the acid in the raspberries breaks down the gelatine that sets the Jelly.
2. by adding fruit you increase the volume to more than 1/2 pint.
You need to do 1 of two things and a few more cubes of jelly or add less water.
Also shop around and look for jelly crystles in stead of cubes it tends to be a better product.
Just a bit of trivia, geletine is generaly made from pigs troters and savoury jelly (like inside pork pies) is called aspic.
Hope that helps
Chris