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Beautiful, Bountiful BerriesPreserve summer’s finest for year-round pleasure Spark your winter salad with a tangy raspberry vinegar Savor one of summer’s sublime pleasures all year long with a dash of forethought and a pinch of preparation. Just a few simple steps will preserve some of this season’s jeweled treats to brighten your wintertime meals. Freeze your findsFreezing berries is a surefire way to preserve the integrity and nutritional content of fruit. For blackberries, boysenberries, marionberries, loganberries, and raspberries, rinse fruit and drain. Blot them dry on dishtowels and freeze loosely on cookie sheets so they don’t clump together. Then seal in airtight freezer bags or containers. Blueberries and huckleberries have to be treated a little differently. Rinse and drain them but then tenderize the skins by steaming them for 1 minute before sinking them into cool water. Freeze them as above. For strawberries: rinse, drain, and remove hulls. Leave them whole or slice them so they are ready to add to hot cereals, muffins, and so on. Turn berries into savory or sweet condimentsDrizzle blueberry syrup on pancakes and waffles or spark your winter salad with a tangy raspberry vinegar.
Discover the art of canning: jams and jelliesA simple combination of fresh berries, pectin, sugar, lemon juice, and water will yield sweet jams and jellies any time of year. “Use firm, ripe fruit and use the exact amount of sugar the recipe calls for to help your jam set,” says avid jam maker and mom to four kids, Lis Collins of Crested Butte, Colorado. Try using your favorite type of berry or mix it up with a variety. Traditional canning requires some steps to ensure safety, which are easily learned from books or Web sites. Or call your local community education extension to find out about their food preservation or canning classes. For an introduction to canning, try a simple, no-cook freezer jam:
Start to think about preserving early in the season: buy more berries than you can eat, stock up on freezer bags and canning jars, and you, too, can dine on strawberry shortcake in December and blueberry muffins in February. What better way to savor all that this fleeting summer season has to offer? Kathleen Finn is a freelance health writer in Portland, OR, who vows to preserve berries this year as she spent the past winter looking fruitlessly into her freezer for a few remnants of summer. Copyright © 2025 TraceGains, Inc. All rights reserved. |