Wednesday 26 August 2020

Wine News


I'm feeling positive about my blackcurrant wine.  It's been fermenting now for about 5 weeks, and is already clearing very nicely indeed.


Five weeks is nothing in wine time.  Still, the recipe promised it would be ready for drinking in six months, so I'd say it's running to schedule.  Here's to blackcurrants!  The same can't be said for last year's blackberry wine, which never really cleared properly and, according to experiments conducted in my own belly, never really fermented at all.


The rowanberry wine, meanwhile, while it cleared perfectly well, is barely drinkable.  I had to add more sugar to it just to make it palatable, which feels like cheating.


Oh well, you live and learn.  It's all good because blackberry season is here again so I'll be heading down to the allotment's vicinity this week to gather some berries for a second attempt.  You live and learn.








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Saturday 8 August 2020

Herb Salt




Herb salts are something I'm into this year in a big way.  They are what you think they are - combinations of dried herbs, with salt.  It's a good way of preserving an abundant herb harvest, and makes for delicious flavourful additions to anything savoury you could possibly think of.  I'm amassing quite a stash:




I grow a lot of herbs on my allotment because they're easy to maintain and mostly perennial. I'm a lazy gardener, which I tell myself has a deep and philosophical element to it - I'm learning from the pace of nature or something - and this may actually be the case, or it may be that I'm only lazy.  So what?  The art of gardening consists mainly in sitting in your garden, and very occasionally, when absolutely necessary, doing some gardening.

As for technique, it's all about drying the herbs properly.  Sage, rosemary, marjoram, mint - all these grow on branches, that can be snipped off the plant and hug up somewhere dry in bunches.  Patience is importance - you don't want to do anything more with them until they're completely dry.  They're completely dry when the leaves have curled and crumble between your fingers to the touch.  Here's what a bowl of recently crumbled marjoram looks like:


Having sprigs of herbs hanging around in windows and doorways makes me feel like a bit of a wizard. That I'm warding off evil spirits or whatever. They also smell nice. Then when they're dry you can add them to food and feel like you're a gourmet chef, even though you're not.

Once the herbs are all crumbled up, you need a pestle and mortar to mix them with the salt (use sea salt if you can, not standard and characterless and mineral-stricken table salt) and crush into a powder, that looks like this:


At this point you can easily remove any stray twigs or woody bits that you don't want.

The thing to do is make your own blends of herb salts.  I've already tried a few of my own, and given them out to colleagues at work, with no complaints.    I keep a jar of "mixed" herb salt handy at all times, and when I went to make my own blends, I just use the separate jars pictured above to create unique combinations.  Another journey begins.  






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