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We've been foraging, and got lots of Haws, which I intended to make jelly with, in a preserving way, boiling the juice with sugar. Researching online, I came across a Ray Mears* video of a no-cook haw jelly:
It seems haws have so much pectin, a mush of them sets by itself, and then can be sliced thinly and dried (or spread into a shallow tray and dried that way) - basically hawthorn leather?
We think this might be the same stuff as Haw Flakes, a Chinese sweet NT remembers having as a kid. We'd googled but couldn't find any recipe or method for making it, and the ingredients on the packets just say "Hawthorn", with typical Chinese enigmatic style.
Anyone know if hawthorn leather and flakes are the same? I know SatNav is a fruit leather expert - ever done hawthorn?
I'll still make some of the cooked jelly, it seems from reading online that you need a lot of fruit for a little jelly that way, as it's not hugely juicy. It is a bumper year for haws, and the reserve I work at has loads of trees, so I can easily collect plenty for experimentation.
*For those over the pond, in case Ray hasn't made it to your screens, he's a wild survival expert - very gentle and in tune with nature, not a gung ho adventurer. He does a lot of programmes about using traditional and ancient methods for things like building shelter or boats, or finding food, and has a big following in the UK. Quite a lot of it among ladies of a certain age I think, who can't decide if they want him to look after them, or if they want to mother him!
It seems haws have so much pectin, a mush of them sets by itself, and then can be sliced thinly and dried (or spread into a shallow tray and dried that way) - basically hawthorn leather?
We think this might be the same stuff as Haw Flakes, a Chinese sweet NT remembers having as a kid. We'd googled but couldn't find any recipe or method for making it, and the ingredients on the packets just say "Hawthorn", with typical Chinese enigmatic style.
Anyone know if hawthorn leather and flakes are the same? I know SatNav is a fruit leather expert - ever done hawthorn?
I'll still make some of the cooked jelly, it seems from reading online that you need a lot of fruit for a little jelly that way, as it's not hugely juicy. It is a bumper year for haws, and the reserve I work at has loads of trees, so I can easily collect plenty for experimentation.
*For those over the pond, in case Ray hasn't made it to your screens, he's a wild survival expert - very gentle and in tune with nature, not a gung ho adventurer. He does a lot of programmes about using traditional and ancient methods for things like building shelter or boats, or finding food, and has a big following in the UK. Quite a lot of it among ladies of a certain age I think, who can't decide if they want him to look after them, or if they want to mother him!
