Think of drinking wine under a vine-covered trellis and you’ll probably be transported back to the heady romance of a holiday in Greece or Italy. I don’t have so far to travel. I just go to Tufnell Park. There, in a north London garden, my in-laws have an old and magnificent vine which in late summer is garlanded with small, sweet black grapes.
It’s a variety called Brant and the people who originally planted it used to make wine. Mandy and I have in the past made vino cotto, a Sicilian grape reduction which is terrific with game or just spooned over ice cream.
This year when Mandy gave me the usual laundry basket heaped with grapes I thought I’d try something else and the family vote went, in the end, to grape jelly. I made two versions, one plain, one spiced.
If you are lucky enough to have a grape vine (or your neighbour’s is tumbling enticingly and irresistibly over your fence) you might like to try this. If you’d prefer the plain version, follow the recipe but omit the second simmer with the spices. You will need to use sugar with added pectin for a good set.
Spiced Grape Jelly
Ingredients:
A quantity of grapes
A splash of water
Pectin sugar (see recipe)
Lemon juice (see recipe)
For the spice bag:
1 tspn allspice berries
1/2 cinnamon stick
6 whole cloves
A blade of mace
Method:
Wash the grapes, pick off any that are blemished and strip them from their stems. Place in a large preserving pan and add just enough water to stop them catching – a cupful should do as they’ll quickly release a lot of juice.
Heat the grapes until they bubble and burst, and simmer for 20 minutes, squashing them with a potato masher. Strain through a jelly bag, taking care not to squeeze it through, otherwise the juice will go cloudy. Leave overnight if possible to get the maximum amount.
Pour the liquid back into the cleaned pan and add the spices, tied in a piece of muslin. Bring to the boil and simmer for about 20 minutes or until it has reached your preferred level of spiciness. Discard the spice bag.
Measure the liquid and for every 500 ml, add 500g of pectin sugar and the juice of 1 lemon. Put everything back in the pan and boil rapidly until it reaches setting point, roughly 10-20 minutes. To test the set, put a spoonful of jelly on a cold plate and if, after a few minutes, it wrinkles when you push it with your finger, you’re there.
Skim off any scum, pour into hot sterilised jars and seal immediately. It’s hard to convey here the jelly’s amazingly deep purple colour – you’ll have to take my word for it because the picture really doesn’t do it justice.
Sounds lovely! I’m making a slightly fermented vino cotto at the moment with a friend’s grapes.
Thanks, Thomas. Would love to talk to you about fermenting some time.
Love the sound of the spiced one. Three measly bunches here; think I better hold off on opening the vineyard.
Mandy’s vine is donkey’s years old. Stick with it and you’ll have vino casa before you retire. 🙂
Sounds delicious Linda, especially with the spices. Grapes are dirt cheap here in autumn, saved this for then. Did you post about making vincotto, that really tempts me,
Hi Sandra, thank you. Yes, there should be a link in the post but if it’s not working you can find it here: http://wp.me/p2nieN-NJ
The recipe comes from a dear friend, Matthew Lochriccio, who is a Sicilian American and a very fine chef.
Thanks Linda. Preserves and I go way back, but sadly I cannot boast an Italian Nonna to learn these particular skills from. I love commercial Vincotto but know a home prepared product will be much, much better. Come autumn I’ll be on to it, thanks heaps. SX
You’re welcome. I’m sure Matthew would be delighted that the recipe is making its way to Australia, too! Lx
I like the idea of the spiced. I am amazed at your source of good grapes.
Best,
Conor
Thank you, Conor. Yes, we’re an exotic family. 🙂
So lovely! I love the spices. Please tell me, is vino cotto the same as vincotto?
Thanks, Mimi. I believe so, yes. xx
I won’t be making much jelly or jam this year but if I do, you can bet this spiced grape jelly will be made. Jellies can be vey sweet and spices are a great way to cut that. One things’s for certain. I’ll be sure to ear navy or black. I think I still have that polka dot t-shirt that resulted from my first batch of grape jelly. 🙂
Gosh, yes, you should have seen us a while back when we attempted treading grapes for vino cotto! It was a bloodbath. Glad you like the recipe, thanks.