Here’s an easy to make Rosehip Jelly recipe. It is a tart, sweet jelly. There are many Rosehip uses and benefits, known to be very good for your health
Greetings fellow gardeners,
Well, this is new. Rain! It has been a long time since we have had several days of rain in a row. It is wonderful for our gardens, but hard to get any work done. I have a large number of Jerusalem artichokes that are ready to harvest. Fortunately, there is always next week. If you have Jerusalem artichokes, you want to wait until they start to die down before pulling them up. I have boiled the tubers and used them in stews, and they are not too bad.
Oscar Peterson Rose
My Oscar Peterson rose from the Canadian Artist Series is blooming again. Such a joyful sight. It is growing near the bright red flowers of my scarlet runner beans. Be sure not to prune your roses at this time; wait for the spring. Many of my hardy roses will bloom right up until frost. I make sure to cover these bushes in bird netting to collect the snow and keep them insulated from the January thaw. In addition to some sweet-smelling roses, I have rose hips. Some of them are almost the size of small crab apples. If you are planning to use some of your rose hips for jelly, pick them after a good frost, as they will be sweeter. Please be sure that these hips have not had any chemicals sprayed on them. The recipe is below:
Oscar Peterson rose and scarlet runner beans
Rosehip Jelly Recipe
Ingredients:
About 8 cups of rose hips
6 cups of water
½ cup of lemon juice
3 ½ cups of sugar
Rinse the rosehips and place them in 6 cups of water. Bring to a boil and then simmer covered for about an hour. Mash and strain through cheesecloth or a jelly bag.
You should have about 3 cups of juice. Put in a pot with the lemon juice and add the sugar. You can add pectin if you wish but there is a lot of natural pectin in rosehips already. You can pour it into sterilized jars and into a hot water bath for 10 minutes.
Rosehip Jelly: Uses and Benefits
In terms of uses for this yummy Rosehip Jelly, serve on toast in the morning or with a cheese board in the evening. It is a tart, sweet jelly that goes really well with cold meats too. So bring it out with a plowman’s at lunchtime too.
Among Rosehips benefits, it has been known to be very good for your health throughout history, and in fact this jam was made in the 1700’s. Rosehips are taken by many today as a natural way to get vitamin C, vitamin E and vitamin K, and help to prevent and treat various infections, especially colds and flu
To read more on the benefits of rosehip from a medical perspective, click here.
Rosehip
More Thoughts
As I was wandering about my garden, I found the comfrey had some lovely fresh new growth and even a few flowers. I like to use my comfrey as a type of fertilizer for my garden. The type that I grow is known as Russian comfrey (Symphytum xuplandicum Nyman). It is a perennial and can grow over a meter in height, with little magenta bell flowers. I will often pick one of the large hairy leaves, wet it thoroughly and use it as a relief for bruises. Most people have the common comfrey (Symphytum officinale) which can be very spready. It can also be used as a fertilizer, but it should be watched and confined. While I use comfrey in the garden or on myself externally, it is not recommended that you ingest comfrey as it has been shown to cause severe liver damage.
It is great to look out the window with the too-many cats and stare at the rain. My trees and the garden are very happy. Enjoy your week. Judith.
Contact Judith through her Website https://www.lapisdragonarts.com/. Find more weekly Veggie Bites experiences on the Veggie Bites page.
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Judith Cox is a Master Gardener and President of the Stittsville Goulbourn Horticultural Society . The many topics covered in her blogs include starting a garden, planting seeds, selecting the best seeds, identifying specific plants, and growing produce other than what is found at the grocery store. Every issue offers solutions to common issues faced by gardeners, including wildlife, whether to water, pests, snails, and other issues. During the winter, Judith writes for local journals and newspapers, give talks at local horticultural clubs on a range of gardening topics. She also finds time to run a small business selling watercolor and pen and ink cards.
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