Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Jam Pan

A while back Marian Keyes wrote a cookbook (Saved By Cake) which I haven't read but looks to be about how baking helped her through depression. She doesn't claim that it's the answer for everybody but I guess depending on how down you are and how much you enjoy cooking it's as good a way as any to deal with a thing. For me cooking is something that I enjoy enough and find absorbing enough that I can rely on it to get me through sticky or stressful patches in life. At the moment we have a family member battling the final stages of cancer, it's a common enough situation to find yourself in - who hasn't been touched in some way by this disease - but that doesn't diminish how upsetting and unsettling it is, so I've been preserving things.

Lots of things. In the last couple of weeks I feel like I've worked my way through at least half of the brilliant 'Salt, Sugar, Smoke' and very helpful I've found it. I've made Purple Fig and Pomegranate jam, Rowan Jelly (though that was from a River Cottage recipe), Cherries in eau-de-vie, Prunes in Armagnac, sweet fig vinegar, and Greengage and Gewurztraminer jam. As I haven't burnt myself it's a harmless pursuit that leaves me feeling better about the world in general, and as I have plans for a lot more preserving (next week I may try making chutney for the first time) I've finally bought a proper maslin pan. For years I've made do with a generously proportioned old cast iron casserole pan that was often (especially at marmalade time) not quite generous enough size wise and weighed approximately half a ton when full of boiling sugary liquid. Now I have a deeper, lighter, altogether more practical stainless steel affair which meant that tonight, for the first time, I managed to make jam without getting it everywhere (joy of joys, none in my hair). This is more than enough of a bonus to off set the trifling inconvenience which is having nowhere to store another pan (it's living under my bed along with several pots of jam, a couple of litres of last years damson gin, plenty of dust, and whatever other items have failed to find a home elsewhere) mostly I am wondering why it took me so long to buy one.

There is nothing quite like having the right tool for the job, however much I might like to think of myself as a natural improviser, generally speaking I am not. I'm more of a natural appreciator of good design and a relatively easy life. I'm also an appreciator of jam and am very much looking forward to making more of it now. (Possibly plum, orange, and cardamom next.)

4 comments:

  1. Agree that it is wonderful to have something to help you through - and thinking of you at this time! Your preserves sound amazing. For me, it's crochet, no better exemplified than a couple of years ago when my father was in hospital. His operation (all OK-ish now) ended up being an eight hour extravaganza....my mother and I were waiting very anxiously at the hospital. She nearly finished a uni assignment, and I nearly finished an entire baby blanket...and have always had the wool and hook close at hand for trying times!

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    1. 8 hours! That sounds horrendous. Glad to hear he's okay now even if it's only ish. Yes, any task that keeps hands busy and demands just enough concentration to keep you occupied but doesn't overwhelm you at the same time is a godsend when stressed. I keep meaning to learn how to knit again...

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  2. I'm sorry to read that you have to go through this. For some reason I am drawn to ironing when stressed by family, er, events. I wonder if I could switch this need onto greengages and Gewurztraminer - you must tell us how that turned out.

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    1. The jam is excellent. Fruity with a twist. The depressing thing about it is looking round and knowing how common a situation it is - which makes it not a bit easier to deal with when it's happening in your own family. Thank god for the never ending stream of housework type things to take your mind off it all!

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