Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Agarita Berries



AGARITA BERRY JELLY
Agarita is a variety of barberry. It grows westward from the Hill Country as far as the Trans-Pecos and back along the Rio Grande to Webb & Jim Hogg counties. Exclusive in this region, Agarita apparently grows nowhere else in the world. Its yellow blossoms appear from January to March, and resembles Narcissus in fragrance. Early settlers used Agarita wood for yellow dye.
AGARITA BERRY JELLY
Place cleaned berries in a kettle with sufficient water to cover and cook until berries begin to pop. They need not all pop. Let juice drip through a jelly bag (or cloth) squeezing only slightly. To make jelly: Combine 6 1/2 cups juice with one package of SureJell, in a kettle large enough to allow strong boiling. Bring to a hard boil and add 7 cups of sugar. Let come to a hard boil again and for only one min. Remove from fire and fill jelly glasses. Freeze or can juice for making jelly later. It has a different flavor all its own.
Mrs. Preston Laws (Margaret), Creedmoor H.D.C.
AGARITA JELLY
Clean berries in deep pan or pail. The leaves and dirt will sink to the bottom, leaving berries on top. About 3 changes of water completes the cleaning.
Use an aluminum or granite vessel to cook. Fill vessel two-thirds, just covering with cold water. Boil until pressure of spoon on berries against vessel shows them to be tender. Pour contents into jelly bag; hang up to drain until it stops dripping. Do not squeeze bag except very lightly.
To one quart of juice add two-thirds quarts of cane sugar (do not use beet sugar). Boil until it jells.
AGARITA JELLY(without added pectin)
Two cups Agarita juice (about 3 1/2 pounds agaritas)Two cups of sugar
To prepare juice. Use equal parts of washed fruit and water and place in non-metal container. Let stand overnight. Boil for 5 minutes. Mash, strain and squeeze to remove juice. About 1/3 of the berries should be half-ripe for good jelly.
To make jelly. Place juice over heat and let it come to a boil. Add sugar and boil about 5 minutes, until it gives the sheet test. Remove from heat, skim off, pour into hot jars and seal.

4 comments:

Susie McCalla said...

Do you actually know Mrs. Preston Laws (Margaret)? I knew her when I was a kid and I remember getting agarita berries with her, her kids, and my mom. Today my husband and I went out to gather agarita berries and I was remembering her, and then I saw her name on your blog.

shrink on the couch said...

Thanks for these instructions. Husband and I picked two gallons of agarita berries today. The cleaning part is taking us forever. Many berries as well as leaves are sinking to bottom, proving to be a very tedious job. I do believe this jelly will be the BEST jelly I've ever tasted, if, for no other reason, we worked so hard to make it!

Edwin Duncan said...

I agree with Phd in yogurtry. Putting the berries in water does not separate the leaves from the berries. Some leaves and berries sink, others float. There seems to be no rhyme nor reason why some sink and others don't, but the sad truth is that there is no easy fix for separating the leaves from the berries--or if there is, I haven't discovered it. If someone has, I'd love to learn it.

Edwin Duncan said...
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