Any-one with a vegetable patch will know the feeling of joy as tomatoes begin to appear, and then the feeling of despair as they keep appearing in a good year. This is an excellent way of using green tomatoes if a plant falls over, or if you just think there are too many on a plant and need to remove some.
Don't be scared by the ingredient list it is really very easy.
1.5 pounds green tomatoes
1 pound green apples
8 ounces coarse chopped onions
1 tablespoon salt ( 15ml tbsp)
4oz raisins
1 pound soft brown sugar
8 fluid ounces cider vinegar
rind and juice of two lemons
2 tablespoons mustard seeds
2-3 chopped deseeded red chillies ( make sure you know how hot they are!)
In a muslin bag:
1 tablespoon coriander seeds
2 teaspoon black peppercorns
2 teaspoon allspice berries
1 teaspoon cloves
2 crushed cinnamon sticks
Note: About the muslin bag...I used a piece of a clean pillow case last time and that worked well, any porous clean cloth will do.
1. Peel and chop the tomatoes.
2. Peel , core and chop the apples and add the peelings etc, to the spice bag.
3. Put the tomatoes, apples, onions and salt into a large pan and bring slowly to the boil. Simmer for twenty minutes.
4. Add the raisins, lemon juice and rind, sugar, vinegar and spice bag and return to the boil. Stir until the sugar has dissolved and then simmer for thirty minutes, or until the mixture is nice and thick.
5. While the mixture simmers wash out your jars and put them and the lids into a low oven to sterilize.
6. Add the mustard seeds and chillies and pour mixture into warmed jars. Seal and leave for one month before eating.
I have to admit that I often don't peel the tomatoes, just give them a good wash. Green tomatoes are difficult to peel, and I am often using small " windfall" fruit. The skin doesn't alter the flavour and isn't really noticeable in the finished product.
The mustard seeds are optional, some people don't like the texture. The chillies can also be omitted if you don't want their kick in the finished product.
Sweet tooth
3 months ago
1 comment:
I'm going to make some G.T chutney tomorrow following this recipe, having a surfeit of green toms which were picked before blight set in. I chose this recipe in preference to the one by Keith Floyd on the BBC food website, so i hope it works out. What I'd like to know is, why are your recipes for using green toms & red toms so wildly different? I absolutely love garlic, but there is none in the G.T chutney, but there is in the R.T. Any enlightenment on this? Many thanks for the recipe in any case.
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