This page looks best with JavaScript enabled

Recipe of Perfect Loquat jam

 ·  ☕ 5 min read  ·  ✍️ Lola Vargas
    🏷️

Loquat jam

Hey everyone, I hope you’re having an incredible day today. Today, I will show you a way to prepare a special dish, loquat jam. One of my favorites. This time, I will make it a little bit unique. This will be really delicious.

Find the World's Best Value on Your Favorite Vitamins, Supplements & Much More. Earn Qantas Points on every night away. Book with confidence with no booking fees online when you book with Qantas Hotels. The loquat is a delicious, plum-sized fruit that can be picked and eaten right off the tree.

Loquat jam is one of the most well liked of recent trending foods in the world. It is enjoyed by millions every day. It’s easy, it’s fast, it tastes yummy. They are fine and they look wonderful. Loquat jam is something which I have loved my entire life.

To get started with this recipe, we must first prepare a few ingredients. You can cook loquat jam using 6 ingredients and 16 steps. Here is how you cook that.

The ingredients needed to make Loquat jam:
  1. Prepare 1 kg loquats (peeled, only the flesh)
  2. Get 800 g sugar (you can use less)
  3. Make ready 2 apples (green)
  4. Prepare 2 lemons (make sure that they are unwaxed)
  5. Prepare 1 (or two, depending on taste) tsp cinnamon powder
  6. Take water (1 cup, maybe slightly more)

Once the jam cooks long enough, the loquats turn a lovely orange-pink color. This is wonderful on buttered toast. This easy loquat jam recipe is a simplified version of my loquat cardamom jam recipe. Making loquat jam is easy, even for beginner jam makers, because the fruit is naturally high in pectin.

Instructions to make Loquat jam:
  1. So, I went down to the garden and picked 2 kg (and a little more) of loquats, the ripest on the tree.
  2. Using a pointy knife (so that it picks the skin easily) that's also small (to be used easily) remove the skin of the loquats.
  3. Then, cut the loquats in half and remove the seeds and as much of the hard part that surrounds them. Then, cut into smaller pieces.
  4. So, you are left with something like a kg of pure fruit flesh. If you use store-bought loquats, that have been cultivated, the useful quantity will surely be larger.
  5. Using the widest pot availabe, pour in the sugar, the apples, peeled and cut into thick slices, a glass of water (plus slightly more) and the loquats.
  6. Remove the peel off the lemons as well as the pith.
  7. Wash the peel thoroughly and using a small and pointy knife cut them into very thin strips of about matchbox size (though thinner). Add them to the pot to caramelize together with the fruit.
  8. If you like a vanilla aroma, you can add a little at this stage. I used cinnamon which I added later on.
  9. Place the pot over heat, cover with the lid, set to low heat and relax with a cup of coffee.
  10. You should check on your pot from time to time, to see when the fruit is mashed. Make sure to stir it with a wooden spoon occasionally so that it doesn't stick. That took about 45 minutes (loquats proved to be hard, maybe it was my fault for keeping the heat too low).
  11. The good housewifes of olden times used to pass these mashed fruits from a sieve to get a thicker pulp. I personally prefer a more firm texture with the pieces of fruit tender enough for you to feel them. So, I passed it through a food mill.
  12. Then I added the cinnamon powder, 1/2 tsp vanilla and let everything simmer for an additional 10-15 minutes shaking the pot (not stirring with a wooden spoon) so that the jam doesn't stick to the bottom. Halfway through that, add the juice from the peeled lemons.
  13. To check if the jam has set, there are various methods. I usually use that of the drop (place a drop of jam -a very small quantity- on a small plate and place it in the fridge. After a while remove it and tip it slightly. If the drop doesn't move or moves slowly, it's ready. In any other case repeat the process until you realize that the jam has set. You can also check the newest tip from  sitronella, here.
  14. Fill your jars almost to the top (I had 4 of 500 g each). I also added a little liqueur on the top to cover the jam (we have so much sour cherry liquer that we use it in everything that we make). It doesn't allow air to get to the jam and I personally like the taste.
  15. Cut pieces of greaseproof paper as many as the jars, slighly larger than the mouth of the jar and place them under the lid before you close it so that it is firmly sealed.
  16. The jam is ready to consume even on the next day. But remember, you made it to preserve the fruits not consume it while there are still fresh fruits available.

This easy loquat jam recipe is a simplified version of my loquat cardamom jam recipe. Making loquat jam is easy, even for beginner jam makers, because the fruit is naturally high in pectin. The only thing you need are loquats, fresh lemon juice, sugar and time. Loquat jam flavours are a lovely blend of apricot, mango and passionfruit, with chunks of soft fruit and a thick amber syrup this is a truly beautiful jam. Loquats have naturally high levels of pectin and sugar, making them easy to work with when it comes to getting a jam to set (much easier than Strawberry Jam for example).

So that’s going to wrap it up with this special food loquat jam recipe. Thanks so much for reading. I’m confident that you will make this at home. There’s gonna be interesting food at home recipes coming up. Don’t forget to bookmark this page in your browser, and share it to your family, colleague and friends. Thank you for reading. Go on get cooking!

Share on