The urgent need was spurred on by the discovery of a set of Christmas cake decoration cutters in the bottom of a drawer, a rogue purchase from many years ago that had never been used. Perfect for the pastry tops of mince pies as well as fondant icing!
So I looked for a recipe that I could adapt using what I had in stock. You can buy delicious candied peel here but all of mine had gone into the Christmas cake so I used the zest of two clementines instead. For the alcohol content I used Armagnac which we had bought to "water" the Christmas cake, not being brandy drinkers ourselves.
I adapted Mary Berry's recipe which you can see here which neatly makes four regular sized jam jars of mincemeat which will keep for several months. It improves with keeping but some went into the pies straight away which were delicious and satisfied the urgent need for them!
Ingredients
175g each of
currants
raisins
sultanas
dried cranberries
100g mixed peel or the zest of 1 small orange/2 clementines instead
1 small apple peeled and finely chopped
50g chopped almonds
225g light muscovado sugar (or other brown sugar)
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1 tsp mixed spice
zest and juice of 1 lemon
125g butter, cubed or sliced
200ml brandy, rum, sherry or Armagnac
Method
Put all of the ingredients except for the alcohol into a large saucepan and heat gently until the butter has melted. Simmer gently for 10 minutes, stirring frequently so it doesn’t catch on the bottom of the pan.
Remove from the heat and allow to cool completely before stirring in the alcohol.
While the mincemeat is cooking then cooling sterilise your jars. Wash the jars and lids then rinse well in hot water, shaking off the water rather than using a tea towel. Place onto a baking sheet then into the oven set to 160°C and leave for 10 minutes. Remove from the oven and fill with the mincemeat while the jars are still warm.
Makes 4 jars of mincemeat which will keep for several months.



I always use Delia Smith's recipe where you gently warm all the ingredients to melt the suet. I think she said that this ensured everything had a coating of suet which helped preserve it. I guess using melted butter in your recipe would have the same effect. I'm sure it will be delicious 😋
ReplyDeleteI have made mincemeat a few times before but have no idea which recipe I used. I liked the fact that this used butter instead of suet and as you say, is probably as good for preserving reasons.
DeleteI still have some bottled mincemeat that I made last year!! I am struggling to keep up with everything, I had both eyes done for cataracts, and although they say all is well they are irritating and get tired very quickly on the computer or reading. Keep well Diane
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like you need a visit to a good old fashioned optometrist who would make sure your vision is properly balanced for reading at both book and computer distances and prescribe correct glasses for it. Also, try lubricating eye drops for dry eyes, which might be part of the problem.
DeleteExcellent, I had a sudden craving for mince pies yesterday, so I’ve quickly made four jars of this today. I’ve used butter instead of suet for quite a few years. For fruit I used what I had: sultanas, cranberries, chopped dried apricots, candied orange peel, a tub of mixed peel, and finished off with a dose of triple sec (poor man’s Grand Marnier).
ReplyDeleteThat sounds delicious!
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