I have recently become a fan of rosehips.. They are wonderful! Dried rosehips taste sort of like a cranberry and it makes an excellent tea. I recently took the seeds from a package of dried rosehips and I'm going to try to propagate them and grow my own.
I spent so much time today to take all the seeds away🤦♀️It's my first time making a rosehip jam and I read somewhere that I need to do this first. This really put me off.You simply gave me hope😊
Super delicious! I tried this method and it worked great! I also added about 1 teaspoon of red chilli paste to my jam, which was about 1-3/4 quarts. It adds a little heat to the jam, but just a tiny bit.
I just used this method and it turned out great! Does anyone have tips for what to do with dry rose hips left after straining them to get the jam out? It’s such a waste to just throw them away but I don’t have any ideas what to use them for
@ thank you! Actually I ended up making the tastiest rose Stroud out of them! They still had some fruit on the seeds so I boiled them for around 10 minutes and put through a sieve. I ended up with a bit thick juice? Then I cooked that with quite big amount of sugar and lot of lemon juice. Consistency came out as a perfect syrup and I think it’s easier to use (for example in tea) than jam :) Highly recommended. Thank you for this original recipe ❤️
Hi I loved your video! Thank you. I just picked about 2 pounds today. I would like to save some seeds for planting and make tea and jam and a mixed fruit leather. If you cook the seeds you can't plant them, is this correct. Oh I also would like to make rose hip oil just a little bit.
You can absolutely save some or all of the seeds , depending on how much effort you're willing to put into separating them from the fruit. Thank you so much for your nice comment! I am glad you found this helpful!
Not sure but I found this: www.eatweeds.co.uk/are-rose-hip-seeds-poisonous#:~:text=Some%20species%20of%20Rosaceae%20family,their%20seeds%20contain%20cyanide%20too.
Hi Anya, I have a rose garden and generally get the very big rose hips. Am I able to use the big rosehips for your rosehip jame recipe, please Anya? Thank you
Yes you can use your own rosehips from your rose garden. Wild rosehips it is best to harvest after the first hard frost. The hips of wild roses are a lot smaller. They also need to have the stems removed and the little hairs on the other end removed. You will not see any green or brown sticking out on the finished wild rosehips. Rosehips from your rose bushes you can harvest as soon as they turn red. Which is before a hard frost.
@@OurGabledHome We do have a few wild roses close to where I live. I will check with them. The pictures of roses I am seeing for rose hips appaears to look like my moms dessert rose china. Thanks for sharing your recipe! I am going to make some if I find the rose hips.
While some people use a paring knife and painstakingly cut out the hairs, I only put the rose hips through a colander. You cannot taste or feel them in the jam. Hope this helps!
Hi there! These small red fruits of the rosebush are super healthy! They are one of the most concentrated sources of Vitamin C! One tablespoon of this rosehip jam covers your daily need for this vitamin. They also contain high levels of Vitamin E, B, and K and are full of antioxidants. Only one tablespoon of this jam covers your daily need for Vitamin C! You can read more about it here: ourgabledhome.com/rosehip-jam/ 😊 ~ Anja
@@OurGabledHome it just sounds so delicious and I have lots of dried rose hips which I use for making tea! I will let you know when I try and make it! X
I have never had rosehip jam! Sounds delicious!
Thanks - and yes, it is 😌
I have recently become a fan of rosehips.. They are wonderful! Dried rosehips taste sort of like a cranberry and it makes an excellent tea. I recently took the seeds from a package of dried rosehips and I'm going to try to propagate them and grow my own.
I am really loving rose & rosehips right now!!
Yeah and thanks for sharing!
Such a gentle voice!
I am now making my rosehip jam using your recipe!
Curious to taste it!
Thank you for this video!
thank you so much for your nice comment! Enjoy your rosehip jam 😊
Our Gabled Home thank you!
@@Veg_Sabbath 💛
I spent so much time today to take all the seeds away🤦♀️It's my first time making a rosehip jam and I read somewhere
that I need to do this first. This really put me off.You simply gave me hope😊
I am so glad you found this video helpful 😊 ~ Anja
Simple! Thank you for the guidance on what to do with all the fruits of our wild roses.
Glad it was helpful!
What a great video! You covered everything I needed to know in a short; sweet, package! Thank you 🥀
😊
Have you used rose hips before? I'd love to hear what recipes you used!
Had never heard of making the jam....will be something to look forward to this fall
You'll be in a for a treat 😋 ~ Anja
I had Rose Hips Jam from my local LIDL grocery store many years ago, it was the best fruit jam I ever had! I can't find it anymore.
Now you can make your own!
Super delicious! I tried this method and it worked great! I also added about 1 teaspoon of red chilli paste to my jam, which was about 1-3/4 quarts. It adds a little heat to the jam, but just a tiny bit.
I am so glad your jam turned out delicious and thank you for sharing about the chili paste. That sure sounds interesting 💛 ~ Anja
I just used this method and it turned out great! Does anyone have tips for what to do with dry rose hips left after straining them to get the jam out? It’s such a waste to just throw them away but I don’t have any ideas what to use them for
You can compost them or see if you can use them for tea.
@ thank you! Actually I ended up making the tastiest rose Stroud out of them! They still had some fruit on the seeds so I boiled them for around 10 minutes and put through a sieve. I ended up with a bit thick juice? Then I cooked that with quite big amount of sugar and lot of lemon juice. Consistency came out as a perfect syrup and I think it’s easier to use (for example in tea) than jam :) Highly recommended.
Thank you for this original recipe ❤️
Hi I loved your video! Thank you. I just picked about 2 pounds today. I would like to save some seeds for planting and make tea and jam and a mixed fruit leather. If you cook the seeds you can't plant them, is this correct. Oh I also would like to make rose hip oil just a little bit.
You can absolutely save some or all of the seeds , depending on how much effort you're willing to put into separating them from the fruit. Thank you so much for your nice comment! I am glad you found this helpful!
Thankyou!
Coconut palm sugar is nice indeed
Great idea!
Loved it 😍
Yay! That makes me so happy to hear 💛 ~Anja
Silly question but could you use a pair of the wifes tights to strain the rosehips?
Probably 😜
Can you eat rosehip seeds?
Not sure but I found this: www.eatweeds.co.uk/are-rose-hip-seeds-poisonous#:~:text=Some%20species%20of%20Rosaceae%20family,their%20seeds%20contain%20cyanide%20too.
Hi Anya, I have a rose garden and generally get the very big rose hips. Am I able to use the big rosehips for your rosehip jame recipe, please Anya? Thank you
Yes, you can use the big rosehips! Happy jam-making 💛 ~ Anja
Yes you can use your own rosehips from your rose garden.
Wild rosehips it is best to harvest after the first hard frost. The hips of wild roses are a lot smaller. They also need to have the stems removed and the little hairs on the other end removed. You will not see any green or brown sticking out on the finished wild rosehips.
Rosehips from your rose bushes you can harvest as soon as they turn red.
Which is before a hard frost.
When do you collect rose hips, and are they on a certain type of rose? I'm in Texas and mine go from green to brown. They are not the pretty red.
Interesting! Most often I use the rose hips from the wild California rose that grows in our area and they are always red 🤷♀️ ~ Anja
@@OurGabledHome We do have a few wild roses close to where I live. I will check with them. The pictures of roses I am seeing for rose hips appaears to look like my moms dessert rose china. Thanks for sharing your recipe! I am going to make some if I find the rose hips.
Did you strained out every hairs from the jam or you can taste them?
While some people use a paring knife and painstakingly cut out the hairs, I only put the rose hips through a colander. You cannot taste or feel them in the jam. Hope this helps!
Could I use Honey?
Yes, that should work
Does this get red of the itchy hairs too?
Hi there! These small red fruits of the rosebush are super healthy! They are one of the most concentrated sources of Vitamin C! One tablespoon of this rosehip jam covers your daily need for this vitamin. They also contain high levels of Vitamin E, B, and K and are full of antioxidants. Only one tablespoon of this jam covers your daily need for Vitamin C! You can read more about it here: ourgabledhome.com/rosehip-jam/
😊 ~ Anja
@@OurGabledHome I meant the itchy hairs with the seeds in the rosehips.. does preparing it this way get rid of those hairs too?
Could I make this with dried rose hips? X
I think you might be able to but you'd have to rehydrate them before. Let me know if it works 😊 ~ Anja
@@OurGabledHome it just sounds so delicious and I have lots of dried rose hips which I use for making tea! I will let you know when I try and make it! X
Did it work? Dried is all i have access to.@@maikeadam5354
Rosehip Jam is amazing but... those dang seeds man.. 😥 So hard or rather tedious to remove them all. 😅
Lol she doesn’t know she’s guessing as she goes
You say bye-bye to your vitamin C when you cook food. You need to eat them raw if you want the vitamin C, the jam has none.
Thank you for sharing!
@@OurGabledHome anytime
While I love your way of making your jam. But I see all the waste you throw out.
You can always compost the seeds 😊 ~ Anja