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Mixed Berry Jam

September 8, 2018 by Jenny Gomes Leave a Comment

Use a mix of whatever berries you have on hand to make this easy, fast, and delicious jam! You can use raspberries, strawberries, blackberries, or blueberries in a mix to make this mixed berry jam.

Mixed Berry Jam

This post contains affiliate links.

The beauty of this recipe is the naturally occurring acid that’s present in berries. This acid makes berries foolproof for beginners and makes it nearly impossible for you to make a mistake. You can download the Acid & Canning Chart for free below and it lists the pH values of all the things you might preserve in jars so you can see exactly how acid the fruit in your berry basket might be.

Download the acid & canning pH guide for free here! This amazing chart will help you understand the critical role of acid in water bath canning and steam canning AND how to make safe substitutions! Download this free PDF here!

You’ll see which fruit is safely more acid than the magic 4.6 number (a LOWER number means it is of greater acid level) and which is higher. Those that are higher can be safely canned with the addition of an acidifying ingredient like lemon or citric acid; that’s why cucumbers can be pickled into pickles with vinegar!

Mixed Berry Jam Recipe

You will need 
5 cups berries
3-4 cups sugar depending on the desired set (more for firmer jam)
1 lemon, squeezed, for taste
2 boxes pectin (liquid or powdered)

1. Prepare your water bath canning pot or your steam canner. Fill the water bath canning pot with water, add 5 half pint jars, and bring to a boil OR fill the steam canner to fill line and turn on low with the 5 half-pint jars nearby on a towel-covered countertop.

2. Combine berries and lemon juice and simmer together in a preserving pan (a heavy-bottomed, wide pan) and mash with a potato masher or wooden spoon for 5 minutes.

3. Optional: Remove from heat and ladle into a food mill. Process jam through for a super smooth jam.

4. Return berries to a boil, add sugar, and whisk in pectin, a little at a time, quickly.

5. Ladle into jars one at a time, apply lids and rings, and either submerge into the boiling water of the boiling water bath with a jar lifter  OR set gently on the rack of the steam canner.

6. Process for 10 minutes PLUS 5 minutes for every 1000 ft above sea level. Remove from heat, rest jars carefully on a towel-covered countertop. Label cooled jars and store for up to 1 year.

Download the printable Mixed Berry Recipe Here!

Mixed Berry Jam Canning Recipe

If you are LOVING the idea of canning, but need a little extra instruction, I have a beginner friendly resource that is low-commitment, printable, and will help you dive in today! The Canning Jump Start Guide shares 4 of my easiest, most foolproof recipes, my no-frills equipment lists for both traditional water bath AND steam canning (steam canning is the fastest way to can, my friends and you’ll want to learn it ASAP!), a season planner, a pantry checklist so you’ll never be without the few super-important items when you bring home a bushel of apples or flat of tomatoes,  and a visual guide that SHOWS you how to set up your stove so you can SEE how canning might look in action. It also includes a visual guide for adjusting processing time for your altitude so you can easily add time and not have to think about it again! If you are new to canning or need a refresher, the Canning Jump Start Guide will help you preserve fresh, wholesome produce to give to loved ones and serve your family. Did I mention it is just $5?!

Buy Now!

Grab the Canning Jump Start Guide today!

Filed Under: Can

10 Easy Sewing Projects for Beginners

August 29, 2018 by Jenny Gomes Leave a Comment

Want to start sewing with some easy sewing projects for beginners? This post will share 9 easy sewing projects perfect for a beginner, plus I’m sharing the BEST way to grow your skills as a seamstress. Read on for the post!

This post contains affiliate links.

Sewing is my first creative love, my happy place, so much so that my machine is left set up on my dining room table 90% of the time. If you came over for supper, I’d have to move the machine. That’s how much I love sewing. My mom taught me to sew and she was taught by her Granny Ruth. Mom grew up in a poor home and Granny Ruth taught her that if she could sew, she’d always be able to have nice things to wear and a nicely decorated home. I still have Granny Ruth’s aqua seam ripper and that very important lesson. Yeah, sewing is super fun, but it also allows a person to mend, hem, alter and extend the life of garments which is clearly great for your heart and checkbook. Because I know how to sew, the options for a garment I can buy, wear, keep, etc is SO much greater. If I see a fantastic hot pink vintage 80’s romper on Instagram that is just a bit too big everywhere, you better believe I’ll snap them up because sewing is EASY, my friends. Sewing is easy, empowering, and such a total blast.

At the very beginning of Pinterest (and, the beginning of me following any bloggers at all, really) close to 10 years ago, I started following a pair of sewing enthusiasts for inspiration and sewing tips. While I knew how to sew from my mom’s instruction and years of working at JoAnn’s Fabrics, the blog’s by Merrick of Merrick’s Art and Leanne of Elle Apparel. Their blogs gave me the BEST ideas for how to score a dress on Old Navy’s clearance rack 5 sizes too big and make it fit (that really was a post on Merrick’s blog and I really did exactly what she told me too- I was a new teacher on a tiny budget and it WORKED!) and tips for how to create beautiful hems that looked SO professional, or how to add pockets (HELLO dresses and skirts with POCKETS!), or how to add zippers that looked even better than what you can get in the store.

Fast forward to today. These gals are real life friends at the other end of my state and they created a sewing course that will knock your socks off. I’m still sewing at my dining room table and I want YOUR dining room floor littered with thread and snips of beautiful fabric the way mine is. The course is a video library you can access anytime you like, over and over. It will show you STEP BY STEP exactly how to build beautiful garments using any pattern you’d like. The name of the course says a lot: The Modern Girl’s Guide to Sewing. Great title, right? The following sewing projects are beginner friendly and will definitely get your creative juices flowing but a course will teach you the pro tips that will make your garments look BEAUTIFUL. They won’t look homemade. They will look SHARP, which is my favorite adjective to use when describing top-notch sewing projects. Dive into either the Beginner or Intermediate videos and easily create custom, perfectly tailored garments and then apply what you learn to curtains, Halloween costumes, tote bags, and all the home decor you can think of. The sky is the limit with The Modern Girl’s Guide to Sewing + a little creativity….and if you are reading this blog, I know you have more than a little inside. Dive in here! 

How to Learn to Sew with Modern' Girls Sewing

10 Easy Sewing Projects for Beginners

Scoopneck Knit Tank

This pattern is such a good one for beginners because there are not TOO many options which is something that I have found overwhelming when I was learning to sew garments. There are two bodice options- sleeveless and a tank top, and a peplum or full-length skirt option. That’s it. There’s a limited number of sewing pattern pieces to cut out, which also limits overwhelm, and the tank top option, in particular, is really simple to put together. I found the pieces to match up exactly and I’m not a perfectionist when it comes to cutting- not by a long shot. Because my kids are still small, I really value a pattern that can be cut out and assembled quickly and this pattern was perfect in that regard.

10 Easy Sewing Projects for Beginners

How to Sewing Lingerie 

Sewing lingerie sounded next to impossible before I tried it and in this post, I’ll show you why it’s not only super simple, it’s fast (hello tiny pieces!) and why elastic is nowhere near as difficult as you might think. The post also has links to FREE lingerie patterns from a fantastic lingerie pattern creator. You won’t be sorry you checked out this post.

How To Sew Lingerie: 3 Easy Steps for Beginners | How to Sew a Bralette with a free pattern, simple tools, and easy steps!

If you are really feeling at the idea of sewing your own undergarments, I wrote a post for that too! 10 Things You Think When Sewing Lingerie for the First Time is a fun, quick, and inspiring little read to get you ready to sew!

Easy Little Girl’s Tutu: A Sewing Project for Beginners

Sewing a little girl’s tutu is actually a lot easier than you might think and is a perfect sewing project for beginners. This simple elastic waist skirt can be adjusted for a variety of ages and you can fill the skirt with fun embellishments like faux flower petals as I did.

Salvaged Sewing: Unfinished Vest to Back Interest Tank

My Gram, a continual source of sewing inspiration (mentioned here), found this half-finished vest in her fabric stash. I loved the fabric but didn’t need a vest. Because I have been on a back-interest tank kick (like these here) I immediately imagined cutting a deeper neckline and crossing the vest front into a flyaway back. Of course, unless you also stumble upon an unfinished vest in your sewing stash, this can’t really be considered a tutorial. It is really a demonstration of using creativity and bias tape to turn something unusable and undesirable (sorry, but I’m not rocking a vest to school…at least not a floral one…yet) into something cute.

10 Easy Sewing Projects for Beginners

Messenger Bag: A Great Sewing Pattern for Beginners

I made this beginner friendly messenger bag using a pattern from the Palindrome Dry Goods blog and Etsy shop using easy-to-sew cotton that I purchased before I had my first child, over 6 years ago. Once you have been sewing a while you may experience the thrill of finding fabric that you forgot you have purchased and/or forgot how much you love the way I did. This bag was also easy enough to whip up while the children were awake, and in between stirring supper on the stove. I used a super stiff decor bond interfacing that the pattern designer didn’t call for but I had on hand and used on a whim with good success. Read on for the super easy tutorial!

Want to learn to sew? This is the course that I recommend and love!

How to Sew an Ironing Pad

In this tutorial, I’ll show you how to sew your own ironing pad and avoid hauling out a cumbersome ironing board next time you need to iron. This ironing pad tutorial is beginner friendly, and the result is space saving and customizable. It is so nice to be able to pull this pad out and iron anywhere, rather than drag out an awkward ironing board.

10 Easy Sewing Projects for Beginners

How to Sew Spandex

Sewing super stretchy spandex and similar knits can be intimidating but the results can be totally rad workout clothes like the neon purple leggings I made recently. These are the tips I can share to ensure a successful spandex sewing session (like what I did there? I’m an English teacher at heart!). These tips will also help if you’re sewing a dance or yoga item too!

10 Easy Sewing Projects for Beginners

How To Sew a Burlap Garland

This garland is truly simple to sew for a very beginner for several reasons. Jute webbing is easy to sew on, and requires only a universal needle,  and basic sewing thread. Sewing on jute webbing (that characteristically is just striped burlap meant for supporting a chair cushion in a chair or sofa) is easy, and gives a good chance for a newbie to practice making a narrow seam allowance (sewing close to the edge) and pivoting at the point of the garland to make a nice, sharp point. Of course, if you are a seasoned seamstress, this project will be even faster and easy to customize further. Jute comes striped in a variety of colors (navy, black, and red being the most common) and a couple different widths. Mine is 4 inches wide.

10 Easy Sewing Projects for Beginners

How to Make a Shower Curtain with a Vintage Tablecloth

The thing that you have to know about vintage tablecloths is that they are often roughly showered curtain sized. You also need to know that because you’ll be sewing the tabs (those fabric loops that connect to the rod) at whatever interval you want, you can make a tablecloth fit a shower.

10 Easy Sewing Projects for Beginners

Seed Sack Pillows

My dear friend saved these seed sacks from a garden project and asked me to make them into pillows for their living area. I waited for months and months because I wanted to find pillow forms for the project; pillow forms are like a plain, muslin covered pillow that remains in pillow shape so you can remove the cover and wash it easily. They are handy, but they don’t come in every shape and size imaginable, and they don’t come in real seed sack size.

10 Easy Sewing Projects for Beginners

Bonus Project:

These are some of my favorite sewing projects. One bonus that I’ll share features on how VERSATILE sewing can be; one pattern can be used to create countless looks. This post 1 Sewing Pattern 3 Ways  shows 3 completely different tops that were a cinch to make but used the same pattern.

10 Easy Sewing Projects for Beginners

It’s a cute tank, right? Head to 1 Sewing Pattern 3 Ways to see the other variations! Hint: Pink floral!

If you want to learn how to sew, check out the courses HERE!

Wildflowers, sewing brings you creative joy and happiness, especially in a busy world where you spend an awful lot of time folding laundry or paying bills (my LEAST favorite chore ever). By learning to sew with the Modern Girl’s Guide to Sewing, you’ll be able to create items that fit YOUR body (goodbye dressing room angst!), your kid’s bodies (hello, easy!) and save money doing it. Choose which level you’re interested in, or I suggest buying the bundle of videos so you’ll be sewing like a boss seamstress in no time! See you in the course, Wildflowers!

Learn to Sew with Modern Girl's Guide to Sewing

Filed Under: Sew

20 Back to School Recipes

August 20, 2018 by Jenny Gomes Leave a Comment

Back to school time means packing lunches, after school lunches, eating on the go, and getting back into the routine. This collection of recipes is perfect for back to school!

This post contains affiliate links.

20 Back to School Recipes

At the end of the post check out my recommendation for the BEST lunchbox! 

Applesauce Muffins Recipe

This recipe for applesauce muffins is is a great way to use a healthy ½ cup of your homemade applesauce (or store-bought if you haven’t learned how to make it from me yet!) into a portable snack.

20 Back to School Recipes

Applesauce Canning Recipe

Homemade applesauce is something that is easy to make, fast (only 10 minutes in the canning process and there’s an easy trick to skipping peeling and coring I’ll explain in a moment) and you can skip the sugar entirely especially if you have sweet apples on hand.

20 Back to School Recipes

Strawberry Jam 

Strawberry Jam is THE preserve to try if you’ve never canned because strawberries are so high in acid that the worst thing that could happen is that you’ll have thin jam, which is essentially strawberry syrup. It’s also a great gift jam, holding it’s color nicely in jars. Hello, peanut butter and jam sandwiches!

20 Back to School Recipes

Strawberry Champagne Jam Recipe 

Strawberry Champagne Jam is THE jam to make to celebrate, to give as a gift, and to savor the flavor of spring. It is much easier than you think and there are a few simple pro tips for keeping that champagne flavor in the jar! You can head to the blog post, or download the printable PDF right here! I love this jam for MY jam & almond butter sandwiches for when I’m driving kids around; filling AND delicious!

Strawberry Kiwi Lemonade Concentrate

This recipe is for Strawberry Kiwi Lemonade concentrate and that is the best part. You can pour a spoonful or two into a glass and fill it with water (or sparkling water if you want to trick them even further!) and stir it up and it is suddenly a natural soda that you made yourself. If I want to add a shot of grown-up libation to it, I can, and if my youngest wants to have some I can make his weaker still. I can put a little in a cup, add water, and send it to school instead of super sugary, store-bought drink. Winning!

20 Back to School Recipes

If you want to dive into these canning recipes, but need some help, I have an affordable visual guide to SHOW you STEP BY STEP what to do, when! The Canning Jump Start Guide has no-frills equipment checklists for traditional water-bath canning and steam canning, a stovetop guide, an altitude adjustment guide, canning season planner, the pantry checklist, and MORE! Get it here! Buy Now!

Canning Jump Start Guide

Strawberry Syrup

I don’t strain this back to school recipe with cheesecloth because I personally don’t care about things like tiny strawberry seeds and I am not interested in perfectly clear syrup. Feel free to strain of course as you wish. This post will share a recipe that is a very simple recipe for strawberry syrup and I hope to remind you also that syrup is not just for pancakes. I think pancakes are a great way to ring in the weekend, don’t you think?

Best Old-Fashioned Banana Muffin Recipe

This recipe is based on one from the 1942 version of the Good Housekeeping Cook Book. It is originally titled, “Banana Tea Bread” but when I read the recipe, given to me by my Gram, I swapped out a few ingredients and decided muffins would serve my lunchbox-toting kindergartener better than bread that I would have to slice, wrap, etc. in the busy mornings before school. This recipe is easy, and filling! If you like to print recipes, you can download it for free right here:

20 Back to School Recipes

Carrot Pickles

Carrot pickles are one of my favorite pickles because they aren’t cucumbers ? I actually don’t care for cucumbers much, to be honest, which I know is really silly but they just don’t light my fire. Canning this recipe is EASY and they pack so well in a lunch box!

20 Back to School Recipes

Pickled Bread and Butter Jalapeños

This recipe is a great way to take a veggie that is in season around back to school time and preserve it in an easy, sandwich-friendly ingredient or bento-box-style lunch component. Be sure to read to the bottom for my lunch box suggestion!

20 Back to School Recipes

Raspberry Jam Recipe 

Raspberry jam is a delight to give as gifts, raspberries are easy to pick at U-pick farms, and deliciously gift-able preserved in these tiny mason jars. I also love this jam stirred into a container of plain yogurt or on top of oatmeal in the morning.

20 Back to School Recipes

Tomato Jam Recipe 

This recipe calls for Roma tomatoes, which are typically denser and thus cook into a thicker sauce a bit faster. You can use whatever tomato you have on hand, however, and this is a great recipe to use a variety if that is what you have. There’s a free download of the jam recipe in the post too! This recipe is great for kids and teens with a slightly more sophisticated palate, or just for parents eating on the go. Try it on an everything bagel with cream cheese and you won’t share with the kids at all.

Cranberry Lemon Jam 

This cranberry lemon jam is super smooth, perfect for Thanksgiving, even better on a sandwich the day after Thanksgiving with turkey slices, great on bagels with cream cheese, and the lemon makes it seem bright and summery too. It’s a perfect jam. You definitely can make this cranberry lemon jam and preserve it in a water bath process- you do not have to use a steam canner. Or you can make it and eat it fresh. Store it in the refrigerator if you do. Can this jam this fall, and when the lunch box fillings are getting tired and boring around February, open this jam to revive everyone’s senses.

20 Back to School Recipes

Smooth Blackberry Jam 

Blackberries are a funny thing. They are probably my favorite berry, definitely, if we are talking about eating out of hand, and of course, they have the worst thorns. I suppose we can complain that a blackberry bush has thorns, or rejoice that a thorn bush has blackberries. Because they are so, so good, I’ll go with the later. School is a lot like that, isn’t it? We can be happy that there’s activities, friends, learning, and new experiences, or we can focus on the early wake-up, the homework, the forgotten forms, and the like. Focus on the fun, and the berries, and enjoy this on some toast on the way out the door in the morning, Wildflowers!

20 Back to School Recipes

Best Berry Jam 

I recently shared a post about why you should head to a U-Pick berry patch this summer after I spent a lovely morning picking a mix of mostly marionberries (similar to blackberries), strawberries, and a handful of raspberries. With this mix, I adapted a recipe from the well worn Farm Journal Freezing & Canning Cookbook written in 1962. I checked my adaptation against other trusted recipes published in my lifetime and it is safe to say that it is a homerun berry jam recipe.

20 Back to School Recipes

Roasted Plum Jam 

Plum Jam is an easy recipe that is elevated in a wonderful way by roasting the plums. Beginners can easily succeed with this canning recipe and the roasting plums make your home smell heavenly. Lining your shelves with these jams will make for easy mornings and lunch-prep all school year long!

Canning Concord Grape Jam 

Canning grape jam is a fairly simple task because the recipe is straightforward and brief, grapes are not difficult to collect (no thorns like blackberries) and are sweet enough that they don’t require a lot of extra sugar. While we most often see the clear jelly in stores, grape jam is delicious and seems to be a bit more virtuous in my mind because more of the actual grape remains in the pot.

Canning Tomato Sauce

Canning tomato sauce is one of the most satisfying tasks a home canner could ask for because of the versatility of tomato sauce. When people start preserving, they often make jam because it is fairly simple and of course delicious but I find the savory preserves, like this tomato sauce, are the most useful. Open a jar of this after a busy school day and have instant pasta sauce, stromboli filling, the base for stew, blank – slate enchilada sauce, and so much more. If I had to can ONE recipe for the rest of my life, it would be this recipe because we eat so much wholesome, no sugar tomato sauce.

Chocolate Cranberry Mole

Chocolate Cranberry Mole: A Fermented Paste from The Fermentista’s Kitchen is a fermented food that you definitely have to try if you are fermenting-curious. I have a real sweet tooth and this sounded weird and delicious and because it pairs with ice cream I had to try it. Here is her recipe and I will note where I changed a few things; namely I used frozen cranberries instead of fresh. Fermented foods are a wise addition to the diet in terms of gut health and they are EASY.

Mailanderli: Swiss Shortbread Cookie

This classic Swiss cookie recipe is a rich shortbread type of cookie that is easy to prepare and my favorite with hot coffee or cocoa. Mailanderli has a variety of spellings on the internet and on recipe cards, you might come across but they all refer to the Swiss version of the sugar cookie. Try this simple recipe that belonged to my Great Grandma Frieda. It is best made with real butter, and extra good if made in the company of loved ones. This is a great lunch box cookie. My daughter always has a raised eyebrow at the end of the day if there was nothing “sweet” in her lunch box (no fruit or treat for her- she hates it if there are only carrot sticks and celery to conclude her meal!) and this is a great recipe for an easy treat.

Swiss Muesli

Muesli is a widely used descriptor referring to breakfasts made with grains, dairy, and fresh fruit. The recipe that follows in this post is adapted from the excellent “The Swiss Cookbook” by Betty Bossi gifted to me by my kind Swiss cousins. If you are hungry for a wholesome breakfast that is fast and delicious, read on. Top with any of the jams listed above!

Back to School Recommendation: My Favorite Lunchbox

I got this lunchbox for my daughter last year. I should back up a bit and tell you all I taught junior high and high school English for 9 years. I’ve seen a lot of lunch boxes. I have seen most of them end up in the garbage (ahem, landfill) before Christmas break, and I really didn’t want to have the hassle of finding a suitable lunchbox again, plus having to figure out if it was recyclable (likely not), plus having to pay for a second (and third, and fourth) lunchbox. I did a ton of research and chose the Planetbox lunch boxes. We used it, the accompanying bag, ice pack, silo and cups for a year and it looks almost brand-new. I justified the cost (it’s more than a crappy plastic lunchbox) thinking that if my daughter hated it, then I would carry it to college where I teach till I die. Well, no such luck because my daughter loves it.

They are super well made lightweight but not flimsy stainless steel lunch boxes. The genius part is you can choose from a really wide selection of magnets to stick on the front (above is the “Animal” option my son chose for this year!) that slide off when you want to put the whole lunch box in the dishwasher or submerge in the sink, which isn’t necessary all the time, but just when you want to. The hinge wasn’t too difficult for my 5-year-old to manage and it was easy to slide it in and out of the insulated bag.

Because it was stainless, I didn’t wrap up her sandwiches or snacks nowhere nearly as often as I would have if it were a more traditionally sized and shaped plastic lunchbox because you can nestle the food neatly into the cubbies and there’s no worry about the food staining – it’s stainless 😉 – and the lid fits perfectly down on the bottom.

This isn’t a sponsored post, and I didn’t get them for free- I just love them and I think you would too!

Happy Back to School, Wildflowers!

Filed Under: Cook

5 Strawberry Canning Recipes for Beginners

August 13, 2018 by Jenny Gomes Leave a Comment

Jam is nearly foolproof for beginners because the recipes are quite high in acid, making them very safe, and they frequently call for very few ingredients making them fast and simple to prepare. The worst thing that can happen in jam making is it turns out a little bit thin, which is essentially syrup. Strawberries are an especially smart fruit, to begin with, because they are available widely and often, they are well-liked by kids and adults, and they are especially high in acid and easy to work with. Here are the 5 strawberry canning recipes for beginners!

5 Strawberry Canning Recipes for Beginners

This post contains affiliate links.

5 Strawberry Canning Recipes for Beginners

Strawberry Champagne Jam Recipe 

Strawberry Champagne Jam is THE jam to make to celebrate, to give as a gift, and to savor the flavor of spring. It is much easier than you think and there are a few simple pro tips for keeping that champagne flavor in the jar! You can head to the blog post, or download the printable PDF right here!

Success! Now check your email to confirm your subscription and download your PDF of the Strawberry Champagne Jam recipe!

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5 Strawberry Canning Recipes for Beginners

Strawberry Jam 

Strawberry Jam is THE preserve to try if you’ve never canned because strawberries are so high in acid that the worst thing that could happen is that you’ll have thin jam, which is essentially strawberry syrup. It’s also a great gift jam, holding it’s color nicely in jars.

5 Strawberry Canning Recipes for Beginners

Download the Strawberry Jam PDF to print or view digitally right here!

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Want to dive into canning these recipes, but need a jump start? Get started canning with the Canning Jump Start Guide! This visual guide shares recipes, checklists, and tutorials to help you get started today for a song! Amazon shoppers can grab it here or you can purchase it here from my site as well!

Steam Canning Strawberry Syrup

Strawberry syrup is, of course, great on breakfast foods but it is very versatile in the beverage realm and after I read the suggestion for strawberry margaritas in “The All New Ball Book of Canning & Preserving” and I felt silly for not using the syrup that my kids love on Saturday morning in one of my favorite grown-up drinks. Steam canning it is especially fast, and this recipe shows you how to can it in both the steam canner and the traditional water bath canner!

5 Strawberry Canning Recipes for Beginners

Strawberry Kiwi Lemonade Concentrate

This recipe is for Strawberry Kiwi Lemonade concentrate and that is the best part. You can pour a spoonful or two into a glass and fill it with water (or sparkling water if you want to trick them even further!) and stir it up and it is suddenly a natural soda that you made yourself. If I want to add a shot of grown-up libation to it, I can, and if my youngest wants to have some I can make his weaker still.

Strawberry Syrup

I don’t strain with cheesecloth because I personally don’t care about things like tiny strawberry seeds and I am not interested in perfectly clear syrup. Feel free to strain of course as you wish. This post will share a recipe that is a very simple recipe for strawberry syrup and I hope to remind you also that syrup is not just for pancakes.

5 Strawberry Canning Recipes for Beginners

If you LOVE strawberries (I know you do!) you might also love my Canning Strawberries Recipe Ebook! In it, there are beginner friendly instructions that walk you through STEP BY STEP quick and easy strawberry-centered canning recipes. You can view the ebook on your phone or e-reader, or on your laptop, and it’s short enough you could print it too!

Related Posts:

Strawberry Pineapple Shrub Recipe

Canning For Party Favors

Free Canning Basics Course

Filed Under: Can

5 Easy Shrub Recipes

August 12, 2018 by Jenny Gomes Leave a Comment

Making your own shrubs is very easy and the flavor possibilities are endless. Shrubs are becoming a popular mixer for cocktails and mocktails because they are no-cook, simple to create, and a great first preserve. Here are my favorite 5 Easy Shrub Recipes for you!

5 Easy Shrub Recipes

This post contains affiliate links.

5 Easy Shrub Recipes

Strawberry Pineapple Shrub Recipe

Strawberry Pineapple shrub is an easy preserve that is a perfect cocktail mixer and it elevates sparkling water infinitely. The vinegar and sugar combined with the fruit make a bright and flavorful syrup with very little effort and this is the perfect shrub for beginners because it is simple to make.

5 Easy Shrub Recipes

Pineapple Core Shrub

In case you are new to the shrub game, shrubs are a very simple type of preserve where fruit or vegetable are preserved in sugar and vinegar on your countertop. If you love the idea of saving a little fruit in a jar on your counter in under 10 minutes for use in cocktails, sparkling water, salad dressing, yogurt, and more.

5 Easy Shrub Recipes

Rhubarb Pineapple Balsamic Shrub

Rhubarb is one of my favorite veggies. I love the color, the flavor, and how delicious it is in a pie, crisp, and canned into jam or syrup. It is pretty easy to get 1 3/4 cup chopped rhubarb; even a new gardener can cultivate this amount. It is also available in grocery stores. Just be sure to be careful with the leaves as they are poisonous.

Ready to learn how to make a shrub out of nearly any fruit? Dive into my free little email course on how to make shrubs! I’ll teach you the ratio of sweetener to fruit that works no matter what you’ve picked from the berry patch or have leftover in your fridge, and the course gives you great options for alternative sweeteners and vinegar ideas to let your culinary creativity run wild! Did I mention this is a FREE email series?! Sign up here!

Blood Orange Balsamic Shrub

Blood Orange Balsamic Shrub is a shrub I have crafted with balsamic vinegar. The other recipes I have shared use apple cider vinegar and that is a much more mild tasting vinegar. Balsamic is bold both in flavor and in color and when added with blood oranges and plain white sugar it creates a strong but delicious shrub. This mixes so, so well with unflavored sparkling water and in a cocktail with bourbon.

Apple Shrub

Apple Shrub is a great recipe because it takes just one apple of any variety, is fun to spice up with cinnamon or a few dissolved red-hot candies, and mixed with whiskey. It is a cocktail that will transition your beverage game right into autumn.

These are my favorite recipes to get a newbie in the shrub world started. If you want to get ALL my shrub recipes and complete instruction and my pro tips in ONE spot, check out my ebook,

Shrubology: Refreshing Homemade Fruit and Vinegar Syrups for Cocktails

You can get the ebook on AMAZON (fancy fancy I know! 😉 here! Thanks for leaving a review, Amazon shopper!

And if you aren’t an Amazon shopper, you can get it here as well!

Happy Cocktailing, Wildflowers!

Filed Under: Cocktails

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Shrubology Ebook

Shrubology: Refreshing Homemade Fruit and Vinegar Syrups for Cocktails
Make easy, no-cook fruit & vinegar syrups for cocktails & mocktails! This ebook shares crowd pleasing recipes and simple to understand ratios so you can make a shrub on your countertop any time- without a recipe. Dive into these Prohibition Era drinks today!

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The Domestic Wildflower
www.thedomesticwildflower.com.
All content created by Jennifer Gomes unless otherwise noted.

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