Terry Shames has abiding affection
for the small Texas town where here grandparents lived, the model for the
fictional town of Jarrett Creek in her Samuel Craddock mysteries. Her second
Samuel Craddock novel, The Last Death of Jack Harbin, will be out in January 2014. Learn more about Terry and her books at
her website.
In my
second Samuel Craddock mystery, The Last
Death of Jack Harbin, coming January 7, I have an old friend come to visit
Samuel while he’s making plum jelly. Here’s the excerpt:
“Come on
into the kitchen, I’m making jelly,” I say. “I got some plums the other day and
they were yelling to be put up or thrown out.”
“Well aren’t
you a sight in your pretty little apron.” She hugs me tight.
She steps
around me to the stove, where the jelly is bubbling. Opening a drawer, she
takes out a spoon and sticks it into the brew, then waves it around to cool it.
She tastes the jam and smacks her lips in approval. My late wife, Jeanne, was
the cook in our household, but somewhere along the line I became the maker of
jams and jellies, and I’m pretty proud of what I come up with.
“We’re
going to have to talk here in the kitchen,” I tell her. “If I leave it too
long, it’ll set up too hard.”
“Samuel, I
may not be the world’s best cook, but even I know you have to be careful with
jelly. My mamma drilled that into me every year when she canned.” She grins and
a ghost of her outgrown, mischievous self flits across her face. “And every
year she’d leave me to watch a batch and the phone would ring or somebody would
come by, and next thing you know I’d forget all about it and I’d be in big
trouble.”
There’s a
story behind why I chose plum jelly for this scene. My mother tried to make
plum jelly, and it always turned out to be either too tart, too sugary, or, in
the worst case I can remember, so stiff you couldn’t stir it with a knife. And here’s the funny part. I love
making chutneys, jams, and jellies, and they always turn out great—except plum.
Failing at plum jelly is in my genes! So I decided my character, Samuel
Craddock would be able to make terrific plum jelly.
Here’s a
recipe from The New Settlement Cookbook.
Try it. Maybe you’ll have more success than I did.
Plum Jelly
Use under-ripe
tart plums. Wash the fruit and remove the stems. Cover fruit with water. Simmer
until the plums are very soft. Strain the juice. Use 1 cup sugar to 1 cup
juice. When juice boils, add sugar and cook until it jells. Pour into hot,
sterilized glasses and seal.
I’m adding
a recipe for Ginger Apples from the
same book, because I know this recipe works—and it’s apple season:
1 quart
tart apples
2 cups
water
2 cups
brown sugar
6 pieces
ginger root (1/2-3/4 inch pieces)
1 lemon
Pare, and
cut the apples into small squares. Grate the rind of the lemon. Boil water,
sugar and lemon juice five minutes or until clear. Add apples and ginger and
cook slowly two or more hours until thick and brown. Pour into jars and seal.
A Killing at Cotton Hill: A Samuel Craddock Mystery
Samuel
Craddock has a reputation as the best lawman the town of Jarrett Creek ever
had. The current chief of police is incompetent, so when Dora Lee Parjeter is
murdered, Craddock steps in to investigate. He discovers that a lot of people
may have wanted Dora Lee dead—the conniving rascals on a neighboring farm, her
estranged daughter and her surly live-in grandson. And then there’s the
stranger Dora Lee claimed was spying on her. During the course of the
investigation the human foibles of the small-town residents—their pettiness and
generosity, their secret vices and true virtues—are revealed.
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4 comments:
Congratulations on your second release! Woohoo!
And since I'm on a carb-crackdown for at least today, I have a terrific excuse not to try and make plum jelly.
Continued success!
Peg, you wouldn't want to try the results I got anyway--at least not on the jelly. The Ginger Apple compete is another matter.
I've always made good plum jelly, Terry, but I use rip plums. I make crappy everything else! FYI, I tried Texaa Champagne as the salsa for my Day of the Dead posole and it rocked! Thanks for reminding me of it with your Deviled Egg recipe. CAn't wait for the next book...!
Ana
Thanks, Ana. I have to taste your plum jelly sometime.
You know I don't think anything doesn't taste better with Texas Champagne!
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