Showing posts with label Nashtown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nashtown. Show all posts

Tuesday, 19 March 2013

Red Currant & Lavender Jelly for the Easter Lamb

At Nashtown Castle our preserves, jellies and pickles are made seasonally with local seasonal produce where possible. They are home grown and home made. Here is our list of the preserves that are currently available.
Nashtown Castle Red Currant & Lavender Jelly for Easter

  • Apple Jelly - made with apples from an old traditional Kilkenny orchard
  • Apple & Lavender Jelly - made with our homegrown lavender
  • Bitter Orange Marmalade - this is our only preserve that has no locally grown ingredients
  • Cucumber Pickle - made with three varieties of cucumber, grown in our garden
  • Gooseberry & Apple Jelly - has a subtle gooseberry flavour
  • Pickled Red Cabbage - robust old fashioned pickle, made with our own red cabbage
  • Pumpkin, Ginger & Orange Marmalade - more like a relish, delicious with cold meat
  • Spicy Pumpkin Chutney - perfect with cold beef and a baked potato
  • Red Currant and Lavender Jelly - to be eaten with the Easter roast lamb. Fresh mint will be difficult to find as Easter is so early this year, so here is a great alternative

Tuesday, 29 January 2013

Pumpkin, Ginger and Orange Marmalade

Pumpkin, Ginger and Orange Marmalade from Nashtown Castle made from our own home grown pumpkins, picked in the autumn, air dried and naturally matured to ensure they are eaten at their best.

Nashtown Castle Pumpkin, Ginger and Orange Marmalade
Made in our traditional country kitchen, the orange and ginger flavours are dominant in this unusual, but delicious marmalade. Use it as a relish with free range pork sausages or on fresh brown soda bread for breakfast.


Nashtown Castle Bitter Orange Marmalade

Orange Marmalade is made from Seville Oranges that are only in season for a few weeks at the start of the year. The bitter oranges, despite their name, originated in China. They are not pleasant to eat raw, but when made into a marmalade, they release their wonderful flavour and perfume, best eaten on hot buttered toast.

Nashtown Castle Bitter Orange Marmalade
Nashtown Castle Bitter Orange Marmalade is created from fresh Seville oranges, handcut and cooked in a preserving pan on an old fashioned Aga cooker, until they are ready to gently set into a special marmalade.

Thursday, 6 December 2012

More Preserves from Nashtown Castle

Continuing the family tradition of preserving our own home grown heritage vegetables and preserving locally foraged fruit when there is a surplus, allows us to enjoy them all year round. Nashtown Castle Preserves and Pickles are now available in Glasrai & Goodies in Gowran, County Kilkenny and Phelans' Vegetable Shop in Ormond Street, Kilkenny.

Nashtown Castle pickles, jellies and chutneys ready for sale
Nashtown Castle Wild Crab Apple Jelly is created with foraged wild crab apples growing in the local wild hedgerows. 2012 was a bad year for apples, we found one special wild tree that yielded all the crab apples that were required.

Nashtown Castle Sloe & Crab Apple Jelly Not only was 2012 a bad year for apples, it was also a poor year for sloes. However, some careful sleuthing in the nearby woods located enough to make this special jelly. We had to watch and wait until the first frosts came along before we picked them, to allow the sloes to develop a little sweetness. 

Nashtown Castle Pickled Red Cabbage We grow our own red cabbage, it only travels a few yards from where it grows, to the pickling bowl in the kitchen. A stunningly beautiful vegetable, when cut in half, it always seems a shame to slice it up. We love to eat it raw, freshly grated in a coleslaw. We preserve it by pickling it, so we can continue to eat it out of season.

Nashtown Castle Apple & Lavender Jelly One of the greatest pleasures of gardening is picking your own home grown lavender, while the perfume swirls around. The lavender bags are emptied every year, refilled and replaced around the house to deter moths. The remaining lavender is infused to make a herbal tea and it is that juice that is added to this beautiful clear jelly. Having very few apples this year, we raided our neighbour's neglected old orchard, full of old, flavorsome varieties of apples to produce this jelly.

Email: kilkennyseakale@gmail.com

Wednesday, 14 November 2012

Jerusalem Artichokes - Helianthus tuberosus

Jerusalem Artichokes (not to be confused with Globe Artichokes) are related to the sunflower. They are native to the eastern states of the North American continent and were extensively cultivated by the native peoples living there. The misleading name is believed to refer to Ter Neusen, the location at which they were grown in Holland, following their introduction to Europe, via France. This being only one of many explanations: that when the tubers were first brought to England, they were known as Artischokappeln van Ter Neusen, which became corrupted to Jerusalem Artichoke. 
Freshly dug Jerusalem Artichokes for sale at Glasrai & Goodies, Gowran, Co. Kilkenny
Tighe in his Statisical Survey of Kilkenny, 1801, mentions that they were grown in the county as a fodder crop for sheep. This should not put anyone off cooking them, as they make a delicious soup and the two recipes below, taken from Maura Laverty's Full & Plenty, 1960, are well worth trying.

JERUSALEM ARTICHOKES
This root vegetable deserves to figure more often on the menu. But it needs care in cooking. If artichokes are allowed to continue cooking after the have become tender, they are liable to become tough again.
Wash and scrub the artichokes and drop them into boiling water. Cook them, covered, until they are tender. After 15 mins. Test with a skewer.
Drain them and keep them in a hot place while you prepare the following dressing: Melt 2 tablespoons butter. Add 1 teaspoon mild white vinegar or dry white wine. Add 2 teaspoons chopped parsley. Pour this dressing over the artichokes and serve at once.

CREAMED JERUSALEM ARTICHOKES
Cook the artichokes as above. Drain them well and pour over enough cream sauce to make a good topping (about ½ pint cream sauce to 1½ lbs artichokes). Sprinkle thickly with chopped parsley.