jelly-bag

“Although you can buy jelly bags, they are easy things to improvise. I always use the washed and bleached out bags that Virginia hams come in, and you can also use the bags that hold popcorn rice. Just wash them well, and hang them in the sun to dry and bleach. If you want to make one, sew up the sides of a piece of pure white cotton so that it does not have a bottom seam, just side ones. When you are making jelly, hang the bag on a hook and let the juice…drip into a large glass jar or bowl. Some of the store-bought bags come with a frame for hanging the bag.”

—Edna Lewis, In Pursuit of Flavor

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I’ve used a jelly bag in the past, but its been a long time. These days I take the easy route and use my handy dandy ricer to juice my berries and grapes.

Tipper

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11 Comments

  1. Tipper,
    If you want “blue ribbon” jelly…The juice has to be dripped slow thru a jelly bag…either homemade or several layers of cheesecloth…My Mother preferred several layers of cheese cloth twisted and tied and let the juice drip slow thru it…Slow dripped jelly makes the clearest and prettiest jelly…Mom also used cheese cloth to eliminate some of the seeds when she made blackberry jam…her jam was the best I ever ate…I always preferred Blackberry jam over jelly…I loved her Apple jelly, grape jelly as well..She always made strawberry preserves, peach preserves apple sauce and apple butter…Yum…I’m starving for a biscuit and butter and one of the condiments…lol

  2. I’ve used a “jelly bag” to squeeze the juice from cooked fruit. I used a washed, bleached bag our flour was purchased in. We didn’t purchase “Virginia Hams” on my Dyer–Choestoe, GA–farm. My Daddy made wonderful cured hams from the several hogs butchered after the weather got cold. He had his own “recipe” for what he put on the pork hams: salt, of course; and some brown sugar and I think some pepper–but I don’t know the proportions. I wish I had learned his techniques for curing hams. But now, of course, we don’t even “grow out’ pigs to butcher when they are large enough and the weather is cold enough! People from Gainesville and Atlanta were “regular customers” to come yearly to purchase their cured ham from my Daddy’s smokehouse. Wonderful memories; hard work, but happy family–and extremely self-sufficient!

  3. One of the things I loved to eat at my Granny’s was cobblers… when it was blackberry cobbler, she would use squeezing bags she made out of flour sacks they bought in 50 lb. bags .. she didn’t like those seeds in the cobbler…. just talking about cobbler makes me hungry . Yummy, warm out of the oven with a bit of vanilla ice cream .Black berry or peach cobbler , oh, the tastiness.

  4. I watched Mommy make juice. She used a big piece of cotton cloth, usually a worn out bed sheet. She’d lay it on a big pot and fill the pot with whatever she was juicing then “gather”the cloth that was hanging outside. Then she would tie a big knot in it and start twisting. The more she twisted the tighter the makeshift bag became and the more juice was forced through.
    Later she got a china cap strainer that sits on a stand. That’s what I use now. In fact I am making apple butter today with one. It’s the perfect tool.

  5. I never had an actual jelly bag, I used cheese cloth and later a ricer, like you. A ricer is a wonderful tool that can have many varying uses. I sure made a lot of jam and jelly in my time, but not so much any more. I’m always happy to get a gift jar once in a while form you and Granny, and that’s enough to meet my needs. I really can’t contemplate buying jelly, the home made if far superior!

  6. I hate to admit this but I have never made jelly. I am a jam person and love the pieces of fruit floating in it. The thicker the better.

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