Good morning, Ladies!
Lili and I were talking some more about home-made gummy treats, and she's allowing me a little blog space to update you with some additional information which answers some questions from my original post.
Live and Learn was curious about carrying these gummies in an uncooled backpack or in a hot car situation. We experimented some with this, and had mixed, but interesting, results.
In our experience, the gummies will travel pretty well in an ice-chest style lunchbox with ice, and moderately well in one without any ice. As long as they were kept from getting actually "hot", ours seemed to tend to stay firm and gummy, not weep, and not lose their shape for hours... in fact, in two cases, for a couple of days. I was quite pleased.
Previously-frozen gummies melted in the car on a hot day. |
One of the interesting parts of this experiment, however, was that the gummies had held their shape and only gotten slightly melty for the first 45-50 minutes. Then all the sudden they were liquid at an hour. The first 20 minutes, I'd actually left them on the sunny dashboard. So, clearly, they can take some heat; but once they're truly too hot, they're going to melt.
Same gummies totally firm again after 20 minutes in the house at (not very cool) room temperature. |
Also, in the original discussion, YHF wondered if home-made gummies could be frozen for later enjoyment. The answer is a resounding "yes!" We tossed a few from the posted recipe batches into a freezer bag, and left them in the freezer for a couple of weeks. It wasn't long enough for freezer burn or any real "long-term" damage; but since some foods seem to deteriorate (especially in consistency) from even very short-term freezing, we figured that that was a reasonable introductory test.
We were pleased and a little surprised to find that, after thawing overnight in the refrigerator, our previously-frozen gummies had absolutely no discernible change in either their taste or their consistency. Both the fruit and fruit juice gummies came out perfect, and they lasted nicely again in the fridge (didn't seem to have any reduction in longevity of freshness) until we sacrificed the last of them to the hot car experiment.
Speaking of longevity, we were frankly amazed at how long these gummies seemed to stay perfectly fresh and wholesome in the refrigerator. Due to some unexpected changes in plans, we did not eat them nearly as fast as we'd expected to; so the original gummies we didn't freeze must have sat more than 10 days with no noticeable change in texture or smell to indicate that it was time to throw them out. Everyday I expected to have to, but I never felt it was necessary; and we ate each and every one with relish. Packaged, artificially-flavored jello has never lasted that long in our house, so I have no idea how long that stays edible. But one would expect that a product with actual juice and/or fruit, and no real "preservative" would have a more limited refrigerator life. I'm not suggesting that you leave yours for ages in the fridge (especially since we know they can be frozen), but I did think that this was worth mentioning, at least.
Ginger-Lemon-Honey Gummies |
Last, in honor of YHF and the other ginger fans in the group, our latest gummy experiment was a Ginger-Lemon-Honey flavor (only "single" ginger, though, YHF <wink>). We erred on the side of softer gummies (a family member's preference) in adjusting to make a larger batch than the fruit juice recipe posted before; so if you want the true gumminess, I'd add another half-packet of gelatine at the very least to the amounts below. Ours were a little more on the "jiggler" side, though still quite sturdy. The rest of the instructions are the same, except that you may wish to strain the ginger gratings out, especially if your digestion is sensitive to the skin, and you don't peel it before grating.
We thought that these were delicious-- like the ginger broth you might drink when you have a cold.
Ginger-Lemon-Honey Gummies
Juice of 1 lemon
Water to make a total of 2 cups of liquid
1 in. section of fresh ginger root, grated finely (easier to grate, though harder on your grater, if frozen)
3 tablespoons honey
4 packets of gelatine sprinkled in 1/2 cup of room-temperature water
Heat the lemon juice, water, ginger root and honey in a small saucepan and simmer until pungent and slightly reduced. Meanwhile, soften your gelatine in the cold/room-temperature water. Strain the ginger liquid, and mix with softened gelatine until completely dissolved. Chill. Set in an 8x8 square casserole, this batch made us 50 gummies (about 3/4" rounds) and lots of delicious scraps.
Best wishes, everybody! Sara