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Skillet Jam

Skillet Jam

This skillet jam is for all of you who love homemade jam, but find traditional canning a bit much – the sterilizing, the jars, the ratios, etc. It comes from an absolute gem of a new cookbook, Eating at Home by Trinity Mouzon Wofford, and it is as simple as it is flavorful. This easy-breezy approach to jam-making delivers intensely bright, not overly sweetened spreads – beautiful swiped across thick slabs of sourdough. If you’re a smoothie fan with a freezer stocked with berries, you’re already half way there. Skillet jam in a pot after cooking
One of the things I love most about skillet jams is that, because they’re meant to be eaten fresh – say, within a week, refrigerated – they don’t need to be shelf stable. As a result, they use just a fraction of the sugar required to preserve conventional jams. Let’s talk a bit more about the jam, and then I’ll share some favorite aspects of the cookbook.

Skillet Jam: Ingredients

  • Fruit: You can use fresh or frozen fruit here. I’ve found that using frozen berries is a great way to use up any fruit accumulated in my freezer.
    Frozen fruit for making easy skillet jam
  • Lemon: I like to use a Y-peeler to remove the lemon rind, then slice it thinly with a sharp knife rather than using a microplane. The zest ends up with more structure,  so it doesn’t disappear as the jam cooks.
    Rubbing lemon zest into sugar with fingers
  • Sugar: granulated. You rub the lemon zest into the sugar with your fingertips.
    Sugar and lemon zest in a pot

  • Salt: To balance out the sweetness a bit.

Fruit for jam simmering in a wide pot

Skillet Jam: Inspiration

I came across this skillet jam in Eating at Home. This is a complete charmer of a cookbook – one that I bought at the neighborhood bookstore a few blocks from our house. I stop in often to see what’s new, and while I don’t always leave with something, this one felt like it needed to come home with me.
Eating at Home cookbook cover
Eating at Home cookbook Table of Contents

The full title is Eating at Home: The Nourishing Practice of Everyday Cooking. A quick flip through – the food looked gorgeous, the recipes very approachable, and the vibe wholesome and encouraging. Trinity Mouzon Wofford writes about cooking on a shoestring budget for a family of four, noting, “…I quickly noticed our dollars went furthest at the local farmers market. As the seasons passed, I learned to look past the ephemeral strawberries to the hardworking root vegetables and greens that would form the foundations of our meals. I discovered that shiitake and oyster mushrooms could sub in for the richness of meat at a fraction of the cost.” It’s the kind of book I can imagine giving as a gift for a wide range of people. It encourages the practice and celebration of simple home-cooked meals, and the importance of slowing down in a hectic, scary world to make space for good, intentional meals.
Eating at Home cookbook page picturing skillet jam and sourdough bread on a cutting board
The book design is what initially caught my attention – the brown and yellow palette, woodblock illustrations, and bright lime endpapers. It uses Falcon Nuvo and Broadsheet fonts, with illustrations by Issey Kobori, Trinity’s husband. Design by Emma Campion, photos by Dane Tashima. The whole package comes together beautifully.

More Trinity:

Strawberries and raspberries in a pot starting to simmer for jam
Skillet jam in a pot after cooking and filling glass jar
So, keep your eyes peeled for Eating at Home, be sure to flip through it if you get a chance. And in the meantime, definitely make a round of this skillet jam. We’ve been enjoying ours all week, I made ours with (frozen) raspberries and strawberries and it is perfect on sesame sourdough.

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Continue reading Skillet Jam on 101 Cookbooks

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