The Purple Passion
Hunting, harvesting and cooking the wild plum.
In the Northern Hemisphere, there are over
2,000 varieties of the main types of plums!
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Where jams and jellies are concerned, wild plums are a
peach of a fruit, the apple of any picker's eye. A fickle
fruit that ripens any time between late spring and later
summer, it comes in a peck of colors, a barrel of shapes, a
bushel of sizes. Some are sweet, some tart. And it boasts
the highest food value of any fruit, with a 20%
carbohydrate content.
In the Northern Hemisphere, there are 2,000 varieties of
the main types. There are about 30 varieties of native wild
plums throughout the United States alone. Additional
hybrids add to the complexity of variation and dilution of
"purity." Some wild plums are the size of cherries, some
the size of eggs. Wild native types are diverse in skin
color: deep red, glowing orange, bluish crimson, bright
red, bright yellow, dark yellow. Shapes may be globate,
oval, conical, or heartlike. All are smooth skinned,
hard-pitted drupes with yellow juicy "meat."
The first wild plums ( Prunus americana and other
species) are usually ready to be plucked by June. While
picking plums, one should exercise a fair amount of
caution: the twigs of these scrubby trees are covered with
dull, pointed thorns. The fruit itself grows singly, not in
clusters as do cherries. Ripe plums will drop into one's
hand at a finger's slightest provocation, and yield an
elastic sensation to the squeeze of pinching fingers.
Ripened fruits which have been warmed by the sun (and
untouched by the ravages of decay), can often be retrieved
from the ground. Wild plums which do not separate easily
from the twigs are not fully ripened, but should be
included in a harvest to add a tang of taste, and more
importantly—natural pectin (the substance that makes
jelly jell).
Easy Plum Jelly
Six pounds of plums should make four or five pints of
crimson jelly or jam. After they are washed, the wild plums
should be placed in a pan with two cups of water, covered
with a lid, and put on a stove on "high" until they boil.
They should then be left to simmer until the fruit becomes
mushy. This mush should be stirred occa sionally while the
fruit is softening up. This process shouldn't take much
longer than 30 minutes.