Rosa Canina or Dog rose is a shrub with a sweet and sour fruit. It has a very high level of vitamin C, very powerful antioxidant Anthocyanin in traces as well as Carotenoids, antioxidants too. It is used for making marmalade, vine and herbal tea.
Marmalade recipe
4 kg big, ripe Rosa Canina fruits
1,5 kg sugar
Wash fruits and remove stems. Cut each one in half and remove seeds and tiny hairs. Now, wash fruits thoroughly, and leave them covered overnight.
The next day put fruits in a large pot and pour cold water enough to cover them. Cook, stirring occasionally, until they become soft. When they’re cooked, mash them through the strainer and then return to the washed pot. Add sugar and cook until it thickens, for about 20 minutes.
Pour marmalade in cleaned, hot jars and place in warm (not hot!) oven overnight. The next day cover the jars.
Cleaning the Rosa Canina fruit is time consuming, but without those tiny hairs from the fruits, marmalade is a lot better.
Note: This is a part of Weekend Herb Blogging #119, hosted by Ulrike from Küchenlatein.
- More sweet preserves:
- Pink grapefruir and clementine jam
11 Comments
Mhmmmm… Looks great! Great shot! I can’t find rosa canina here, but growing up in Croatia I used to make it.Odlicno za palacinke!
that’s a great capture Maria:) and the marmalade sounds great too!
Thanks for participating WHB. Just a stupid question, does the name of your blog mean “pancake”? I bet your marmelade would be great with a thin oneUlrike aka ostwestwind from Küchenlatein
Yes they are Ulrike :). Although, pancakes in Serbia actually look like crepes. Hopefully, I will be posting recipe soon.
I know the Austrian “Palatschinke”, they are thin pancakes but not the French crepes or the thick American pancakes. The German ones are something in between
this marmalade sounds really good..i havent tasted yet rosa canina, you think it exist also in the wilds of southern france..im really curious.guess i have to make my research :-)glad to discover your wonderful site!!
My granmother was from Istria and she used to cook what we call palacinche.I am very fond of eastern and nord european cusine so I linked
Hooray, something brand new that I’ve never heard of before. Very interesting entry, thanks!
The marmalade would be great with the pancakes…
Thank you all for your beautiful comments!
Mmmm gonna try this. It is great.
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