Guest guest Posted June 1, 2004 Report Share Posted June 1, 2004 From: <<I want to make the Orange Marmalade and Fruit Chutney's in NT but I am having trouble finding Rapadura (I am in Australia). What would be a suitable alternative? Honey? Maple Syrup? What about Palm Sugar (found in Asian Grocery Stores)? Is this a suitable sugar alternative?>> ---- I use palm sugar [easy to find here in London]... it is awkward to use as it comes in little 'cakes' which are hard to break or grate... it has a smoky flavour which might not be a suitable [taste wise] replacement in various dishes... guess you can experiment and see if you like the results. Dedy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 2, 2004 Report Share Posted June 2, 2004 >I want to make the Orange Marmalade and Fruit Chutney's in NT but I >am having trouble finding Rapadura (I am in Australia). What would >be a suitable alternative? Honey? Maple Syrup? > >What about Palm Sugar (found in Asian Grocery Stores)? Is this a >suitable sugar alternative? Personally I think any sugar that is less refined is better. Honey and maple syrup are great for my family. Just about anything sweet works in chutney (if you start out with sweet fruit, like plums, you don't really need sugar at all). I haven't tried palm sugar myself, haven't seen it! However, when we've made stuff with plain ol' white sugar it hasn't had any great impact on our health .. if the dessert is full of OTHER good stuff, and your diet is full of other good stuff, the nutritional difference between " complete " sugar and " white " sugar isn't that much of an impact. Most of our " sweet " desserts don't use as much of any sweetener as they used to. -- Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 2, 2004 Report Share Posted June 2, 2004 > Hi, > > I want to make the Orange Marmalade and Fruit Chutney's in NT but I > am having trouble finding Rapadura (I am in Australia). What would > be a suitable alternative? Honey? Maple Syrup? > > What about Palm Sugar (found in Asian Grocery Stores)? Is this a > suitable sugar alternative? How about golden syrup - not as strong as treacle and molasses, but not as refined as table sugar? Cheers, Tas'. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 2, 2004 Report Share Posted June 2, 2004 Heidi- >Just about anything >sweet works in chutney (if you start out with sweet fruit, like >plums, you don't really need sugar at all). From a fermentation perspective (and NT chutneys are fermented, right?) I have to sound a note of caution with honey. I haven't tried chutney, but I've noticed that my pickled salmon fails when I use a really good raw honey (like YS Organic). I guess it's the antimicrobial properties of the honey in action. I plan to try heating some lesser honey beforehand next time I make pickled salmon. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 2, 2004 Report Share Posted June 2, 2004 > >Just about anything >>sweet works in chutney (if you start out with sweet fruit, like >>plums, you don't really need sugar at all). > > From a fermentation perspective (and NT chutneys are fermented, right?) I >have to sound a note of caution with honey. I haven't tried chutney, but >I've noticed that my pickled salmon fails when I use a really good raw >honey (like YS Organic). I guess it's the antimicrobial properties of the >honey in action. I plan to try heating some lesser honey beforehand next >time I make pickled salmon. : I agree there! I was not thinking of fermented chutneys ... the ones my family likes are just vinegar/fruit kinds of things but we don't eat them all that much (for fermented stuff we do kimchi). Honey creates very SLOW fermentations ... I made mead once and it didn't ever ferment dry, but it fermented for MONTHS (most wines take less than one month). It doesn't seem to matter if it is raw or not ... for beers we boiled everything. Though raw honey is said to be much more antimicrobial (microphages, maybe?). -- Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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