That sounds odd, because normally blackcurrants have so much power and pectin that they go to make a jam that tastes like dynamite and sets like glue!!!Patricia Thornton wrote:Earlier in the year I made some blackcurrant jam that didn't set, in fact it was more like Ribena than jam.
Definitely the sugar. In ice cream making the critical thing which defines the firmness/softness is the sugar content (or in a sorbet with alcohol) the combination of sugar and alcohol. I can't remember - if I ever knew - the figures, but I suspect that for custard based and fruit based ice creams, you could fairly simply work out a formula to link the total volumes and the weights of sugar you should use.Patricia Thornton wrote: An hour later the Gaggia was still trying desperately to get it to a consistency greater than Mr. Whippy so I stuck it in a box and put it in the freezer over night. The next day it was only slightly stiffer than Mr. Whippy, rather sweet for my taste but great for pancakes. I used to think it was oil that kept the soft ice-cream soft but now think it must be the sugar.
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