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Minced Fruit

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Submitted by Verona

Old-fashioned mincemeat-style fruit preserve with prunes, dried apples, and raisins simmered with corn syrup, vinegar, and warm spices. Meatless take on traditional mincemeat for pies and tarts.

YIELD

16 servings

PREP

20 min

COOK

20 min

READY

40 min

This is a vintage meatless mincemeat, also called “minced fruit," that gives you the warm-spiced, tangy-sweet preserve that fills traditional Christmas mince pies and tarts, without the suet or beef of original mincemeat recipes. The flavor profile is unmistakably festive: dark, spicy, fruity, with the slight tang from cider vinegar that keeps everything from veering too sweet.

The three fruits work together to build the texture and flavor that makes mincemeat distinctive. Prunes bring deep, almost wine-like sweetness and tender chew. Dried apples add the chunky body that holds the preserve together. Raisins provide intense fruit-sugar concentration and the texture you expect in any classic mincemeat.

Light corn syrup is the sweetener of choice in this style of recipe. It dissolves smoothly without crystallizing and gives the preserve a glossy, almost candy-like sheen once cooled. The vinegar is the secret weapon; the acid balances the heavy sweetness and adds the tangy backbone that makes mincemeat taste like mincemeat instead of just sweet stewed fruit.

The spice blend is classic British holiday: cinnamon, allspice, ground cloves, and a pinch of mace. Mace is the often-forgotten spice in modern American pantries but it’s traditional in mincemeat and worth seeking out for its slightly nutmeg-like, slightly fruity warmth.

Pro Tips

  • Sterilize the jars properly before packing. A boiling-water bath for 10 minutes is the minimum; underdone jars are the source of most home-canning failures.
  • Stir frequently during the long simmers. The high sugar content means the mixture can scorch on the bottom of the pan if left alone.
  • Pack the hot preserve into hot jars (both at the same temperature). Cold jars hit by hot preserve can crack from thermal shock.
  • The flavors continue to develop in the jar over weeks. Fresh-made mincemeat tastes good; aged 2-3 weeks it tastes great.

Variations

  • Add ½ cup of brandy, dark rum, or bourbon during the last 5 minutes for a boozy, traditional British holiday twist.
  • Stir in a quarter cup of chopped candied citrus peel for the bright, almost old-fashioned fruitcake note.
  • Use this as a filling for hand pies, turnovers, or thumbprint cookies, not just standard mince pies.

Ingredients

2 473
CUPS ML PRUNE *
2 473
CUPS ML DRIED APPLE SLICE *
2 473
1 237
CUP ML LIGHT CORN SYRUP
white
¼ 1.3
TEASPOON ML MACE
¼ 59
CUP ML VINEGAR
7 ½ 1.8
CUPS L WATER
1 5
TEASPOON ML CINNAMON
½ 2.5
TEASPOON ML ALLSPICE
1 5
TEASPOON ML SALT
½ 2.5
TEASPOON ML CLOVES

Directions

Wash prunes. Remove pits. Chop prunes. Wash apples. Remove cores. Combine apples and 6 cups water.

Simmer 40 minutes.

Combine sirup, vinegar, 1½ cups water, spices, and salt.

Boil 2 minutes.

Add prunes.

Simmer 10 minutes. Add apples and raisins. Simmer about 20 minutes, or until flavors are blended.

Pack in freshly sterilized jars.

Seal.

* not incl. in nutrient facts Arrow up button

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Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 155g (5.5 oz)
Amount per Serving
Calories 463 1% from fat
 % Daily Value *
Total Fat 1g 1%
Saturated Fat 0g 0%
Trans Fat 0g
Cholesterol 0mg 0%
Sodium 669mg 28%
Total Carbohydrate 41g 41%
Dietary Fiber 3g 12%
Sugars g
Protein 5g
Vitamin A 0% Vitamin C 3%
Calcium 7% Iron 9%
* based on a 2,000 calorie diet How is this calculated?
Low Fat, Low in Saturated Fat, Low Cholesterol, Cholesterol-Free, Trans-fat Free, Good source of fiber
 

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