Fruit-Syrup – Saft Recipe

RatingDifficultyBeginner

A fruit syrup is a type of syrup that is made from fruit juice or puree. It is a very sweet syrup that can be used to flavor desserts or as a topping for pancakes, waffles, and other breakfast items.

Yields1 Serving
Prep Time15 minsCook Time10 minsTotal Time25 mins
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 1 kg (2 lbs) of berries, e.g. black or red currants, cherries, raspberries, strawberries, etc.
 300 - 600 ml (1 - 2 cups) of water
 300 - 600 ml (1 - 2 cups) of granulated sugar
 5 grams of sodium benzoate to preserve the "saft"


1

Proceed as follows:

2

Clean the berries. The pit can stay in cherries; black and red currants can remain as racemes.

3

Weight the berries and determine the water quantity. Black and red currants require the largest water quantity, strawberries, cherries, and raspberries require less water.

4

Boil the berries in the water under cover for 10 minutes. Squeeze them now and then with, e.g. a wooden spoon in order to make certain they are crushed.

5

Now comes the tricky part: You have to strain the "saft", using a straining-cloth. Do not apply pressure, but let gravity do the trick. This part of the preparation might take up to an hour.

6

Measure the quantity of "saft", bring it to the boil and add the sugar. If required, carefully skim off any scum.

7

Add the sodium benzoate if desired (first dissolve it in a small quantity of saft, then add the solution to the rest of the "saft").

8

Fill the "saft" into hot, clean bottles and seal the bottles immediately (e.g. using cork). Before serving, mix the fruit-syrup with water to desired strength.

CategoryCuisine

Ingredients

 1 kg (2 lbs) of berries, e.g. black or red currants, cherries, raspberries, strawberries, etc.
 300 - 600 ml (1 - 2 cups) of water
 300 - 600 ml (1 - 2 cups) of granulated sugar
 5 grams of sodium benzoate to preserve the "saft"

Directions

1

Proceed as follows:

2

Clean the berries. The pit can stay in cherries; black and red currants can remain as racemes.

3

Weight the berries and determine the water quantity. Black and red currants require the largest water quantity, strawberries, cherries, and raspberries require less water.

4

Boil the berries in the water under cover for 10 minutes. Squeeze them now and then with, e.g. a wooden spoon in order to make certain they are crushed.

5

Now comes the tricky part: You have to strain the "saft", using a straining-cloth. Do not apply pressure, but let gravity do the trick. This part of the preparation might take up to an hour.

6

Measure the quantity of "saft", bring it to the boil and add the sugar. If required, carefully skim off any scum.

7

Add the sodium benzoate if desired (first dissolve it in a small quantity of saft, then add the solution to the rest of the "saft").

8

Fill the "saft" into hot, clean bottles and seal the bottles immediately (e.g. using cork). Before serving, mix the fruit-syrup with water to desired strength.

Fruit-Syrup – Saft Recipe

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