Using up cherries
 

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[Closed] Using up cherries

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The cherry trees in the local park have been over flowing of late, until the latest rains washed them away, but it's prompted me to make a couple of cherry pies lately. Abet using tinned cherries, hey the local wild life was enjoying them too much & there too high up to pick easily.
Very nice.

Yesterday my brother turned up with 2Kg of unpitted cherries, and I need to use em up before they go bad... got any suggestions?

Was going to use some (all?) for a jam making experiment, though the recipe I've found is american and uses those stupid ****in "cup" measurements. Fine if you have sugar/flour (simple conversion to gram are avaiable) but wet fruit, WTF does a cup of cherries weigh?
Grrrrrrr


 
Posted : 28/06/2011 9:13 am
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Just spend a couple of quid on some measuring cups, simples.

Or use the volume conversions. 1 cup = near enough 250ml which is, surprise surprise - a typical cup or mug size 🙂

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cup_(unit)


 
Posted : 28/06/2011 9:15 am
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Bah! I am resisting, I will not be assimilated by cups...


 
Posted : 28/06/2011 9:17 am
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[IMG] [/IMG]


 
Posted : 28/06/2011 9:22 am
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those stupid ****in "cup" measurements

A really clever system of measurement. Imagine being able to bake and cook and only having one unit of measurement that didn't rely on having scales? Brilliant in it's simplicity.

Get a cherry / olive stoner and get stoning!


 
Posted : 28/06/2011 9:55 am
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A really clever system of measurement. Imagine being able to bake and cook and only having one unit of measurement that didn't rely on having scales? Brilliant in it's simplicity

Yet relies on having a correct size cup. And what happens when you need to measure half or quarter of a cup, do you have more cups of these sizes or measure it roughly in a full size cup? In which case the whole point of measuring ingredients is lost.


 
Posted : 28/06/2011 10:05 am
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It's true - cups are pretty useful. You don't need scales. We bought my sister in law a traditional British cookery book for Christmas one year and had to get her some scales too 🙂


 
Posted : 28/06/2011 10:05 am
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A really clever system of measurement. Imagine being able to bake and cook and only having one unit of measurement that didn't rely on having scales? Brilliant in it's simplicity.

What can I say? I prefer the accuracy of scales, not the guesstimation, I see cups as.


 
Posted : 28/06/2011 10:13 am
 Nick
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[url= http://www.joyofbaking.com/breakfast/CherryClafoutis.html ]Cherry Clafoutis[/url]


 
Posted : 28/06/2011 10:14 am
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It's true - cups are pretty useful. You don't need scales.

How do you measuring something like butter with a cup?


 
Posted : 28/06/2011 10:17 am
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Nick, your a star, that just what I want. Seen it done on River cottage, by Huge with other fruit, looked lovely
(and the recipe has proper measurements)


 
Posted : 28/06/2011 10:18 am
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Well in the USofA butter has measurements written on the side of the sticks so you know how much to add... if you're scooping it out of jar/container you just scoop it into your cup then scoop from the cup into the mixing bowl...
Personally (tho I grew up with the system) I love measuring cups; all I have to do is scoop the ingredients and pour into the bowl. Makes cooking very simple and teaches fractions too. 🙂 no zero-ing out scales or thinking little more, shake shake, accident dump...golldarnit now tons less...damn a little more...


 
Posted : 28/06/2011 10:32 am
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Molegrips... from your Wiki link 😈 :

There is no internationally-agreed standard definition of the cup, whose modern volume ranges between 200 and 284 millilitres.

Accuracy eh? What would you want that for? 😉


 
Posted : 28/06/2011 10:39 am
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They freeze ok if stoned.

Best to use to make a cherry vodka or gin.


 
Posted : 28/06/2011 10:48 am
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Aye, cups are standard per se, but if you are using cups from the same set then your measurements are all going to be accurate (relative to each other)...scales aren't always accurate either...


 
Posted : 28/06/2011 10:51 am
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cups are brilliant. and Lurpak has 25g markers on the pack these days


 
Posted : 28/06/2011 10:53 am

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