Old Fashioned Gooseberry Recipes - Vintage Recipes and Cookery (2024)

When I was in grade school in the 1960s, we visited our grandparents every summer and they grew gooseberries. We picked and ate green gooseberries right off the bushes. They were certainly sour, but that was the attraction. We had contests to see how many we could eat before having to spit them out. We never did get to see them as red berries. They must have ripened in late summer or early fall after we went back home. I don’t hear of gooseberries much anymore, but they’re mentioned in a lot of old cookbooks.

INFORMATION BELOW COMPILED FROM 1800s COOKBOOKS

STEWED GOOSEBERRIES
Young green gooseberries stewed, strange to say, require less sugar than ripe gooseberries. It is best to stew the fruit first, and add the sugar afterwards. The amount of sugar varies very much with the quality of the gooseberries.

GREEN GOOSEBERRY TART
Top and tail*
the gooseberries. Put into a porcelain kettle with enough water to prevent burning and stew slowly until they break. Take them off, sweeten well, and set aside to cool. When cold, pour into pastry shells and bake with a top crust of puff-paste. Brush all over with beaten egg while hot, set back in the oven to glaze for three minutes. Eat cold.

*top and tail – to cut off the hard parts at each end before you prepare it for cooking.

Old Fashioned Gooseberry Recipes - Vintage Recipes and Cookery (1)

COMPOTE OF GOOSEBERRIES
Choose a quart of large, sound, ripe, gooseberries. Remove the stems and tops, then throw the berries into boiling water for two minutes. Drain, let them lay three minutes in cold water containing a tablespoon of vinegar to restore their color, and then drain again until quite dry.

Meantime, make a thick syrup by boiling one pound of sugar with one pint of water, As soon as the syrup has boiled about ten minutes, put in the gooseberries and boil them gently until just tender, about ten minutes. Then pour both fruit and syrup into an earthen or glass dish, cool, and use.

GOOSEBERRY CHEESE
Remove the tops and stalks from two quarts of ripe, red gooseberries. Put them in a moderate oven* till soft enough to rub through a sieve. Then add to them one-fourth their weight of sugar. Set them over the fire to boil gently for half an hour, stirring them constantly and skimming till clear. Then put by the tablespoon on plates and dry in the mouth of a cool oven. Pack, when quite cool, in a tight box between sheets of white wrapping paper.

*moderate oven – about 350-400 degrees Fahrenheit.

GOOSEBERRY FOOL
Remove tops and stalks from two quarts of gooseberries. Boil them with three quarters of their weight in sugar and one-half pint of cold water until soft enough to pulp through a sieve. Then mix the pulp with a pint of milk, or cream, if a more expensive dish is desired, and put into an earthen or glass dish to cool. Serve cold.

GOOSEBERRY JAM
Press the juice from three oranges and shave off the rind, being careful not to get any of the white part. Remove blossoms and stems from five pounds of gooseberries, seed* two pounds of raisins, and chop all together very fine. Add three–fourths of a pound of sugar and the orange juice, and cook slowly for an hour. Pour into jars or tumblers and when cold, spread a layer of powdered sugar on top of the glass and seal.

*seed – seedless grapes and raisins were not available in the 1800s.

GOOSEBERRY PUDDING
Stew one pint ripe or nearly ripe gooseberries ten minutes—very slowly, so as not to break them. Cut six or eight slices stale bread with crusts removed to fit your pudding-dish, and toast to a light brown on both sides. Dip each slice, while hot, in milk and spread with melted butter. Cover the bottom of the dish with them, put a layer of the gooseberries sprinkled thickly with sugar, more toast, more berries, and so on, until the dish is full. Cover closely and steam in a moderate oven twenty or twenty-five minutes. Turn out upon a hot dish and sift powdered sugar over the top. This is considered a wholesome breakfast dish.

AN EASTERN PUDDING
Make a paste of a pound of flour and one-half pound of minced suet.* Roll it out thin into a square or oblong sheet and trim off the edges so as to make it an even shape. Spread thickly over it some marmalade or cold stewed gooseberries, (which must be made very sweet). Roll up the paste with the fruit spread on it, into a scroll. Secure each end by putting on nicely a thin round piece of paste left over from the trimmings. Put the pudding into a cloth and boil it at least three hours. Serve it up hot and eat it with cream sauce, or with butter and sugar.

*suet – the hard white fat on the kidneys and loins of cattle, sheep, and other animals.

PRESERVED GOOSEBERRIES
In dry weather, pick some full grown but unripe gooseberries, top and tail them, and put them into wide-mouthed bottles. Stop them lightly with new velvet corks, put them into the oven after the bread has been baked, and let them stand till they are shrunk one fourth. Take them out of the oven, fasten the corks in tight, cut off the tops, and rosin them down close. Set them in a dry place, and if well secured from the air, they will keep the year round. Currants and damsons may be preserved in the same way.

photo credit green gooseberries

photo credit ripe gooseberries

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Old Fashioned Gooseberry Recipes - Vintage Recipes and Cookery (2)

The Alaska Wild Berry Cookbook: Homestyle Recipes from the Far North

Mouth-watering recipes include classic desserts, such as blueberry-lemon pie and strawberry mousse, to more unique ones, such as salmonberry cake, but there are also sections for berry-made breads, salads, meat dishes and marinades, preserves, candies, mincemeats, and even beverages. Also included are easy substitutions for berry lovers everywhere, foragers and grocery store shoppers alike, to customize and enjoy the dishes wherever they may live. From lowbush cranberry marmalade to raspberry cake to crowberry syrup, this classic berry cookbook covers it all.

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Have You Ever Eaten Gooseberries? Please Leave a Comment Below.

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Old Fashioned Gooseberry Recipes - Vintage Recipes and Cookery (2024)

FAQs

What are gooseberries called in the USA? ›

Gooseberry (/ˈɡuːsbɛri/ GOOSS-berr-ee or /ˈɡuːzbɛri/ GOOZ-berr-ee (American and northern British) or /ˈɡʊzbəri/ GUUZ-bər-ee (southern British)) is a common name for many species of Ribes (which also includes currants), as well as a large number of plants of similar appearance.

How do you make gooseberries taste good? ›

Most recipes use gooseberry compote, a mixture of gooseberries and sugar reduced down with a splash of water until soft and pulpy. Gooseberries vary wildly in sweetness, so the ratio really depends on personal taste. Start with two parts gooseberry to one part sugar and adapt to suit your palate.

Do you have to top and tail gooseberries before cooking? ›

How to prepare gooseberries. Top and tail (snip off the stem and the flower ends from each one with some kitchen scissors), then wash. If you're planning to sieve the cooked berries there's no need to top and tail.

Why do gooseberries turn red when cooked? ›

The great thing about gooseberry jam is that the gooseberries change in colour, adopting an appetising warm pinkish hue with the intense heat of jam-making. This change is apparently due to the anthocyanins in the gooseberries interacting with metal ions leached from the cooking vessel itself.

What is the difference between American and European gooseberries? ›

Native American gooseberry species have smaller fruit size and less flavor, but they are more resistant to diseases when compared to European cultivars, which are noted for powdery mildew and leaf spot susceptibility. This problem has limited the culture of most of the European types in this country.

Can you eat raw gooseberries? ›

Easy to add to your diet. For maximum health benefits, it's best to enjoy gooseberries raw. Their flavor ranges from quite sour to relatively sweet, a little bit like slightly underripe grapes. The riper the fruit, the sweeter it becomes.

Why can't you buy gooseberries at the supermarket? ›

They can't be machine-harvested so they don't fit with the supermarket business model. Supermarkets like uniformity, low production cost, and the hell with quality and flavour. Gooseberries are divine but there's no place for them in the industrialised mass market. You have to find a specialist, or grow them yourself.

What is the sticky stuff on gooseberries? ›

The skin of the berries is naturally sticky due to the presence of a pair of high molecular weight withanolide glycosides (sugars) that are produced by glands at the base of the calyx. This substance is thought to protect the developing fruit from predation.

Why does water taste sweet after eating gooseberry? ›

Amla (gooseberries) are rich in Vitamin C, which is what causes the sour flavor. The molecular geometry of Vitamin C is similar to Sucrose/Glucose/Fructose and so when diluted, it activates similar receptors in the tongue, which causes a sweet residue on your tongue.

What goes well with gooseberries? ›

Often the unsung hero of summer fruits, gooseberries have a refreshing tartness that's ideal for crumbles, tarts, jams, cobblers, cakes, fools and even gin.

Can I freeze gooseberries? ›

Gooseberries freeze really well, so, because of the short season, it's worth buying more than you need. Freeze them on a tray, well spread out, then transfer the frozen berries to a bag or box and return to the freezer. This makes it easy to defrost as many as you need.

What is a gooseberry slang? ›

British, informal : an extra person who is present when two other people (such as lovers) want to be alone together — used especially in the phrase play gooseberry.

Can you eat too many gooseberries? ›

Although amla has many advantages, consuming too much of it can be dangerous. Before taking Indian gooseberry, it is important to consider its adverse effects. Amla's high fiber content increases the possibility of gastrointestinal problems such as bloating, stomachache, and diarrhea.

What is the fungal disease in gooseberries? ›

From early summer, symptoms appear on gooseberry bushes as: Powdery grey-white fungal patches on the leaves, which later turn brown. Mildew on the fruits turns brown as it ages. Young shoots are stunted and twisted at the tops, and die back.

Can you eat gooseberries right off the plant? ›

Gooseberries are such a tasty fruit. if you've only ever eaten supermarket ones you're missing a treat! Home grown fruits are sweet and juicy, and the range of varieties you can grow mean you can eat some straight from the bush.

What are the other names for gooseberries? ›

The long history of gooseberries in the UK has led to a great number of local names: 'Carberry', 'Dabberry', 'Dayberry', 'Dewberry', 'Fayberry', 'Feaberry', 'Fabes', 'Fapes', 'Feabs', 'Feaps', 'Goggle', 'Golfob', 'Goosegog', 'Goosegob', 'Groser', 'Groset', 'Grizzle' 'Honey-blob', 'Thapes' and 'Wineberry', to name few!

What is another name for gooseberry fruit? ›

Physalis peruviana is a species of plant in the nightshade family (Solanaceae) native to Chile and Peru. Within that region, it is called aguaymanto, uvilla or uchuva, in addition to numerous indigenous and regional names. In English, its common names include Cape gooseberry, goldenberry and Peruvian groundcherry.

Can you buy gooseberries in the USA? ›

In 1966, restrictions on gooseberries went from a federal ban to state jurisdictions. Now, most states welcome gooseberries with open arms, but some states like Maine still have restrictions.

What is another name for a gooseberry? ›

Sentences with gooseberry

The physalis fruit is also known as the cape gooseberry, goldenberry or ground cherry.

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