Lovely Buttery Lemon Curd recipe
I mentioned on Monday that I made a batch of lemon curd while my frustrating, sticky marmalade was boiling away.
Lemon curd is far easier and more fun to make than marmalade, and oh my wow, it’s delicious.
It doesn’t have a long shelf life though – what with the butter and the eggs – but I don’t mind having to make it regularly because it’s so quick and easy that it’s not a problem.
Compared to jams from foraged or grown fruit (where the only expenses are sugar, a tiny bit of spice & energy), this is expensive – lots of bought-in items. Using eggs from our own chickens, it worked out at about 70p a jar; if we’d had to buy in good eggs, it would have been about £1 a jar – not break-the-bank expensive and it is very very nice, but not the cheapest either (the blackberry jam I made last autumn worked out at about 25p a jar since the only thing I had to buy was sugar). It’s a good way to use up egg gluts – something we’ll have to get more proactive with now the girls are laying more.
Buttery Lemon Curd recipe
Ingredients
5 large lemons
5 medium-to-large eggs
250g of butter (!), room temperature
400g of golden caster sugar
2tsp of cornflour
Makes just under 3lbs of lovely lemon curd
Read MoreSix things I learnt while making marmalade yesterday
1. Squeezing multiple oranges and lemons after a couple of days of sewing & gardening is a mistake
I spent a couple of hours yesterday morning cutting back scratchy shrubs (including working underneath a holly bush) and I spent Thursday & Friday evening sewing (aka stabbing myself in the fingers with needles). I also have a tendency to bite the skin around my nails.
OH MY OW.
(Although admittedly after searing pain for a few minutes, it stopped hurting quite so much. They did keep tingling overnight though and even now are more painfully than little cuts or scratches should be.)
2. It’s easier to finely slice rind if it’s rind up, pith down than vice versa
I started with the rind to the chopping board but made much better progress when it was the other way around.
Read More