I live in Hawaii. Lilikoi (passionfruit) is everywhere. My favorite dessert in the whole wide world is Lilikoi Dream. Requires a bit of prep, but it's easy. 1. Cut fruit in half and scoop out the pulp including seeds. 2. Whirl in a food processor until completely pulverized into a smooth puree. 3. Place whirled pulp in several layers of cheesecloth and SQUEEZE the hell out of it which gives you the orange-yellow pulp with very few black bits of seeds. Discard the cheesecloth and seed bits. The amounts of the following ingredients isn't important; the ratio is. It's 1/3 passionfruit puree, 1/3 sweetened condensed milk and 1/3 unwhipped heavy cream. Lightly blend all ingredients together. Place in small ramekins or shot glasses or those tiny plastic "tasting" cups. Refrigerate until cold. You only need a bit of the Lilikoi Dream dessert - it's rich, heavy and definitely delicious. Aloha!
You're welcome as always. As my younger, more rare trees mature I'll be able to send you more fruits. That was very interesting, I'll be making that when I pick my next batch for sure! I think I'll use an immersion blender to smooth the pectin mix out.
@Spicefreak: That reminds me of a story by Sir PTerry: www.angelfire.com/weird2/athenia/stories/pterry/sea.htm (if you find it hard to read, just highlight all)
"quince cheese" is know by "marmelada" in Portugal. Quinces in Portugal are called "marmelos", the native portuguese Queen Catherine of England (Catherine of Braganza) loved the jam made from quinces (called "marmelada") that she used to eat in Portugal as an afternoon snack with tea, so she tried to import quince trees into England in order to have "marmelada", unfortunately the quince trees did not adapte to the Climate in England, so they tried to do the Marmelade (named after the quince jam "marmelada") with bitter oranges, so that the queen could eat with her 5 o'clock tea, an habit that quickly spread throughout England. Hope you liked a bit of history :D
How timeley I picked the first two of my passionfruit today and looking at so many on the vine I was thinking what a waste to not be able to use the skins. Thank you! Much blessings :)
The yellow ones are very common in Brazil, I have two passion fruit plants full of it in my yard. They make very good juice too, never tried the jam tho guess I will :)
Passion fruit curd, like lemon curd is pretty magical. So incredibly good! Just don’t add any lemon zest too it, because then the citrus flavour becomes too strong
you can reheat the jelly with more water and it will be a more fluid/less concrete state with the next refrigeration. also when warm, try it over ice cream.
I tried my first, fresh, purple passion fruits a couple of weeks ago, from Wegman's, and I LOVE THEM!!!! I just cut them open and go at it with a spoon Of course it's now mid September, and they don't ave them around more, so now I'm sad... But I have something to look forward to this summer!
i have never had passionfruit but man hawaiian punch is good. i'm old enough to remember it being poured from metal cans at birthday parties 😌 good times.
Long ago my mom and aunt decided to make watermelon rind preserves. I was a kid and had no idea it could be done, but they spent most of the day boiling water, adding the cut up pieces us kids had made of the rind and added a LOT of sugar. Eventually it was done and the next day (after cooling in the fridge all night) we went at it...somewhat. It was quite thick and sticky but once you got the spoon out, bent and all, the taste of the treat was worth even bit of effort.
Advice: Larger batches are easier to work with. Practice making jams until you get a feel for it. Stir regularly around the sides of the pot. And also test your jam on a cold plate throughout the process.
@@thexbigxgreen don't worry about it, it's a super easy thing to mistake. Tchaikovsky has a certain rhythm to his stuff, so on occasion you'll listen to a piece and know it's him but can't place which ballet it's from.
Post covid, you need to go try the different varieties in South America. So many passionfruit there. Banana passionfruit, passiflora quadrangularis. Also in eastern North America they have a native passionfruit called the maypop, I’ve heard it’s pretty good.
I love passion fruit, any time I see them in a store I get a few and just eat the pulp raw. next time I see them I'm getting a bunch and making this for sure
Magnificent! 👏 how you got the pectin naturally was genius! The jams thicc consistency was like orange 🍊 marmalade, simply fantastic!! If you didn’t want is as thicc , just don’t put in all the rine , just add half , but I like the result you had way better !!!
I grew up in rural Mississippi, and we would have passion flowers grow on our fence line. My grandmother would take the flowers and pinch off one "arms," skip one, then pinch off, another. She said the result was a ballarina. These flowers were so beautiful that you may easily miss the green hollow fruit beneath. When I a teen, I found out that they were passion fruit, which I largely only knew of from pictures of them on juice labels. Sadly, dispite paying special attention to the plant one season, I never opened a pod to find any ripe fruit (apparently). The pulp was translucent white around black seeds, and the couple I tasted were very tart, though not acrid or "green" tasting at all. I assumed they were not ripe, as they didn't taste like the juice blend at all (good luck finding pure passion fruit juice lol). But never did I notice the fruit changing color as they fell out of season, so perhaps they were ripe after all. Anyway, in your research, have you heard of a variety like this, or is it that I missed my chance somehow? P.S. I love what you do, and enjoy learning about new things I wouldn't otherwise. Your channel really shows that our society's concept of fruit is dominated by supermarkets, and I am glad you take the time to show that there are more fruits in the world than 10 or so, plus a tomatoe. lol
Passionfruit is my favorite. I have a passion fruit plant here in NYC, but I have only gotten 2 fruits from it so far...i typically use it for baking, and it pairs especially well with chocolate.
I think the term I have seen is quince paste so you’re essentially making a fruit paste. I was given some passionflower seeds So I am interested in seeing what I can make of what I grow. So thank you very much for posting this video! Your level of detail is very helpful.
Passionfruit is the national Australian fruit (ham and pineapple pizza is the national dish) we always eat the seeds , I chew them up. The popular variety is Nelly Kelly and they are very easy to grow.
I have a plant that makes yellow ones (they are quite common here, the purple ones are extremely rare, I never saw one in real life), the wrinks are in all store bought ones, but my plant does them smoothly, actually, when they are wrinkled they are usually bad, the juice also comes with different colors, sometimes it looks quite orange/reddish like the purple one on the video (it is usually "yellow", might be orange but really bright)
I remember the first time I realized passionfruit were being sold at my local grocery store. I picked one up, quickly ran home, and instantly ate pretty much all the pulp at once. It was... shocking, to say the least. But I don't regret it one bit! I'm a huge fan of really sour stuff; in fact, I think that I prefer the passionfruit even to the cherimoya, which I had the pleasure of eating recently. Passiflora is fantastic!
Lol when I had my first passion fruit I was expecting it to taste like the passion fruit juice you can find at an American hotel breakfast, I was wrong! Ps. That jam looks delicious.
The fruit itself has an extremely powerful flavour, so to actually enjoy it you either eat it extremely slowly or make a simple juice by diluting it with a lot of water and sugar(the same way you make Lemon juice) or just make a jam, cake, pie, etc., but you just have *to be in the mood* for eating the fruit by itself
I came here for the fruit. I'm happy with that. Never did know what to do with those fruits, usually we just eat them "monkey style ". I stay here because passion fruit jam. This guy, our host, is good.
I dunno where you got your passion fruits from🤷♀️ but i can safely say that where i come from they are quite sweet.... Unless of course they are not fully ripe...I'm from kenya bythaway..... Please reply
This might sound insane, but I’ve always smelled and tasted a slight hint of something “gasoline-like” in passionfruits. Never had anyone agree with me on that one.
You mentioned that the passionfruit itself is very tart. Is this also true for the jam or is it cancelled out by the sheer sweetness of the sugar you added?
I live in Hawaii. Lilikoi (passionfruit) is everywhere. My favorite dessert in the whole wide world is Lilikoi Dream. Requires a bit of prep, but it's easy.
1. Cut fruit in half and scoop out the pulp including seeds.
2. Whirl in a food processor until completely pulverized into a smooth puree.
3. Place whirled pulp in several layers of cheesecloth and SQUEEZE the hell out of it which gives you the orange-yellow pulp with very few black bits of seeds. Discard the cheesecloth and seed bits.
The amounts of the following ingredients isn't important; the ratio is.
It's 1/3 passionfruit puree, 1/3 sweetened condensed milk and 1/3 unwhipped heavy cream.
Lightly blend all ingredients together. Place in small ramekins or shot glasses or those tiny plastic "tasting" cups.
Refrigerate until cold. You only need a bit of the Lilikoi Dream dessert - it's rich, heavy and definitely delicious.
Aloha!
I'd love to see a full line up of the Passiflora fruits
That would be sooo many... but probably not all are edible
You're welcome as always. As my younger, more rare trees mature I'll be able to send you more fruits. That was very interesting, I'll be making that when I pick my next batch for sure!
I think I'll use an immersion blender to smooth the pectin mix out.
Would you ever consider selling them? I very rarely find passionfruit anymore
Passion fruit only grows on a vine...let us see your tree...
That looks almost as solid as my loquat chutney. Had to cut that stuff with apples to bring the pectin down because I was losing cutlery in it.
@Spicefreak: That reminds me of a story by Sir PTerry: www.angelfire.com/weird2/athenia/stories/pterry/sea.htm (if you find it hard to read, just highlight all)
"quince cheese" is know by "marmelada" in Portugal. Quinces in Portugal are called "marmelos", the native portuguese Queen Catherine of England (Catherine of Braganza) loved the jam made from quinces (called "marmelada") that she used to eat in Portugal as an afternoon snack with tea, so she tried to import quince trees into England in order to have "marmelada", unfortunately the quince trees did not adapte to the Climate in England, so they tried to do the Marmelade (named after the quince jam "marmelada") with bitter oranges, so that the queen could eat with her 5 o'clock tea, an habit that quickly spread throughout England. Hope you liked a bit of history :D
These used to grow wild all over our property in Mississippi. It was one of my favorite summertime treats!👍
A lot of sugar is added to make the jam more solid, if you're using something with a lot of pectin you can use less sugar
How timeley I picked the first two of my passionfruit today and looking at so many on the vine I was thinking what a waste to not be able to use the skins. Thank you! Much blessings :)
I used the processed rind to make pound cake. It turned out delicious with a floral aroma.
The yellow ones are very common in Brazil, I have two passion fruit plants full of it in my yard. They make very good juice too, never tried the jam tho guess I will :)
at my house, in australia we have soooo many purple passionfruits... THEYRE DELICIOUS!
also maybe push the pulp through a strainer and get the seeds out?
7:45 "1 cup of sugar" LOL... that was a big cup
Bro I can't express how much joy your channel brought me Jared ❤️ 🙏
Wewwww man you're really staying busy with these videos!
Keep up the good work!
Can't go outside, might as well cook some rinds.
@@WeirdExplorer... and clean the stove 😇
Passion fruit curd, like lemon curd is pretty magical. So incredibly good!
Just don’t add any lemon zest too it, because then the citrus flavour becomes too strong
That one with the lines on it looks really neat!
you can reheat the jelly with more water and it will be a more fluid/less concrete state with the next refrigeration. also when warm, try it over ice cream.
Passion Fruit and Rum great combo.
It's great to make ice cubes out the pulp. They just about store forever and are a great flavour addition to your drinks.
Was thinking it reminds me of your quince episode, then you said the same. Great video! I never knew you could use the rind like that.
I tried my first, fresh, purple passion fruits a couple of weeks ago, from Wegman's, and I LOVE THEM!!!! I just cut them open and go at it with a spoon Of course it's now mid September, and they don't ave them around more, so now I'm sad... But I have something to look forward to this summer!
i have never had passionfruit but man hawaiian punch is good. i'm old enough to remember it being poured from metal cans at birthday parties 😌 good times.
Sir, this was an exceptional episode today, loved it.
I appreciated the ploop at 6:41 👏🏾
passion fruit butter is like the best thing to do with passion fruits
Long ago my mom and aunt decided to make watermelon rind preserves. I was a kid and had no idea it could be done, but they spent most of the day boiling water, adding the cut up pieces us kids had made of the rind and added a LOT of sugar. Eventually it was done and the next day (after cooling in the fridge all night) we went at it...somewhat. It was quite thick and sticky but once you got the spoon out, bent and all, the taste of the treat was worth even bit of effort.
I’ve made this! Similar recipe, but i only used half of the rinds and I only kept a quarter of the seeds for some texture.
You are the best. I live un the forest but you teach me so much things...
Advice: Larger batches are easier to work with. Practice making jams until you get a feel for it. Stir regularly around the sides of the pot. And also test your jam on a cold plate throughout the process.
It seems you could also add those rinds to other kinds of jam, just to thicken them.
Use the tender shoots/leaves as vegetables:- in stews or stirfried, very good in pork stew and beef curries
For a moment there I thought I was the only one hearing Swan Lake lol
"This is the *most classy* hallucination I've ever had"
It's actually the Nutcracker. Same composer though
@@Horticarter41 Oh my bad, thanks for the correction!
@@benny_lemon5123 "Jeeves, bring me my dress straightjacket."
@@thexbigxgreen don't worry about it, it's a super easy thing to mistake. Tchaikovsky has a certain rhythm to his stuff, so on occasion you'll listen to a piece and know it's him but can't place which ballet it's from.
Thanks for this! I'm growing passion fruit right now but didn't know the rinds could be useful.
Post covid, you need to go try the different varieties in South America. So many passionfruit there. Banana passionfruit, passiflora quadrangularis. Also in eastern North America they have a native passionfruit called the maypop, I’ve heard it’s pretty good.
He’s tried them all before:
th-cam.com/video/fydEeXLmtMI/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/I7RAqX2_Mio/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/HIHENM15__M/w-d-xo.html
I love passion fruit, any time I see them in a store I get a few and just eat the pulp raw. next time I see them I'm getting a bunch and making this for sure
Everyone should be buying your shirts, imho. I bought 2 a while ago, and they're some of my faves. They have a really good, long fit!
my vines finally started fruiting, this looks like an awesome way to preserve all the fruit ill have soon
You can probably mix in a tiny bit of boiling water to thin it out
Magnificent! 👏 how you got the pectin naturally was genius! The jams thicc consistency was like orange 🍊 marmalade, simply fantastic!! If you didn’t want is as thicc , just don’t put in all the rine , just add half , but I like the result you had way better !!!
These grow wild and thick in our pasture they have the most interesting flowers. I don’t ever eat them though. Seems we’re really missing out
What growing zones do you live in?
Eden Schwenk 7a in Oklahoma
Midnight Gardener Wow! That's the same zone as me, in Massachusetts!
Eden Schwenk that’s badine 😎
I grew up in rural Mississippi, and we would have passion flowers grow on our fence line. My grandmother would take the flowers and pinch off one "arms," skip one, then pinch off, another. She said the result was a ballarina. These flowers were so beautiful that you may easily miss the green hollow fruit beneath. When I a teen, I found out that they were passion fruit, which I largely only knew of from pictures of them on juice labels. Sadly, dispite paying special attention to the plant one season, I never opened a pod to find any ripe fruit (apparently). The pulp was translucent white around black seeds, and the couple I tasted were very tart, though not acrid or "green" tasting at all. I assumed they were not ripe, as they didn't taste like the juice blend at all (good luck finding pure passion fruit juice lol). But never did I notice the fruit changing color as they fell out of season, so perhaps they were ripe after all.
Anyway, in your research, have you heard of a variety like this, or is it that I missed my chance somehow?
P.S. I love what you do, and enjoy learning about new things I wouldn't otherwise. Your channel really shows that our society's concept of fruit is dominated by supermarkets, and I am glad you take the time to show that there are more fruits in the world than 10 or so, plus a tomatoe. lol
It might be a maypop
Uuuuuh this with a Brie sounds soooooo good :3
Passionfruit is my favorite. I have a passion fruit plant here in NYC, but I have only gotten 2 fruits from it so far...i typically use it for baking, and it pairs especially well with chocolate.
The plant needs lots of sunshine for good fruiting.
I think the term I have seen is quince paste so you’re essentially making a fruit paste.
I was given some passionflower seeds So I am interested in seeing what I can make of what I grow.
So thank you very much for posting this video! Your level of detail is very helpful.
Passionfruit is the national Australian fruit (ham and pineapple pizza is the national dish) we always eat the seeds , I chew them up. The popular variety is Nelly Kelly and they are very easy to grow.
I say Passion fruit tastes like tart pineapple and unripe strawberries mixed with a little bitterness from lemon rind.
the music choice in your videos is outstanding!
thanks!
That looks good, I’m definitely going to try that when my passion fruits start dropping!
Mix passion fruit with cubed watermelon its great
Oh, that looked good. I might pick out the seeds so it doesn't look like boiled Pollywogs. Does anyone recognize the music in the background?
Swan Lake
The seeds are one of my fav parts of passion fruit jam.
@Kiki Lang: At 7:05, I can hear _Waltz of the Flowers,_ from _The Nutcracker._
You can strain the juice out of the seed but they give it more texture instead of only juice.
Man i struggled to overlook the stains on your stove😬😂😂😂... Still love your videos
i have 7 passion fruit plants growing from seed 6 yellow and one purple
Love that classical piece in your vids !
Sounds like a way to set fruit that doesn't have a lot of natural pectin in it. Try peaches for example
Thanks for sparking my imagination😉
Looks like alien eggs. 😄
When in doubt, pinky out! 😄
Hot tip: taste as you go and drip some of the hot jam on something cold to get a feel for consistency
You can melt the jam and add water if you want, it will set up again
Fabulous! I had no idea
Great idea, Jared.
I'm gonna try it.
Go for it!
I have a plant that makes yellow ones (they are quite common here, the purple ones are extremely rare, I never saw one in real life), the wrinks are in all store bought ones, but my plant does them smoothly, actually, when they are wrinkled they are usually bad, the juice also comes with different colors, sometimes it looks quite orange/reddish like the purple one on the video (it is usually "yellow", might be orange but really bright)
I remember the first time I realized passionfruit were being sold at my local grocery store. I picked one up, quickly ran home, and instantly ate pretty much all the pulp at once. It was... shocking, to say the least. But I don't regret it one bit! I'm a huge fan of really sour stuff; in fact, I think that I prefer the passionfruit even to the cherimoya, which I had the pleasure of eating recently. Passiflora is fantastic!
So you're a thief? 😉
@@chadliampearcy i *stole* fizzy lifting drinks
These reminded me of some spherical dragon fruit from Mexico. The fruit man on 25th and 3rd is the only one who would sell em but damn quarantine...
Goodness, just seeing you eat that fruit makes me salivate in sympathy. They really are unbelievably sour, but still delicious.
Floor of passion fruit is something that find very common in markets specialized in natural products here.
Lol when I had my first passion fruit I was expecting it to taste like the passion fruit juice you can find at an American hotel breakfast, I was wrong!
Ps. That jam looks delicious.
The fruit itself has an extremely powerful flavour, so to actually enjoy it you either eat it extremely slowly or make a simple juice by diluting it with a lot of water and sugar(the same way you make Lemon juice) or just make a jam, cake, pie, etc., but you just have *to be in the mood* for eating the fruit by itself
Very cool!
I came here for the fruit. I'm happy with that. Never did know what to do with those fruits, usually we just eat them "monkey style ".
I stay here because passion fruit jam. This guy, our host, is good.
looks very tasty
Yep, less sugar would be the way, I don't think the extra water would be necessary.
I don't think you had too much sugar, you just had too little water so the sugar was more concentrated than it was supposed to be
Wow, the purple one looks like a dragon egg. Honestly looks more dragon-like than actual dragonfruits
Passion fruit with sugar is delicious!
I dunno where you got your passion fruits from🤷♀️ but i can safely say that where i come from they are quite sweet.... Unless of course they are not fully ripe...I'm from kenya bythaway..... Please reply
It reminds me of guava jelly. It also needs to be cut with a knife.. and it is very, very sweet..
This might sound insane, but I’ve always smelled and tasted a slight hint of something “gasoline-like” in passionfruits. Never had anyone agree with me on that one.
A hint of turpentine... I agree
Knew people allergic to berries that thought the berries smelt like they were dipped in gasoline.
my favourite fruit
The passion fruits I’ve had are green and leathery and very tropical and sour tasting. Small. Purple flower. What am I eating?
Tangy ... Fruity ... Punch!
any youtuber: it's been...
my brain: *one week since you looked at me*
Oh my god I have the same blue bowl as you. I love that bowl lmao
I was hoping you'd mix the two pulps and taste what they're like together.
Just throw it back in the pot and add water. You can cook it back down to a more jam paste
You can strain the pulp with hot water and make a tea and put it in the shell!
Take some seltzer, syrup, passionfruit pulp and mix it . Tasty drink. I used to pick those off my neighbors fence sometimes!
Any reason why they came up looking like Frankenstein stitches. Thanks
I'm not going to lie, Passion fruit pulp might be the nastiest looking pulp I've seen in my very limited experience with fruit.
it's magical
Ahhhh. Sou ka na. Please tell me you saved the seeds from that unusual specimen? That looks so amazing!
It was probably just a weird mutation on the skin.
"Fruit cheese" jsjjs in mexico it's "ate". (Not pronounced like "eat" ate)
omggg yum!
best channel
i ate that part of the rind as a kid cuz it had a little part of the fruit (raw, unprocessed)
The purple one looks like something you took from a nest on an alien planet.
I didn't know passion fruit were sour!
Hahaha, hey dude , when's the last time you cleaned your stove or for that matter, your kitchen 😮
0:39 Star Wars alien fruit...
You mentioned that the passionfruit itself is very tart. Is this also true for the jam or is it cancelled out by the sheer sweetness of the sugar you added?
Why do some passionfruit have cracks and some don't?
WOW👀😮
Mmmm salami ball