Chestnuts Preserved in Sugar Syrup
- 1 kg Chestnuts
- 100 grams + 100 grams + 100 grams Sugar
- 400 ml Water
- Soak the chestnuts in very hot water for 10 to 15 minutes.
- Peel off the outer shell and inner skin with a knife.
- If the inner skin is hard to peel, return the chestnut to the hot water again.
- If you soak the chestnuts for a while, the inner skin will soften and become easier to peel.
- The peeling is the most difficult part, but keep at it!
- You'll be rewarded with the delicious chestnuts you'll get in the end!
- When all the chestnuts have been cleanly peeled, soak them in water for half a day to get rid of the bitterness.
- You can just soak them for a few hours, but I think they come out nicer if you soak them for half a day.
- Put the chestnuts and plenty of water in a pot and start heating.
- When it comes to a boil, cover with a small lid that sits right on top of the contents of the pan (a drop lid or otoshibuta; you can substitute this with a piece of aluminium foil) and simmer over very low heat for 15 minutes.
- Put the pot in the sink and run water into to cool the chestnuts.
- When the water in the pot is cold, fill with fresh water and heat again.
- When it comes to a boil, simmer over very low heat for another 15 minutes.
- You should be able to break apart the chestnuts with your hands, and they should still be a bit hard when bitten into.
- Cool the chestnuts down again under running water as in Step 5, and soak in the cold water until they are completely cool.
- Next, put water and the first 100 g batch of sugar in the pan and heat.
- When the sugar starts to dissolve, put the chestnuts in gently.
- When it starts to boil, turn off the heat.
- Leave as-is overnight.
- The next day, add another 100 g of sugar and heat until it starts to boil.
- Turn off the heat, cover with a drop lid, and leave to cool down and rest for half a day.
- Put the last 100 g batch of sugar in the pan and bring to a boil again, then turn off the heat.
- Cover with a drop lid again and leave to cool.
- When it has cooled down completely, place only the chestnuts (not the syrup) into jars.
- Heat the syrup again, bring to a boil, skim off any scum, and pour into the jars over the chestnuts.
- When the syrup cools, it's done!
- Any chestnuts that couldn't be immersed in syrup can be frozen.
- Here's an example of a schedule for making the chestnuts in syrup: Peel the chestnuts in the morning, and leave to soak for half a day to rid of bitterness.
- Boil twice, adding the first batch of sugar for the initial simmering.
- Leave to rest overnight.
- The next morning, add the second batch of sugar, simmer and rest until the evening.
- Add the last batch of sugar in the evening.
- Put the chestnuts in jars later that night.
- This way you can do all 3 sugar additions in 2 days.
- If you remove crumbled chestnuts as you go, the syrup won't become cloudy.
- Cut off any discolored bits too, if you notice them.
chestnuts, water
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/171184-chestnuts-preserved-in-sugar-syrup (may not work)