Food miles

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Married to Night Train
Location
Salford, UK
Putting the sugar (mine is Silver Spoon) aside, I made jam last week with blackberries and apples gathered at my workplace - about a mile and a quarter from my flat.

However, the blackberries had been taken over to NT's to store in his freezer, and then brought back, so they've done 140 miles more than the apples - 70 by train, 70 by car.

I made crab apple jelly yesterday, with crab apples gathered from the Dean's Park next to the Minster. About 500 yards away.
 
OP
OP
Cycling Naturalist
Location
Llangollen
Caramelisation always involves sugar, it is the oxidation of mono and di saccharides. Those sugars do not have to come from refined sugar. Apples, if sweet enough, pears, plums, and many more fruits can be caramelised using their own sugars with none added. Patrick could have only had 30m of food travel for his caramelised apples if he'd tried. I've done it with Worcesters which have a very high sugar content and taste wonderful caramelised under a grill.

A good example of this process is caramelised onions. When heated the starch (a long polymer made from glucose units), which makes up much of the onion, is broken into the disaccharide maltose (2 glucose units) which is then oxidised. It produces the lovely sweet malty tasting brown caramelised onion, with uses such as onion gravy for bangers and mash suppers.

edited following patick's admission of using added sugar....

Yes, but these are apples off a decorative apple tree - planted for the spectacular spring blossom. The apples are small and rather bitter - a bit like a halfway house between a crab apple and a dessert apple. Normally, there's not much of a yield, but this year was the best in 28 years. I made apple and bramble jelly at the weekend, utilising some of the abundance of blackberries that I grow in large tubs round the back of the greenhouse. It set like a dream. I've had a couple of attempts with rowan jelly (also in abundance) but there is a dry and dusty taste to it.
 

Davidc

Guru
Location
Somerset UK
Yes, but these are apples off a decorative apple tree - planted for the spectacular spring blossom. The apples are small and rather bitter - a bit like a halfway house between a crab apple and a dessert apple. Normally, there's not much of a yield, but this year was the best in 28 years. I made apple and bramble jelly at the weekend, utilising some of the abundance of blackberries that I grow in large tubs round the back of the greenhouse. It set like a dream. I've had a couple of attempts with rowan jelly (also in abundance) but there is a dry and dusty taste to it.
Sounds good (so did the original meal). The crop of wild blackberries is good this year and they're really sweet too.

The apples sound a bit like cider apples - have you tried crushing and fermenting them? (That always works best with added sugar if you want to get totally paralytic on the product).
 

Fab Foodie

hanging-on in quiet desperation ...
Location
Kirton, Devon.
I recall posting a report some years back where it showed that the Carbon footprint of frozen New Zealand Lamb was lower than Welsh hill farmed Lamb purchased locally, strange but apparently true.
 

jayonabike

Powered by caffeine & whisky
Location
Hertfordshire
Beef - Argentina
Chillis - Israel
Peppers - Spain
Tomatoes - Spain
Chilli Sauce - Thailand


Do I win??
 

Puddles

Do I need to get the spray plaster out?
Just been totting it up.
Gloucester Old Spot belly pork - 5 miles
Potatoes - 1 mile
Caramellised apple slices - 30 metres
Sage - 15 metres
Not sure about the green vegetables, but they tend to be Lancashire - so 80 miles.

One's choices are limited when there's no Waitrose with Organic Fair Trade Quinoa locally.
I-like-waffles-Whats-your-point.jpg
 
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