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Sugar solution is created its a physical process
I've attached a link for a three ingredient sugar glue so you can build your gingerbread masterpiece.
You add fruit pectin when canning to your fruit mixture after it has cooked. The pectin will cause the jelly or jam to firm up and you can package it from there.
Yes you can recook jam that did not set. Just Google "recooking jam" and you will see a number of Coop. Ext. sites and others that will show you the way. Happy jammin' Thom Foote Fairbanks, Alaska
The simplest form is apple jelly. Apples contain pectin already, so do not require the addition of it. While recipes vary, essentially fruit and water are combined, and boiled to release the juice of the fruit. This is then filtered through damp cheese cloth or a damp jelly bag to remove the solids. The resulting clarified juice is combined with sugar (and often added pectin), and simmered to reduce it to a heavy sugar. The pectin in the juice (or the added pectin) causes the jelly to jell (or gelatinize) as it cools.
If you don't add enough sugar to a recipe, the final product will not be as sweet, or won't have the intended taste the recipe was designed to have.
Hot sugar is soft, when you add cold liquid it will get hard at once.
Pectin is inside fruits and it makes your jam become more "solid". Sometimes, when you prefer to use less sugar than the regular recipe (the same weight of fruit and sugar), you may add pectine to make your jam not so liquid. Ana Maria da Costa http://www.all-about-italian-food.com
I'm about 80% Sure nothing happens. But try it! It would be a great experiment.
You take fruit and make sure you get all of the juices out, you add pectin and sugar. Then get a pressure cooker and put it into jars until it says it is done. Then get it out with tongs (IT WILL BE HOT) and wait for it to set and go cold before putting it away. ................................................. Jellies and jams are made by boiling fruit with sugar until the mixture "jells" or thickens. Many fruits, particular apples, contain enough natural pectin that additional pectin is not needed for jelling. Other fruit needs the addition of pectin, or apple peels which are high in pectin, for a good jell. Jelly, at least in American cooking, is made of strained fruit juice and sugar so that the end product is clear. Jams are made with crushed fruit, with or without seeds, so that the final product is thick and dense. Jams became popular with home cooks as they made more economical use of fruit with less waste than the clear jellies. Preserves can be a combination of the two techniques, with hole or cut fruit suspended in clear jelly.
it displace the water
you dont have to just let it reduce to a thick enough consistency