Blackberry Syrup

A close up of blackberries
Photo by Hank Shaw

This is a recipe I use for any of the compound fruits, such as blackberries, raspberries, loganberries, boysenberries, salmonberries, etc. It won’t work with blueberries or huckleberries — you need a fruit with a soft enough skin to melt under low heat.

My method sounds persnickety, but it results in a clear, beautiful syrup. Use it over pancakes, in drinks, as an ingredient in a barbecue sauce, as a base for ice cream or sorbet — the possibilities are wide.

This syrup will store in the fridge a long time, easily six months — if you can stop yourself from eating it all that long.

Yields 1 quart

  • 2 pounds blackberries, raspberries or similar fruit
  • 2 pounds sugar

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  1. Pour the blackberries into a saucepan and turn the heat to medium. Pour the sugar all over the berries, but do not stir.
  2. Let the heat begin to break the blackberries before stirring gently, about 5 minutes.
  3. Stir every five minutes, just to keep anything from burning on the bottom of the pan. Let the blackberries melt with the sugar slowly.
  4. As soon as the syrup hits a simmer, turn off the heat.
  5. Set a very fine-meshed sieve over a large bowl. Carefully ladle out some free-run syrup, which will be beneath the floating blackberries. Pour it through the sieve.
  6. Keep doing this until you have all the blackberries in the sieve. Let this drain for 1 hour. Do not mash the berries into the sieve, or you will get cloudy syrup.
  7. Pour off the syrup into jars and either keep in the fridge or seal in a hot water bath for 10 minutes.
  8. Oh, and the leftover blackberries? Mix them with plain yogurt and they are delicious!

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