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Pate de fruit made with fresh strawberries. Homemade strawberry gummy candy made with strawberries and pectin. Pรขte de fruits can be easy!

Pรขte de fruit made with strawberries and pectin

Make yourself comfortable. We have a lot to talk about today.

For the better part of two weeks, Iโ€™ve been standing at the stove. Standing at the stove, stirring viciously boiling pots of sugary goo that constantly threatens to splash on my arm, all the while crossing my fingers behind my back that it sets into a perfect little square. A perfect little square with a crunchy sugar crust and a gummy center.

I have a long-standing love affair with pรขte de fruit (AKA fruit gummies). These little crunchy gummy fruit squares are the first thing I look for when I walk into a chocolate shop. Truffles are truffles, but really: tell me your pรขte de fruit flavor du jour, siโ€™l vous plaรฎt.

Itโ€™s hard for me to narrow it down, but my favorite pรขte de fruits to findย in a chocolate shop are: passion fruit (Iโ€™m 100% certain Heaven has bowls of passion fruit candy everywhere), rhubarb, lemon, and apricot. Bonus points for peach pรขte de fruit, because it has the lowest pectin around (making it difficult to set). But when strawberry pรขte de fruit is in the window, I freeze.

Strawberry candy is a fickle thing: it should taste exactly like a fresh, ripe strawberry, but also super concentrated and jammy. In short, when I bite into strawberry candy, I want it to taste like Iโ€™m biting into a thousand fresh strawberries in the fields of Salinas, California with the ocean behind my back. Are you on board?

Strawberry Pate de Fruit recipe

How to make strawberry dummies

Homemade strawberry fruit gummies

Homemade strawberry candy

I leaned on my friend Patrick who works at my favorite patisserie. He was no help when my first 4 batches refused to gel. He basically said โ€˜good luck, your thermometer is to blame.โ€™

After dozens of batches (literally 12 bags of frozen strawberries), I got it (no thanks to Patrick). Originally, I was trying to use gelatin (because I wanted extra bounce), but pectin is the way to go.

There was also a time or two when I forgot to add all of the sugar. Iโ€™ll take some of the blame here.

Pate de fruit recipe

Kitchen tips for pate de fruit:

Pate de fruit with fresh strawberries isnโ€™t particularly difficult in execution; itโ€™s just that it varies so much based on your fruit. Both the type of fruit and the age of fruit matter here, because itโ€™s all about the pectin.

So, this pate de fruit recipe will work with frozen strawberries and no other fruit. If you want a blueberry pรขte de fruit, ask google. Wanna add lemon juice? Donโ€™t. Ask google. What Iโ€™m sharing here is a recipe for strawberry pate de fruit with no other ingredients besides frozen strawberries, sugar and pectin.

Letโ€™s talk about pectin. I didnโ€™t want to buy it. Lord knows I donโ€™t need another little bag of unlabeled white powder in my already over-flowing pantry. Wait, that came out wrong. I donโ€™t do drugs. I just have little jars of cream of tartar, corn starch, meringue powder, baking powder, and powdered sugar everywhere; it never seems to end. But, I bit the bullet and bought someโ€ฆmainly because my favorite chocolate shop is 20 minutes away.

Pectin is in the regular grocery storeโ€“yep, even the small stores, because grandmas use it to make jam in the summertime. Go to the section where they sell the canning jars, and youโ€™ll find a little box of pectin powder.

Fruit gummies made with pectin

Speaking of jam, if you flub up this recipe, youโ€™ll have very good strawberry jam, so please be happy with that. The way to mess up this recipe is to not reach the proper temperature. Grab a candy thermometer, clip it on, and watch it like a hawk. And stir, stir, stir.

A lot of recipes for pate de fruit mention in the head notes that you need a high-quality, thick-bottomed pan to make candy, or else youโ€™ll fail. I say thatโ€™s bull. I used this copper pot (designed specifically for things like jams and jellies), and I STILL burnt the bottom. The limiting factor is stirring frequency, not a fancy pot.

If you do happen to burn the mixture in a few places, scoop it out and keep going. I ate batch #8 (in which I scooped out a burnt blob), and it was tasty. The burned bits are going to happen near the thermometer, so be sure to unclip it and stir behind it every few minutes. Itโ€™s a pain, I know, but youโ€™re basically running your own patisserie here, so be proud of your efforts.

And maybe, just maybe, when you serve this, someone will say โ€˜wow, I didnโ€™t even know you could make that from scratch!โ€™ which is exactly what someone said the last time I served homemade marshmallows. Think about it: when was the last time you wowed someone?

Strawberry Pate de Fruits recipe

It looks like you have a date with a candy thermometer and some strawberry pate de fruit. Enjoy!

Yield: 32 one-inch squares

Strawberry Pate de Fruit

Pรขte de fruit made with strawberries and pectin

Strawberry pรขte de fruits, small batch candy recipe.

Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 35 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 pound frozen whole strawberries, defrosted
  • 2 cups granulated sugar, divided use (plus extra for rolling)
  • 2 tablespoons powdered pectin

Instructions

  1. First, line a 9x5" bread loaf pan with parchment paper.
  2. Place the defrosted strawberries in a blender, and puree until completely smooth, about 3 minutes. You should have 2 cups of puree.
  3. Next, add the puree to a 2-quart saucepan, and clip a candy thermometer on the edge.
  4. Whisk together 1 cup of the sugar with the pectin, and then pour this into the strawberry puree. (Pectin can clump if you don't blend it with the sugar first).
  5. Turn the heat to medium-high, and cook the mixture, while constantly stirring until it comes to a simmer, about 5 minutes.
  6. Next, add the remaining cup of sugar to the pan, and continue to cook, while constantly stirring, until it reaches 235ยฐ F. Be patient, it will take at least 15-20 minutes, and it will seem to stay at 220ยฐ forever. Just keep stirring and letting it reduce.
  7. Once the mixture comes to 235ยฐ, remove it from the heat, and pour it into the prepared pan.
  8. Leave the pan at room temperature for 2-3 hours to set. I let mine set overnight, uncovered. If you live in a low humidity environment, you may want to cover it with plastic wrap.
  9. Remove the pรขte de fruit from the pan, and using a knife dipped in sugar, cut it into cubes. Roll each cube in extra sugar, and place on a plate to serve.

Nutrition Information:

Yield:

32

Serving Size:

1

Amount Per Serving: Calories: 55Total Fat: 0gSaturated Fat: 0gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 0gCholesterol: 0mgSodium: 1mgCarbohydrates: 14gFiber: 0gSugar: 13gProtein: 0g

Did you make this recipe?

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About Christina Lane

Christina Lane is the author of 5 cookbooks all about cooking and baking for two. She has scaled down hundreds of recipes into smaller servings so you can enjoy your favorite dishes without the leftovers! Valentine's Day is her favorite holiday.

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36 Comments

  1. nancy hoekman says:

    Can I sub any fruit?

    1. Christina Lane says:

      Not just any fruitโ€ฆskim the post for some examples.

  2. Anne McGuigan says:

    Hi, These look very tasty. I am wondering how long they will keep. I am thinking of making them for my grandchildrenโ€™s Advent Calendar.
    Thanks
    Anne

    1. Christina Lane says:

      Tightly wrapped for 3 days.

  3. Diane L Jackson says:

    Did I miss something here? How does one get 32 x 1โ€ณ squares out of a 9โ€ณ x 5โ€ณ loaf pan? Assuming 1โ€ณ squares, that would be 45 at 0.7โ€ณ deep; (1โ€ณ x5) x (1.5โ€ณ x 6) equals 30.
    Cannot make the math work and just seeking clarification before I devote a lot of time and effort.
    Thank you.
    I hope to make these for Christmas; they sound delicious!