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If you can't find any you can make damson gin, as I just did.


However I recommend you don't follow Nigel Slater's advice to freeze them and then bash them with a heavy object.


A mallet and a rolling pin made no impression whatsoever until they were half thawed, and they ended up as mush, so there was little point in freezing them in the first place.


It's the afternoon with a needle method next time :))

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I asked google.


Apparently for sloes the advice used to be wait for a frost as that makes the skins start to burst open, but depends on the weather so now they just say pick when ripe. Maybe that's why you have to prick them?


For medlars it's leave on the tree unless there's a risk of frost, pick when unripe when they're too tart to be edible (bleurgh), then store for two to three weeks until they go brown and start to soften but aren't actually rotting (double bleurgh). Sounds like a lot of bother, doesn't it.


For sprouts it's pick after the first or second frost. I do love a sprout.

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