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Quince - My Favourite Small Tree 

Bunny Guinness
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Quince trees (Cydonia oblonga) (not to be confused with Chaenomeles the Japanese Flowering Quince) originate in Iran but are hardy, and can be grown as far north as Scotland. They are beautiful, slightly unruly looking small trees with a long period of interest, grey felted young foliage breaking early in the year, followed by beautiful white tinged with pink blossom, then fabulous highly aromatic golden fruit that hang for ages. The winter outline is charismatic. They can be grown as an espalier, a fan, a free standing tree or a multi stem. One variety, Isfahan can be eaten from the tree in UK, and further south in Europe if left to ripen most quince fruit varieties can be edible straight from the tree. Bunny talks about how to prune, prevent Quince Leaf Blight, the best varieties and what to cook with, them amongst other aspects.
#quince #smalltree
Video - Unity Guinness

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18 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 75   
@sc00badive
@sc00badive Год назад
I'm in North Carolina and I've never seen a Quince tree. I love the way yours look and the way you've pruned them. I wish I could smell them, they sound wonderful!
@kristinastoltzfus6032
@kristinastoltzfus6032 Год назад
My mother-in-law made Quince honey. I have no idea how she made it bit it was delicious. Thanks for all the information again!
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
Can you find out? Bet it was an incredible combination! 🐇
@kristinastoltzfus6032
@kristinastoltzfus6032 Год назад
@@bunnyguinness I will ask my father-in-law as she is no longer with us. Hopefully someone saved the recipe.
@caroline6057
@caroline6057 Год назад
@@bunnyguinness if you google it, recipes come up from the old days in case she can not get her recipe. It is quince, sugar and water.
@kristinastoltzfus6032
@kristinastoltzfus6032 Год назад
Quince Honey 2 Cups grated Quince 2 Cups grated apples 1 pint water 4 lbs sugar 😳 Wash and pare Quince and apples. Core and cut into quarters. Grate and grind both fruits and mix them together. Add water to fruit and bring to a boil. Add sugar gradually and stir until all has been dissolved. Cook slowly till fruit is clear and mixture is fairly thick. Pour into jars and seal. This is a beautiful color and the texture is amazing. I had no idea ot had so much sugar in it though. It is so yummy.
@Vahtacen
@Vahtacen Год назад
Bunny, I love your videos. Your attitude to gardening is so refreshing, and it brings me great joy every time I get to see a new video of your wonderful garden. Greetings from Australia!
@alisn.7998
@alisn.7998 Год назад
I live in Cumbria, UK, on the coast, and have a Serbian Gold tree, which is about 8-9 feet high maximum, is over 10 years old, and is quite wide. It always bears lots of fruit, but they never get much bigger than a duck egg. This may be because they’re not in damp soil, but would homemade compost help? Or fertiliser? We make quince jelly from them, despite the size, using a 3 tier steamer device from Finland, and it’s delicious. Also, I core, slice and freeze bought quinces, when available, for inclusion with apple pies etc. I also use them to cook with pork chops, adding a certain je ne sais quoi. What a perfume and flavour! As you say, the perfume alone, from a bowl of picked quinces, scents a room. So wonderful.
@manmasher
@manmasher Месяц назад
I love to make poached quince in rosé and of course brandied quince marmalade. Thanks for all your insightful info.
@eddavanleemputten9232
@eddavanleemputten9232 Год назад
I’ve just started a quince mead, based off the combination of recipes for quince wine and a single German video for quince mead. Wash the fuzz off the quince, cut out any spots that look iffy, remove the cores but leave the skin on. Either grate the fruit or thinly slice them. Pop the result in a pan, barely covered with either water or the juice of your choice (recommenced: either apple juice or pear juice that is free of sulphites or sorbates, citric acid or ascorbic acid is fine). Bring to a slow boil, allow to boil for 15 minutes, no more. Cover and take off the heat, allow to cool. Add pectic enzyme once cooled to room temperature (follow manufacturer’s instructions according to the fruit’s weight) if you want a clear end result. If you don’t mind hazy, leave it out. Pectic enzyme does help with flavour extraction though. Remove the fruit from the liquid into a colander to recover all the precious liquid, bit don’t press it to avoid too much pectic extraction. See how much you’ve got. Two and a half kilograms yielded me just under three litres of juice. Add one kilogram of honey, and enough juice to get to around 4 1/2 litres of liquid in total. This should get you to a specific gravity of around 1.110 (if you have a hydrometer). Add the juice of 1/2 to 1 lemon, and pop 250 grams of raisins and the zest of 1/2 to 1 lemon in a fine mesh brewing bag. Transfer the liquid and the brewing bag to a fermenter (I’d recommend one that can at least hold five litres), add wine yeast (baker’s yeast also works but I prefer wine yeast or ale yeast) and allow to ferment under airlock away from sunlight. Leave the brewing bag with the raisins at least for 2 weeks and give the fermenter a swirl once a day for at least the first week, wetting the bag and raisins to avoid mould formation. Depending on the yeast you used it will ferment out to a completely dry mead (no residual sugar) or something sweeter. It all depends on the alcohol tolerance of your yeast. Now, you get to decide: back sweeten, or leave as is? If you want the result sweeter, the final specific gravity went down to 1.000 or lower and/or you think your yeast hasn’t reached alcohol tolerance, either stabilise to prevent re-fermentation or simply add a non-fermentable sweetener like erythritol or stevia. When your mead starts to clear and isn’t fermenting anymore, siphon it off the sediment. You might have to repeat that several times. Try to avoid splashing or pouring, it’ll oxidise your mead which can negatively affect the flavour or even cause it to turn into vinegar. Try to minimise head space as well. There are various ways you can do this: by topping off with juice, by siphoning into a smaller container, by inserting something into your container that takes up space (like glass fermentation weights). Or, if there still is carbon dioxide suspended in your brew after siphoning, place an airlock and give your mead a few swirls to push out the air, leaving a protective ‘blanket’ of carbon dioxide on top that’ll seal your mead off from any oxygen. Once your brew is completely clear and (optional) sweetened to taste, siphon one last time and gently stir (no splashing) to get rid of any last remaining carbon dioxide. Siphon into bottles. Swingtops or corked bottles have my preference. Label and allow to age. Recommended is at least six months after bottling, preferably one or two years. Some people like to add tannin although quince already have plenty of that. Either steep 2 teabags in the hot quince liquid for 5-10 minutes, or add wine tannin. Alternatively, and for extra dimension to your mead, you can add a handful of medium toast oak chips to the mead once fermentation has done and the mead is clearing. Careful though: you can over-extract and then you’d feel you’re sucking on a piece of wood when drinking your mead. Test at least after a week and remove as soon as you think the level is ok. Adding oak does help in smoothing the raw edges off a lot of meads and fruit wines. So does the addition of a split vanilla pod after fermentation (leave in for as long as you can). Additional tips and recommendations: Make sure all equipment is properly sanitised. If during fermentation you get a gym sock smell, that’s nothing to worry about. Fermentation can smell really strange. Worrisome are a rotten smell or a vinegar smell. But it’s quite hard to mess up a fruit wine or a mead. If you have access to yeast nutrient, use it: the happier and healthier your yeast, the better the end result. A home made budget yeast nutrient is boiled baker’s yeast. Dissolve a teaspoon of baker’s yeast in a small amount of water, bring to a boil, allow to boil for 5-10 minutes. Keep an eye on it, it shouldn’t boil dry. Allow to cool and add to your fermentation vessel. Repeat after a few days (3-5). Yeast feasts on it’s own and dead yeast contains a lot of the nutrients live yeast cells need to thrive.
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
This is a real labour of love but I bet it tastes amazing. You sound a real professional- many thanks! ❤️
@eddavanleemputten9232
@eddavanleemputten9232 Год назад
@@bunnyguinness - Wow! What a compliment! Thank you! I’m in no way a professional. Just a hobbyist who greatly enjoys making yummy drinks for friends and family.
@eon6571
@eon6571 Год назад
Love quinces...my grandma used to can apples and quinces together,, delicious.. I dug up some small ones growing around her 150ish yr old trees and now have some of my own..
@lwjenson
@lwjenson Год назад
Thank you for this lovely video!
@alertbox
@alertbox 10 месяцев назад
Hello Beetle 🐈‍⬛
@nicolaeve8761
@nicolaeve8761 Год назад
It was the first tree I planted in our Northumberland garden. We love them roasted along side a mild soft cheese, but best of all in Christmas pudding!
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
Will try both of these! Many thanks 🐇
@elsagrace3893
@elsagrace3893 Год назад
Quince jelly is so beautiful as well as heavenly tasting.
@sonjaklauscondo7093
@sonjaklauscondo7093 Год назад
Hello Bunny, yes it is a very nice tree. We have one in the orchard. My mother used to put a fruit in her wardrobe because of the fragance. This year I will try to make juice out of quince. Thank you for the inspiration. Greetings from Germany
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
Better than lavender to scent you clothes- will try!🐇
@myrabowman7456
@myrabowman7456 Год назад
Thank you for your informative video. Great to hear your ideas for using them with red cabbage and also some of the other comments have been helpful, as well. I'm watching it in Matamata, New Zealand, where I have a tree in front of my house. it is currently in full blossom and is looking beautiful.
@angellas.1314
@angellas.1314 Год назад
Love this fruit. My Magyar, 🇭🇺 , granny makes a compote with it. Or cold soup in the summer!
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
Recipes please! 🐇
@angellas.1314
@angellas.1314 Год назад
@@bunnyguinness I will ask her.
@davidsteele3037
@davidsteele3037 Год назад
Just ordered a pair of 'Serbian Gold' from Pomona Fruits. Being in the Welsh borders at 230m above sea level, the weather can be a challenge but fingers crossed.
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
I think it should be fine, keep me posted!🐇
@Bloomingfielding
@Bloomingfielding Год назад
Marmelada anyone! It’s delicious , it’s quince paste the word comes from Marmelos (quince to you) . English marmalade (witch is orange jam)
@janetarnott1829
@janetarnott1829 Год назад
Thanks Bunny. I live on the edge of the Staffordshire Moorlands and have a Quince tree which has done really well this year . I haven’t started picking yet your video came just in time as I will now leave them longer. I intend to make quince jelly. (The recipe is in a National Trust book of preserves by Sara Paston Williams) your shows are excellent- keep up the good work! Janet.
@annebeck2208
@annebeck2208 Год назад
There was a nursery that did Quince tasting in the US. Aromatya came out on top. Symirna and Kuganskya were tied for second.
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
Wow, I have never seen these for sale in the Uk. The Isfahan I planted could be eaten straight from the tree. I dry most of ours (except Isfahan) and find even those that are quite sour , once dried taste great, not sweet but not sour just delicious. They are really healthy too . 🐇
@maheshmehta2201
@maheshmehta2201 6 месяцев назад
Hello I am from India and I just went to Germany. Then I saw these quince fruits there and then I brought a lot of seeds from there to India. I like it very much because it has many benefits for our health.I had kept this seed in the fridge and its germination has taken place, but if I want to plant it in the ground or in a pot, I do not know how to do so, so I have to dig up its plant. If you can give me any guidance, it would be greatly appreciated. I will accept it in gratitude, please guide me.
@nanao.292
@nanao.292 11 месяцев назад
You don't have to pull them hard, just rotate them gently at the stalk (by holding the fruit with your fingers around), if they're good already they can be turned and fall into your hand easily (if not they won't give), hence also a good way to tell they're ripe enough.
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness 11 месяцев назад
Yes I agree. I have started eating them raw too, and am acclimatising to their slightly tart taste. Also they are good chopped and pour hot water over then you have a quince tea. The quince is quite edible at the end, much sweeter, even if you have not had honey in it 🐇
@SpanishEclectic
@SpanishEclectic Год назад
I first discovered actual quince fruit at our international market a number of years ago, though there is a Quince St. here, so I had heard of them. I've also seen them in old paintings, and some of my historic cookbooks. They have a very interesting flavor. At some point I'd like to do espaliered fruit trees, but that's down the list a ways. Interesting to see how the fruit is used around the world; membrilla is common as a treat in Mexico.
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
I have a fan trained, and have seen a few like this but I never have seen an espaliered one - can’t see why it won’t work though….🐇
@helenachase5627
@helenachase5627 Год назад
Bunny, would you consider a video on how to make your fantastic picket fences with a slight curve to each board or perhaps how to plan and create a serpentine hedge ? You may think that is easy but for us it is not so straightforward.
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
You mean like the picket fence around the treehouse I built for my book Garden Workshop? It’s very easy I did it with a jigsaw. You have to be careful that the gaps are not wider than 100mm for health and safety though. I must try doing a RU-vid shirt, setting out a serpentine would be good for that and the picket fence. Maybe after Christmas? Serpentines are great for paths, hedges, lawn edges etc 🐇
@nickllewellyn1987
@nickllewellyn1987 Год назад
Thank you Bunny, my quince has got very dense due I think to it being pruned in winter, I shall now prune it in late summer as you suggest.
@andreajones7023
@andreajones7023 Год назад
I've grown many from seed, love them. Used to sow almost every seed from ones I scrumped. I've moved to France and had to leave them all behind so currently searching new more mature ones to buy now.
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
So you must have grown interesting new varieties? Fascinating, I am inspired - will sow lots now, thanks!🐇
@andreajones7023
@andreajones7023 Год назад
@@bunnyguinness Yes the best was the Giant Chinese Quince from seeds from Ryton gardens, I grew it in a pot and it grew huge fruits. Gave it to Nottingham Organic Growers before we moved last year. Although technically it was a Chaenomeles. Another was Krumsk which is still in my old garden grown as an espalier. Hopefully the tenants won't dig it up and if we ever move back it will be lovely and mature for us.
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
Ahh! Are. You THE Andrea Jones, the great garden photographer?🐇
@andreajones7023
@andreajones7023 Год назад
@@bunnyguinness gosh no, not famous at all!
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
@@andreajones7023 unusual name though and obviously a great Quince grower!
@user-ii1di7fy7c
@user-ii1di7fy7c 7 месяцев назад
Cook quince and granny smith apples add to custard
@joannmicik1924
@joannmicik1924 Год назад
Lovely! I am going to search for a quince tree for my garden.
@helentc
@helentc 5 месяцев назад
Very interesting. Thank you. I'm curious, is there something similar that they taste like? Once they are ripe or baked, are they similar to apples or pears or both?
@alisn.7998
@alisn.7998 Год назад
I forgot to mention that the ‘pear’ tree in that favourite song ‘On the 12th day of Christmas…’ may actually have been a quince. Illustrations from old days show very large ‘pears’, and the ‘pears’ were still on the tree leading up to christmastide. So, maybe the writer mistook them for pears?
@countesscable
@countesscable 5 месяцев назад
I planted a quince tree ‘Vanja’ about 10 years ago, and though it flowers prolifically, it has never fruited. I’m baffled.
@reclamantul
@reclamantul Год назад
You can do a very nice quince pie… like any apple pie
@rootsandvulture
@rootsandvulture Год назад
I'd be interested to hear more on how you take the cuttings, whether they are successful, and do not require a rootstock like apples and pear. I am also growing from seed, and have multiple saplings, the wondered how well they will come from seed. The seed donor was a Turkish deli quince.
@RoseMary-vs3io
@RoseMary-vs3io Год назад
👍
@SinfolCat
@SinfolCat 11 месяцев назад
my mothers dream is to have a garden similar to urs
@Speakupok
@Speakupok Год назад
They are delicious
@pablo9364
@pablo9364 9 месяцев назад
Could there ever be a great place to plant medlar trees in one of your designed gardens?
@veragiles981
@veragiles981 Год назад
Thanks Bunny! Great idea as i need to plant up an area of garden that is sadly going to have a couple of houses built behind it. I should have plenty of room for a quince but roughly how long before it will bear fruit and will it cope with cold winds? Thanks!
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
If you are in uk it should be fine with cold winds. It should start to bear fruit in 3-4 years. If you can have more than one variety it does help with pollination. 🐇
@rosie40ify
@rosie40ify Год назад
Bunny how do you grow them in large pots? I always enjoy your videos
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
In the video the quince in a double line in large lead like pots do well. I think quince like a rich moisture retentive, slightly acid soil best. So we would always remove the bases from the pots so the trees can root down into the soil proper and so they don’t get drought stressed which they might in pots. Choose a large pot that is tough so that it does not burst with the pressure from the roots in years to come. Water them for the first few months if it is in the growing season, but don’t water more than weekly so you encourage the roots to chase the moisture down into the soil proper. But do add a good volume, at least four halls a week but obviously depends on your climate. 🐇
@andykaczmarczyk7172
@andykaczmarczyk7172 Год назад
Can you grow them as an espalier against a wall ?
@xXLunatikxXlul
@xXLunatikxXlul 11 месяцев назад
I had two Quince trees spring up in my backyard, but I have noticed the leaves turn Brown in late September? Also, my Quince has fuzzy white hairs? Would love to hear your answers :)
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness 11 месяцев назад
That sounds like quince blight to me. By fuzzy white hairs do you mean a sort of fluffy down on the fruit? Some varieties have more than others and it’s just how they are. Just enjoy it. Re the blight, som3 years, wet years, it seems more extreme - this year was bad, other years it’s hardly there till the autumn. 🐇
@elisaangel9789
@elisaangel9789 Год назад
I think this may be the perfect tree to plant in my yard to make a break between my lot and the neighbor's. If I plant them in a line, would you recommend planting them every 15 feet or so?
@elisaangel9789
@elisaangel9789 Год назад
I bought peanut butter trees today. I am going to plant them where I was thinking about the quince trees.
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
I think you could go to 3 metres apart if you want a good screen and don’t mind the canopies merging🐇
@Lucerne87
@Lucerne87 Год назад
Interesting about the summer pruning to keep them more open. Are your trees shown here on a particular rootstock?
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
I don’t know what rootstock unfortunately 🐇
@iamchinny3
@iamchinny3 Год назад
I am completely distracted by the beautiful flowers in the back drop. Are they dahlias? And if so what variety?!
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
They are indeed! My favourites Thomas Edison, look good with the salvia think that is in shot, it’s cero potosi, an excellent hardy with me, perennial 🐇
@iamchinny3
@iamchinny3 Год назад
@@bunnyguinness An absolutely gorgeous dahlia and salvia too! They are going straight onto my wishlist, many thanks for the video and reply.
@helenachase5627
@helenachase5627 Год назад
How do create a half standard ? Just cut right off at 3 or 4 feet ?
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
Yes exactly that! 🐇
@judithharrison3653
@judithharrison3653 Год назад
Quince meat, mince pies made with grated quince added to the mincemeat
@bunnyguinness
@bunnyguinness Год назад
A fantastic idea, will do shortly so is good for Xmas 2022! Thanks 🐇
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