Slatko

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Traditionally, honored guests in a Serbian home are greeted with a spoonful of “slatko”--a type of fruit preserve. It’s very easy to make and you can use almost any kind of fruit.

Favorite types of slatko are wild strawberry, blueberry, plum, and cherry. Slatko, which means “sweet” in Serbian, is less thick than jam.

It’s ideal as a topping for ice cream, pancakes, shortcakes, and waffles.

[edit] Variants

The basic slatko is made of strawberries but instead of strawberries, try raspberries, apricots (skinned, cut in halves or quarters, but not smaller), peaches, blueberries, blackberries, red currants, or whole, slightly unripe plums (skinned). If you make plum slatko, add some walnut halves to the mixture. You can use frozen berries and fruit also, but adjust the amount of water and cooking time accordingly.

The trick to making slatko is adjust the amount of sugar to compensate for the sweetness of the fruit you’re using. Sweeter fruit, less sugar.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ www.serbiancafe.com/kuvar/11/1076/Slatko-od-smokava - 12k