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Something New! Tayberries and Tayberry Jam

2009_07_24-Tayberry.jpgWe thought we had tried almost every berry in North America (we are massively in favor of berries in all shapes and sizes) but then we discovered one we had never even heard of, let alone tried: the tayberry!

 
 

Mulberries, blueberries, strawberries, raspberries, blackberries — even gooseberries, cloudberries, and currants — we've tried them all! But the tayberry was something new.

We found this novel berry for sale in jam form at a small stand in Pike's Place Market in Seattle. The enthusiastic young man at the booth told us it is their bestselling jam. Tourists like us probably snap it right up. We couldn't resist, especially after he told us it tasted like a cross between blackberries and raspberries.

Well, as it happens, tayberries are a cross between blackberries and raspberries. It is a hybrid between two varieties of these berries, created around 1962 at the Scottish Crops Research Institute. According to Wikipedia, this is also where it comes by its name: it's named after the River Tay in Scotland.

The jam was quite delicious: a little runny, but with the seeds and tartness of a raspberry jam, but the complementary sweetness of a richer blackberry jam. We are enjoying it thoroughly, and we're already wondering, just a little, if tayberries would grow in our zone.

Have you ever tried tayberries or tayberry jam?

• Find it! Tayberry Jam, $7 at Johnson Berry Farm

Related: Urban Foraging: Can You Identify This Berry?

(Images: Flickr member B.D.'s world licensed for use under Creative Commons; Faith Durand)

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Ingredients - Fruit, berry, tayberry

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Comments (7)

Not sure what you zone is but they grow in Michigan--zone 5.

posted by sally599 on July 24th 2009 at 10:57am
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I bought Marionberry jam when I was in the Pacific Northwest a few years back-delicious!

posted by edava72 on July 24th 2009 at 11:24am
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Have you tried juneberries?

posted by art on July 24th 2009 at 1:37pm
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Or thimbleberries?

posted by LauraII on July 24th 2009 at 2:50pm
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Good to see tayberries gaining in popularity here. Now I can remove it from the "Check Stock in Pantry before Leaving for the UK" list.

posted by JaxByDefault on July 24th 2009 at 4:06pm
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my aunt gave me a jar of homemade tayberry jam a couple of years ago for christmas. it was amazing! it tasted like the quintessential berry jam, without tasting like any particular berry. i wish i had more!

posted by cassiopia on July 27th 2009 at 11:36am
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Or buffaloberries?

posted by seidhr on July 27th 2009 at 4:23pm
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