Seasoned Advice Asked on March 27, 2021
When I make Jell-O (fruit-flavored gelatin or jelly), I often get a patchy skin of “thicker” gelatin on the bottom of the dish. The color is the same, but the “skin” has less flavor and a much harder texture.
My assumption is that some of the gelatin granules aren’t getting completely dissolved; however, I can’t see any granules remaining (or I’d keep stirring it). Am I right about the cause? How do I prevent or reduce the problem if there isn’t any visual cue?
If you pour jello into dishes while it is still very warm, the mixture has time to start layering and separating a bit, leaving the layer you describe on the bottom of the dish. In my experience, the best way to avoid it is to not pour the mixture into the dish/es until it is cooled to nearly room temperature and considerably thicker. While it's cooling, you can stir it periodically to prevent layering, and then it should set quickly enough that it won't separate.
Correct answer by Johanna on March 27, 2021
I've been making Jello for quite a while, using a regular pan, pour one cup of boiling water, then the Jello granules, the juice from one lemon, and a little bit of Stevia. Finally poured one cup of cold water, mixed everything good pouring it into a plastic container and to the fridge. It always worked perfectly. Nice and even Jello.
I recently purchased some plastic microwaveable containers, trying to make things faster, I poured some hot water into the container and microwaved it until the water was boiling, and repeated the whole process. This time I ended with the mix in the same container that I was going to use for setting, so I simply put it in the fridge. Next morning, I realized there was that nasty layer with the consistency of a gummy bear on the bottom. So definitively the hot container hardened the jello on the bottom.
Next day I made more, this time using the pan again, and boom. Perfect Jello.
Answered by Martin Ocando on March 27, 2021
You need to keep stirring for full 3 minutes, as in the instructions. The only time I have the stuff on the bottom is when I don't stir enough.
Answered by Cheryl S Love on March 27, 2021
Cooling too quickly or unevenly. If possible mix it in a separate bowl and stir every few mins until its starting to thicken. Then pour it into the final bowl or mould and you should be fine.
Answered by boop on March 27, 2021
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