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enlarge | Brand: Taste the Wilderness! Category: Grocery
Buy New: $12.75
Avg. Customer Rating: 9 reviews Sales Rank: 26140
Ingredients: Wild Huckleberries, Sugar, Corn Syrup, Pectin, Citric Acid. Media: Misc. Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
ASIN: B0000TLEEW
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
| Showing reviews 6-9 of 9 | | « PREV | | |
problem with Amazon shipping July 13, 2006 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
I cannot rate the product because I did not open the jar. My problem was with negotiating the Amazon purchase. Although I tried to get it sent to another address along with several other items, it ended up coming to me instead. The shipping is killer. So I want to warn those out there to read the email Amazon sends you carefully, or the same thing may happen to you next time you ship something to an address other than your own. Next time I will buy directly from the merchant instead of going through Amazon. The shipping was killer. The 2 stars are for Amazon's shipping pages.
The Wild Huckleberry-Tastebud Bursting Flavor; Pure Ambrosia April 13, 2005 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
The wild Huckleberry is the most ambrosia-like of all berries, with a tastebud bursting robust flavor, somewhat tart, quite rare, and never to be mistaken for the more common blueberry. Indeed, the delicacy is so extraordinary that Mark Twain named his most famous character after it. And why not? People who know about wild Huckleberries tend to be very passionate about them. Evocative of summer sunlight, mountainsides, mysterious woods, and images of children berry hunting. The huckleberry bushes' small oval leaves, the blue-black berries, perfectly round, each with an intense flavor, a unique tartness and crunch.
This uncultivated cousin of the blueberry, grows only in the wild at elevations of 4,000 to 6,000 feet. Twelve species of huckleberries are native to Washington and Oregon. They also grow wild in the Rocky Mountains. However varied the berry, the season is short: late July through mid-September. Because they are hard to find, they tend to be expensive. But huckleberry lovers swoon over the thick skin and wild flavor that no other berry captures as well. As far as I am concerned, these berries, food of the god's, are worth every penny.
Huckleberry Haven's Wild Huckleberry Jam perfectly captures the pure, natural taste of this most elite of berries. Buy one jar and you will be back to buy an entire case. I spread the jam on toast, muffins, scones, French Toast, occasionally even on pancakes - much better than syrup, and as another reviewer wrote, this is the best jam to accompany peanut butter. I hope you try this product. I always have a jar in the fridge. ENJOY!! JANA
Huckelberry Haven Jam February 6, 2005 Normally I don't use jam, the consistancy of jam usually seedy and chunky, too sweet for my taste. The exception being huckelberry jam, from huckelberry haven. The perfect balance of jelly & jam, the huckelberries are not overpoweringly sweet. The only jam to use with peanut butter for a great tasting sandwitch. Thank you huckelberry haven.
JUST LIKE GRANDMOTHER USED TO........ January 26, 2004 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
For those who enjoy a rich spread for toast, crumpets, English muffins, etc. this huckleberry medley is what you're looking for. Ripe, fresh berries abound in these preserves which makes a more than satisfying complement to any breakfast menu. It's a treat to find a product that hasn't been "watered down" to please everyone's taste.
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