Redcurrants
Ribes rubrum · aalbes · aalbessen
Redcurrants: what every chef needs to know
Redcurrants are small, glossy red drupelets growing in clusters on the redcurrant bush. They are known for intense acidity, high vitamin C content (approx. 41 mg per 100g) and a fresh, fruity flavour with little sweetness. In commercial kitchens, redcurrants are rarely eaten raw but are processed as a garnish, coulis, jelly, Cumberland sauce or as an acid-balancing component. The skin is thin and the flesh contains high levels of pectin, meaning redcurrants gel excellently without additional pectin. Cumberland sauce, the classic English accompaniment to game, is based on redcurrant jelly, port, orange zest and ginger. In modern cooking, clusters of redcurrant leaves and berries are used as a decorative element on meat dishes. In Scandinavian cuisine, redcurrants are an essential component alongside meatballs and game.
Redcurrants: nutritional values per 100g
Based on unprocessed product. Source: NEVO 2023 — the Dutch food composition database, managed by RIVM and Wageningen University.
Nutritional values are indicative for unprocessed raw materials. Preparation method, variety and origin may affect values. Source: NEVO 2023.
Redcurrants: classic dishes
Proven preparations from the professional kitchen — from haute cuisine to global restaurant classics. Use as inspiration for menu development and recipe costing.
classic Engelse sauce based on red-bessengelei, ruby port, sinaasappelzest, lemon juice, ginger and mosterdpoeder. served cold at game, cold meat, terrines and kerstham. Nagenoeg onveranderd recipe sinds the 19e eeuw in the Engelse fine kitchen.
Zweedse gehaktballen in cream sauce, traditional served with red-bessengelei as zoetzure counterpart. the Scandinavian kitchen gebruikt red bessen when the sour contrast at rich, greasy dishes.
airy mousse based on red-bessencoulis, geslagen whipping cream and Italian meringue. the intense colour and friszure flavour make the a elegant zomers dessert. finished with fresh trossen and poedersuiker.
Redcurrants: preparation techniques
Exact temperatures and times for HACCP compliance. Core temperature is leading for poultry and pork.
boil bessen briefly with a tablespoon sugar and lemon. strain through fine sieve. the high pectinewaarde makes the coulis of nature light thickened.
use only the gezeefde sap (not puree). no extra pectin nodig at ripe bessen. Stollingstest: druppel on cold bord.
Combineer red-bessengelei with ruby port, sinaasappelzest, citroenzest, ginger and mosterdpoeder. classic sauce at game and cold meat.
sprinkle trossen with fine sugar directly for serve. provides a berijpt, elegante presentation at desserts and kaasplanken.
Redcurrants: HACCP storage and food safety
Based on Codex Alimentarius (WHO/FAO) and EU Regulation 852/2004. Consult your national authority (NVWA/FDA/FSANZ) for applicable local standards.
Redcurrants: global seasonal overview
Availability per climate zone — Northern Europe, Mediterranean and warm climate. Relevant for purchasing planning and international menus.
Local season: June to August — a short 6–8 week window. Outside the season, available as IQF (individually quick-frozen) frozen product, suitable for coulis and jelly. Fresh clusters out of season are expensive and lower quality.
Redcurrants: EU-14 allergen information
Full overview compliant with EU Regulation 1169/2011 (Annex II). Raw material information — always verify with your supplier for processed products and possible traces.
Raw material information (unprocessed product). Processed products may contain traces. EU Regulation 1169/2011 Annex II.
Redcurrants: wine pairings
Every wine recommendation is verified via at least 4 independent sources: wine specialists, sommeliers and culinary authorities. Serving temperatures conform to Wine Enthusiast and Vintec guidelines.
Ruby port is the traditional basis of Cumberland sauce and the classic begeleider of everything with red bessen in the Engelse kitchen. the ripe kersenbessen-notes and soft tannins resonate with the acidity of the bes. at red-bessengelei at game: verwar the port not, druppel a klein glaasje LBV next to the dish.
- Ruby Port Reserve (Sandeman, Graham's, Fonseca)
- Late Bottled Vintage (LBV) Port
- Vintage Port (premium, bij bijzondere gelegenheden)
Pinot Noir from Bourgogne has a karakteristiek red-bessen-and-strawberry profile with subtle tannins That the acidity of red bessen complement without to overwhelm. excellent at roodwildsauzen with red-bessengelei as smaakcomponent.
- Bourgogne Pinot Noir (Chanson, Louis Latour)
- Gevrey-Chambertin AOC (dieper, complexer)
- Volnay AOC (eleganter, voor fijne bereidingen)
Wine advice is for culinary information purposes only. Wines and appellations are exemplary; availability varies by region and supplier.
Frequently asked questions about Redcurrants
Why are redcurrants rarely eaten raw but still used as a garnish?
The acidity of redcurrants is too high for most people to enjoy directly as a snack. As a garnish, however, they provide visual contrast, textural interest and a fresh acid balance alongside rich desserts and meat dishes. The small clusters are also aesthetically striking. Dusting clusters with caster sugar just before serving reduces the perception of acidity through the sugar coating.
How do you make redcurrant jelly without a setting agent?
Redcurrants are naturally high in pectin, particularly in the skin. Cook the berries with an equal weight of sugar and a tablespoon of lemon juice to 104°C (219°F) — the gel setting point. Do the plate test: drop a teaspoon of juice onto a cold plate and leave for 1 minute. If it wrinkles when pushed, the jelly is ready. No additional pectin needed.
What is the difference between redcurrants, whitecurrants and blackcurrants?
Redcurrants (Ribes rubrum): lightly acidic, high pectin, for jelly and garnish. Whitecurrants are an albino variety of the redcurrant, slightly sweeter. Blackcurrants (Ribes nigrum, cassis) are more intense, fuller in flavour and considerably richer in vitamin C (approx. 181 mg per 100g). Cassis is used for crème de cassis, liqueurs and desserts. Culinarily and botanically, they are three distinct flavours and applications.
At what temperature should you store Redcurrants?
Store Redcurrants at 0 tot 2 °C, compliant with EU Regulation 852/2004 and Codex Alimentarius guidelines.
How do you prepare Redcurrants professionally?
The primary professional technique for Redcurrants is Risbessen-coulis (gezeefde puree) at 80 °C, zacht koken for 5 min. Always verify core temperature with a calibrated probe thermometer.
Does Redcurrants contain allergens?
Redcurrants is free from all 14 EU declarable allergens under EU Regulation 1169/2011 Annex II. Always verify with your supplier for processed variants.
Legal disclaimer: For informational purposes only
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Informational character
The information on this page has been compiled exclusively as reference material for professional kitchen staff. KitchenNmbrs does not provide legal, medical or commercial advice. Data on preparation techniques, storage temperatures, HACCP guidelines and allergens is based on publicly available professional sources and applies to the raw ingredient in its unmodified state.
Your responsibility as operator (FBO)
Under EU Regulation 1169/2011 (Food Information Regulation) and EU Regulation 852/2004 (HACCP Hygiene Regulation), the Food Business Operator (FBO) is solely and exclusively responsible for:
- Providing accurate, up-to-date and complete allergen information to the end consumer;
- Determining allergens in the finished product based on current supplier documentation;
- Maintaining and documenting a demonstrable HACCP management system;
- Controlling cross-contamination risks within their own production environment;
- Compliance with local food safety authority requirements.
Allergen information: Limitations
The allergen information on this page relates to the ingredient as such. The actual allergen composition of your purchase may differ due to:
- Varying suppliers, production facilities or growing regions;
- Cross-contact during production, transport or storage ("may contain");
- Changed product formulations not yet reflected in public sources;
- Processing or preparation in your own kitchen that introduces new allergens.
Always verify allergens against the current specification sheets (spec sheets) from your supplier. Orally or informally provided allergen information is not legally valid under EU Reg. 1169/2011.
Milk allergen and lactose intolerance
The EU-14 allergen "Milk (including lactose)" covers two distinct conditions, both of which require declaration: (1) cow's milk allergy, an immunological reaction to milk proteins (casein, whey), and (2) lactose intolerance, an enzymatic deficiency (lactase) preventing digestion of milk sugar. Both groups must be informed separately on the menu. Lactose-free is not the same as milk-protein-free: a guest with cow's milk allergy may still react to lactose-free products.
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Official sources and authorities
Legal basis: EU Reg. 1169/2011 Annex II (EU-14 allergens) · EU Reg. 852/2004 (HACCP) · Local food information legislation as applicable