Re message 38, wrap each orange in kitchen paper, put them into a plastic bag and into the freezer. All that's needed later is a slow defrost.
Marmalade time!
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amateur51
Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostAnother essential element of making my own marmalade is that the product matures with storage,but I usually don't wait to start. On the first suitably cold day out comes the big basin, and I'm all set to make a steamed marmalade sponge pudding, lovely stuff with lashings of custard!
There's an item in this week's New Scientist about claims that DNA can "teleport" itself into a sample of pure water, and it might be possible to use the "copy" to reconstruct the original. This will almost certainly prove to be untrue, but it opens a lovely possibility, food shared via the Internet!
What a treat!
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But what is it about marmalade that gets people to come out so eloquently here? I can’t imagine the same would have happened if the OP had been about jam making.
I suppose making jam is really for using up suppress, which is a chore. Whereas to make marmalade, you actually chose to do so and go out and buy the fruit, which is a hobby (I go out and buy Frank Cooper’s Original Oxford these days).
Alain
I imagine it was ‘fruit first’ where these oranges grow. Or is marmalade a British invention?
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Originally posted by arancie33 View PostIndeed they are only freshly available at this time of the year but they can be frozen and resurrected for marmalade at any time.
More info here, including the probable derivation of the word (marmelo means quince in Portuguese):
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marthe
I love marmalade but have never made it. My grandfather made very nice marmalade. He was a chemist who loved the science of combining fruit and sugar to make jam or jelly. I was his best marmalade customer because he and I were the only ones who really liked it. Sadly we don't get Seville oranges here at any time of year. My husband is the real jam maker in the family though, and put up a lovely batch of crab apple jelly from the bumper crop of crab apples we had this year. His mother loved to pick brambles and damsons for making jam. She also made delicious lemon curd. My favorite jelly has always been a ruby-colored raspberry/red currant jelly made by my grandmother every July. The raspberries came from her garden; the red currants from a local farm.
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Curalach
Mangerton, I think the Wiki article is pretty accurate about the origins of marmalade and it is appropriate that it should be highlighted by a Dundonian. Reading it, I became aware that I was reading, almost word for word, an article in one of the weekend papers. Sunday Herald I think. Lazy journalism or what?
I have sometimes frozen the oranges for a few weeks until I had sufficient time available for the manufacturing ritual. I have never detected any difference in the finished product.
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Originally posted by Curalach View PostMangerton, I think the Wiki article is pretty accurate about the origins of marmalade and it is appropriate that it should be highlighted by a Dundonian. Reading it, I became aware that I was reading, almost word for word, an article in one of the weekend papers. Sunday Herald I think. Lazy journalism or what?
I have sometimes frozen the oranges for a few weeks until I had sufficient time available for the manufacturing ritual. I have never detected any difference in the finished product.
Yes, I've frozen the oranges when I haven't had time to make all the marmalade I need.
The first batch is cooling now - reached setting point, so I'll give it a quick boil tomorrow & pot it up. Then it's on to the next batch! (I do 3 pounds of fruit at a time).
Marthe - the chemistry is interesting, especially relating to pectin - I think I read somewhere that boiling the marmalade too much, or at too high a temperature, can destroy the pectin & therefore results in a marmalade (or jam) that won't set. I use a sugar thermometer to check that it's at the right temperature.
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marthe
Flossehilde, I use a sugar thermometer for jam and candy making(American useage here). As with bread making, the relative humidity and other factors can lead to the success or failure of a particular batch. We've played around with combinations of high/low pectin fruits (strawberry-rhubarb) to make jam/jelly without using artificial pectin which sometimes gives jam an unpleasant rubbery quality. We've always had great success with our apples, both crabs and regular apples, because of their high pectin content. Concord grape jam/jellyalso sets well for the same reason. You're right about boiling and too high temps destroying pectin; also gives an unpleasant taste to the jam. Though we don't get Seville oranges here, I might try making marmalade with whatever's available at the supermarket.
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Eudaimonia
Originally posted by french frank View PostTried twice and ended up with something approaching an orangy version of Golden Syrup.
This thread is making me want to try again-- though as I'm not in LA anymore, I'd have to buy my oranges from the store like everyone else. Or maybe I'll just make chocolate-covered candied orange peels and be done with it. That sounds like a much better option, all things considered.
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Originally posted by Curalach View PostMangerton, I think the Wiki article is pretty accurate about the origins of marmalade and it is appropriate that it should be highlighted by a Dundonian. Reading it, I became aware that I was reading, almost word for word, an article in one of the weekend papers. Sunday Herald I think. Lazy journalism or what?
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Originally posted by mangerton View Post... used a Spong mincer (long before food processors!). The pips were separated, and put in a small piece of cloth which was tied to the handle of the jeely (sic) pan, so that the pectin could be extracted.
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Curalach
Originally posted by mangerton View PostCuralach, that occurred to me as well. It was Saturday's Herald - normally the only paper I buy, for Myops' crossword.
Indeed it was Saturday's Herald and I rather agree with Flossehilde about the new Sunday edition, the jury's out on that one.
Back to marmalade. The next time you cook a chicken casserole, like Chicken Basque, try smearing some marmalade on the skin of the chicken pieces. This produces a crisp tangy skin. Delicious.
I'm off to buy the Sevilles this morning. I notice that they are slightly cheaper than last year in our local greengrocer.
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David Underdown
Originally posted by Chris Newman View PostSir Michael Tippett [...] put his recipe in the Guardian in an article on the self-same nourishment.
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Marthe, if you're using ordinary sweet oranges you could try adding some lemons (over & above the lemons used to give extra pectin) as well, to give it something approaching the bitterness of Seville orange marmalade. If you can't find a recipe I think I've got one I could post.
Re Seville orange exports -I think that virtually the entire crop is exported to the UK for marmalade. I wonder if there's any other crop/product where the entire output goes to one market?
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