Orange Marmalade
Submitted by eeyoreskiss
Old-fashioned orange marmalade simmers thin-sliced unpeeled oranges and lemons in water for 24 hours, then boils with sugar in small batches for sparkling jellied preserves. Heritage British-style recipe.
YIELD
6 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
80 minREADY
24 hrsThis is the kind of orange marmalade your great-grandmother might have made: thin-sliced unpeeled fruit soaked overnight, simmered hard, then cooked in small batches with sugar until it sets to a glassy amber jelly. The whole rinds (pith and all) are essential. They release the natural pectin that makes the marmalade jell without commercial pectin packets.
The 24-hour soak is the patience step. After hard-boiling the sliced oranges and lemons for an hour to halve the volume, the fruit rests overnight to soften the peel and develop the marmalade’s signature bitter-sweet edge. Skipping this step leaves the rind chewy in the finished jar.
Cooking in 4-cup batches is the move that produces a brighter color and a cleaner set. Larger batches scorch on the bottom or take so long to come up to gel point that the marmalade darkens. Three-quarters cup of sugar per cup of fruit is the classic ratio.
Pro Tips
- Slice the fruit as thinly as possible. Thick slices stay tough even after the long simmer.
- Use a wide, heavy-bottomed pan. Surface area helps evaporation and prevents scorching.
- Test for set with the cold-plate trick: chill a small plate, drop a teaspoon of marmalade on it, push with a finger. If it wrinkles, it’s done.
- If the first batch refuses to set quickly, the fruit needs more cooking before sugar is added in the next batch.
Variations
- Use Seville oranges if you can find them. They’re bitter, classic, and what marmalade was originally made from.
- Add a splash of whisky or Scotch to the last batch for a Highland-style marmalade.
- Stir in a few cracked cardamom pods or a thumb of fresh ginger during the boil for a spiced version.
Ingredients
Directions
Measure oranges and lemons together.
Add 5 times as much cold water.
During next 24 hours, boil hard for an hour.
This will reduce the quantity one-half.
Measure into 4-cup units.
Cooking in this quantity will produce better flavor.
If oranges are overly sweet, add 1 tablespoon lemon juice for every cup of fruit.
Bring to boiling point.
Boil 8 minutes.
Add ¾ cup sugar for each cup of fruit.
Boil first unit rapidly until it jells -- not more than 10 minutes.
If a longer time seems to be necessary, boil the next unit for a longer time before the sugar is added.
Pour into sterilized glasses and cover with paraffin when cold.
Comments



