Sour Orange Marmalade
Submitted by bearman55
Tart, aromatic marmalade made from bitter Seville-style oranges. Tender peel strips suspended in jewel-bright jelly that’s perfect on morning toast or stirred into tea.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
20 minREADY
40 minThis is old-school marmalade the way your grandmother might have made it, when citrus season meant putting up jars for the whole year. You’ll boil sliced orange peel until tender (changing the water if it gets too bitter), then extract juice from the pulp through multiple strainings.
The magic happens when you combine that intensely flavored juice with the softened peel strips, sugar, and a pinch of salt, then boil it to the jelly stage. The result is bittersweet, aromatic marmalade with tender peel throughout.
Sealed with paraffin in sterilized jars, this keeps beautifully for months in your pantry.
Pro Tips
- Use true sour oranges (Seville or bitter oranges) for authentic flavor, not regular sweet oranges
- Change the peel boiling water 2-3 times if bitterness becomes too intense for your taste
- Test for jelly stage by dropping a spoonful on a cold plate (it should wrinkle when pushed)
- Let the marmalade cool slightly before jarring so the peel strips distribute evenly instead of floating
- Save extra orange peel in the freezer for grating into baked goods or cocktails
Ingredients
Directions
Remove the peel from two oranges.
Slice this peel very thin and cover with water.
Boil until tender, adding additional water as it boils away.
(Change the water often if the flavor becomes too bitter.)
Peel the remaining oranges (the peel may be stored in freezer for later grating uses).
Boil the pulp in 2 quarts water until very soft.
Strain through a bag with pressure.
Re-strain without pressure.
Mix this juice with the drained peel, the sugar, and the salt and boil until the jelly stage is reached.
Let stand until slightly cool.
Stir and pour into hot sterilized jars and seal with paraffin.
Comments




Seems simple but I've been doing this for several years and it is not.