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Marmalade

(39 Posts)
NfkDumpling Thu 16-Jan-14 11:12:58

I've just spent an age slicing oranges for marmalade using DMiL's ancient recipe. It does say a mincer can be used but I was wondering if in future I could use my food mixer? I tried a recipe from the Internet but it wasn't nearly as good as MiL's and I had to resort to Certo which I feel is cheating!

NfkDumpling Sun 19-Jan-14 17:44:08

Ooh, now you're getting fancy!

janerowena Sun 19-Jan-14 20:44:29

Maybe thin slices are added and stirred in just as it is put into each jar, that should work.

NfkDumpling Mon 20-Jan-14 07:21:25

It would make a lovely present.
If you thinly sliced a small sweet orange. Microwaved to soften and carefully placed the slices around the inside of the jar, then gently poor the marmalade in - would that work? Or would the slices be too soggy and collapse? Needs experimentation.

JessM Mon 20-Jan-14 07:57:34

oh dear this is a long way from the rather over-chunky um, rustic, batch I made on Saturday. Should maybe have discarded 30% of peel. Those Seville oranges don't have a lot of juicy stuff in the middle... grin

papaoscar Mon 20-Jan-14 12:57:11

I remember my old mother used to use Mamade orange concentrate in tins 60+ years ago. Can you still get it?

GrandmaH Mon 20-Jan-14 13:48:10

Bought a Tefal jam maker.
Perfect jam, marmalade & chutney every time in fraction of time.

I do cut rind by hand though as I quite like doing it to be honest. With a good play on the radio I find it very relaxing.I tried doing it in various machines but it always went cloudy.
When we run out I buy Mamade to top up supplies & also have used Lakeland jam & lemon marmalade tins which work very well.

I'm adding preserved ginger this afternoon to latest batch as DH has hidden his whiskey ( I did use a malt last year by mistake- I was not popular!!)

Nelliemoser Mon 20-Jan-14 17:39:22

I have just done batch #1 2014.
It took a bit of rescuing as I made a mistake and did not do the calculations for the amount of sugar properly too little and had to add some more late in the process. blush
That was a problem of needing to change the given quantities as I do not have a proper size preserving pan. I was probably getting complacent, the first batch I made last year was fine.

It now seems full of tiny bubbles but fortunately it tastes good. I tried the drips from the tray I bottled the jars on.

Icyalittle Mon 20-Jan-14 19:08:33

Anyone who can point me at a nice lime marmalade recipe? My green grocer was selling them for £1 a kilo this morning. I wasn't intending to make any Seville this year because I've still got lots from my last batch but that was too good to miss.

janerowena Mon 20-Jan-14 22:44:39

My OH's is nice, but I don't know where he got the recipe from. I had to make him reboil it because it was too runny though. He is doing a lot of cooking lately, they have charity bakeoffs at work, and he wanted to make a lime filling for his own version of jammy dodgers. It ran everywhere! He will have it storen on the computer somewhere.

Yes papaoscar I have made mamade in years when I have lived in towns without nearby markets, and I made some two years ago when i missed the seville orange window, it came from Tesco. The 'cook the oranges first' method tastes exactly the same.

Nelliemoser Mon 20-Jan-14 23:18:21

Re the slices around the jar.
You could possibly soften the sweet oranges just very slightly and stick them on with a thick sugar syrup and leave that to set hard, before you put the hotter marmalade in. Go one someone! Experiment and send us a picture.

JessM Tue 21-Jan-14 08:05:26

Gosh icylittle - limes that cheap? Are you in the UK?

janerowena Tue 21-Jan-14 11:58:04

At the markets here you can buy most fruit and veg for £1 a kilo at the moment. I would be there at the moment if it weren't for the freezing fog. I go there first, then plan my shopping list. Tesco grapes by comparison are unripe and ridiculously expensive.

Icyalittle Tue 21-Jan-14 21:18:41

janerowena that's my experience too. Yes, JessM, in Gloucestershire, just the usual green grocer, but he did also have them for 38p each. Nothing wrong with the kilo I bought though. I found a recipe that said to add a little bicarb to offset the acidity and help the set. I will see if it works tomorrow.