Phil Pascoe
Established Member
I bought Sevilles on Saturday for a lady who makes loads of pickles, jams and marmalades and sells them for local charities.
It looks great. What are the oranges and where do you get them?I'm just prepping my 1st batch - 2kg of oranges and a couple of lemons. I follow a recipe my dad used which results in a really tangy and tasty marmalade - I give away lots to friends and family and they love it -
1kg fruit
1.25kg sugar
Steam fruit for ~2hrs or until dimpled - or ~15mins in a pressure cooker +1pt water
When cool slice and de-pip but put everything cut up into the preserving pan, pith and skin.
Warm and then tip sugar in and stir till dissolved, then increase heat to bring to a boil
~20mins you should see the mixture change and acquire a glossy coating - 'the rolling boil' and at this point test for set by placing a drop onto a chilled saucer and 5mins later check to see if it wrinkles, if not repeat...
Progress thus far -
View attachment 173903
The house becomes infused with the smell. The Seville have a distinct aroma.No help to you but just to say that my mother used to make marmalade in a large (Copper?) pan each year and the smell of marmalade making still takes me straight back 60 years - its one of my favorite smells. I would eat it straight out of the jar, never a fan of jams as they were too sweet without the tang.
I shall have to bring this up with my local Co-op.Available in your local waitrose
@John DeLapp They are Sevilles imported from unsurprisingly Seville in Spain - usually available in the supermarkets around this time of year - as others have mentioned Waitrose and Sainsburys both have them at the moment but if you blink they are gone!!
Seville itself is a fabulous place to visit - I have been there often and the oranges grow in the parks and even line some of the streets and around March/April they litter the streets creating a squishy mess for the urban cleaners to clear up!!
@Jameshow The recipe I follow uses way less sugar than most, - 1kg fruit to 1.25kg of sugar +2 unwaxed lemons - I give a lot of it away to friends and family and all including myself find it is plenty sweet enough
I suspect that we aren’t far off in our finished product. The main difference I see is in boiling. When I first started researching the boil water was always listed as an integral Part I believe it ends up with a lot of flavor.@John DeLapp -Bah teach me to skim read your starting post....
The recipe I use involves the whole orange -peel, pith and innards where the only bits discarded are the knobbly ends and the pips- albeit these bits get saved and are briefly boiled in maybe 300ml of water to extract more pectin from mainly the pips to aid setting the mix. Also I only use 1kg oranges to 1.25kg sugar + 2 unwaxed lemons and that plus the bitterness imparted by the pith and internal membranes results in quite a tangy marmalade.
Where this departs from what it looks like you are doing is this -
I just steam the fruit whole for ~2hrs - in fact for the last 2y I have been doing the steaming in an Instantpot pressure cooker - it only takes 15minutes and seems to retain more flavour!
Then I quarter the fruit, de-pip and trim ends and chop them straight into the preserving pan, add sugar and warm till dissolved then boil for ~30mins to approach set-point.
Chopping the fruit after initial cooking is slightly messy - sticky hands etc but is super easy because the peel is soft and it would appear to be way quicker than scooping out all the innards to then recombine later on.
No right or wrong way for sure but this one works for me!!
I’m sitting here in California up to my elbows in Seville oranges, making marmalade. I would like to know if there are others who are experienced in making the rough old Scottish type. It consists of Seville Oranges, the same weight in sugar and the same weight again of the water used to boil the oranges at the start. As much as I can appreciate the labors of others with their tri fruit blends and carefully sectioned fruit removing all traces of membrane that is not what I’m after. Is anyone still making the rough old original? I have been doing this for approximately the past eight or nine years so I’m not an absolute beginner.
I’ve started with 14 1/2 pounds of oranges.View attachment 173867
Good on you ! I firmly believe in the trad recipe at this point although a lemon or two couldn’t hurt. I go to Costco where I can get ten pounds of organic sugar. Nice stuff. I ended up right on one to one on sugar and it’s plenty sweet as far as I’m concerned.LLP
Thanks for the inspiration. I've been out this evening and bought 3kg of Seville Oranges in preparation. I've long been a keen jam maker, but only ever made marmalade once before. My favorites are Quince and Medlar.
I had an acquaintance years ago who was a Roberton's jam salesman. He had been told the there was nothing remotely harmful about a bit of mould, indeed once the jam was mouldy it wouldn't deteriorate any further.Twice I’ve found a speck of mold growing on a jar, I took it off with a spoon and carried on. No tummy ache FWIW.
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