Anna's Orange Marmalade

  • Level: Intermediate
  • Yield: 3 to 4 pints
  • Total: 14 hr 45 min
  • Prep: 15 min
  • Inactive: 12 hr
  • Cook: 2 hr 30 min
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Ingredients

4 large seedless oranges

2 lemons

8 cups sugar

Directions

  1. Cut the oranges and lemons in half crosswise, then into very thin half-moon slices. (If you have a mandoline, this will be quite fast.) Discard any seeds. Place the sliced fruit and their juices into a stainless-steel pot. Add 8 cups water and bring the mixture to a boil, stirring often. Remove from the heat and stir in the sugar until it dissolves. Cover and allow to stand overnight at room temperature.
  2. The next day, bring the mixture back to a boil. Reduce the heat to low and simmer uncovered for about 2 hours. Turn the heat up to medium and boil gently, stirring often, for another 30 minutes. Skim off any foam that forms on the top. Cook the marmalade until it reaches 220 degrees F on a candy thermometer. If you want to be doubly sure it's ready, place a small amount on a plate and refrigerate it until it's cool but not cold. If it's firm -- neither runny nor too hard -- it's done. It will be a golden orange color. (If the marmalade is runny, continue cooking it and if it's too hard, add more water.)
  3. Pour the marmalade into clean, hot Mason jars; wipe the rims thoroughly with a clean damp paper towel, and seal with the lids. Store in the pantry for up to a year.

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mikeyjunkmail0616

I made this recipe about 18 months ago; now that oranges are in season again, I'm planning to make another batch this weekend.<br /><br />What I learned from the first batch:<br />- get the BEST fruit you can - thin, smooth-skinned oranges are sweeter than thicker, rougher-skinned. Go through the fruit in the store and if it's not really fresh, wait to make marmalade;<br />- when cutting the fruit, the 'half-moons' will be quite large (4 inch length common at the 'equator'). The length of the pieces doesn't change when cooked, so that 4" piece of fruit will still be 4" in a jar. I'm planning on cutting the longer pieces down so I can fish them out of the jar later;<br />- I cut the fruit on a plastic mat. This makes it easy to slide the fruit (with all the juice) into my cooking pot. I followed by pouring the water over the mat to get the remaining juice into the marmalade;<br />- Heating the marmalade to 220 deg F on my old stove was a challenge, but once I got it there, it darkened (and thickened) quickly. I hope to get it off the heat slightly sooner this time around, so the final consistency is a little less-thick;<br />- this marmalade does not last nearly as long as store-bought; 12 jars were gone in about 3 months. Can't figure out why... (&lt;--kidding here...the final product tasted really good, and I looked for new ways to eat some.)

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