• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Home
  • About
    • About Me
    • Copyright Information
    • FAQ
    • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Me
  • Recipes
  • Pottery

Home Sweet Sweden logo

You are here: Home / Recipes / Sauces, Dips, Drinks and Conserves / Conserve and Canning Recipes / Fast Marmalade

January 5, 2011

Fast Marmalade

Pin4
Share5
Tweet
9 Shares

Approx cost: €3.00
Approx calories (per tbsp): ~50
Approx preparation time: 1 hour

If you’re unlucky enough to buy a particularly sour batch of clementines/mandarines during the holiday period, or just get sick of eating them, here’s a fantastic way of using them up so you don’t have to waste them. As long as the canning jars are properly sterilised at the end, the marmalade will last for ages and is great on toast, croissants, etc. It’s a really fast, simple recipe – not at all like some recipes which call for boiling up the marmalade for hours on end. Total cooking time for this really is only about 40 minutes so it’s definitely not something you have to devote any great amount of time to. This post also has a video directly below.

Ingredients

Marmalade Ingredients

Ingredients you'll need for this dish




– ~1 kilo Oranges/Clementines/Tangerines/Mandarines etc
– ~1 kilo Sugar
– ~0.8 litres water

You’ll also need
Food Processor
Canning Jars

Instructions

  1. Start by cleaning the oranges really well. You can either scrub them with a nail-brush, or rub them well with your hands in hot water.



    Washed oranges
  2. Pick out one or two oranges which have the best skin, peel them and and set the peel aside. Chop the rest of the oranges (and the peeled ones) finely and transfer to your Food Processor and blend for several minutes until a smooth pulp – don’t worry too much if there are still lumps inside.



    Chopped Oranges

  3. While the oranges are being mixed, take the peel you set aside earlier and chop very finely. Heat a saucepan on a high heat and then transfer the orange pulp and peel to the pan. Use the 0.8 litres of water to rinse out the food processor bowl, and then pour the water into the orange pulp. Cover and boil for 20 minutes.

  4. Uncover the mix and pour the sugar into the marmalade bit by bit, stirring well while doing so. Once all the sugar has been added, leave uncovered and boil vigorously for ~15 minutes. While the marmalade is boiling, place a plate into the freezer. Wash out 2 or 3 canning jars thoroughly and place upside down into an oven around 160 degrees Celsius for around 15 minutes.

  5. When the marmalade has boiled for around 20 minutes, remove the plate from the freezer – spoon some marmalade onto the plate. Tilt the plate a little to allow the marmalade to touch the cool plate and using a small spoon, part the marmalade to see if it’s setting or not. If not then just boil it for longer. When it’s ready, take out the canning jars and spoon the marmalade immediately into the jars. Fit the rubber seals (if they’re that type of jar) and then seal up. Allow to cool before storing away (or eating)!

Fast Marmalade

Nom nom

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Lucia says

    January 8, 2011 at 05:58

    Last and only time I attempted to do marmalade I boiled the thing way too much and turned everything into someweird caramel. When would you recommend stop cooking the marmalade?

    Reply
    • Charles says

      January 8, 2011 at 07:29

      Once you've added in the sugar it only needs to boil fast for about 20-30 minutes, sometimes a little more. You can check if it's ready by spooning some onto a cold plate and checking if it's starting to set!

      Reply
      • brenda says

        January 11, 2023 at 22:40

        hi I just watched your video and would like to know don’t you have to water bath or do you invert the jar until cool?? also how longe is the shelves life thank you ?

        Reply
        • Charles says

          January 11, 2023 at 23:29

          Hi Brenda,

          I’ve always made jams in the way shown in the video – I simply always did what my mother and grandmother always did.

          I don’t boil the jars, but sterilise them in the oven first. You then pour the hot jam into the hot jars.

          I don’t personally invert my jars while they cool – my mother uses small plastic discs which are sealed around the opening with a rubber band, they get sucked down as the jam cools and go concave, it’s really cool to see.

          My jars usually have metal tops with a button which gets depressed (sucked in) as it cools, so you know it’s an airtight seal.

          Shelf-life, we usually eat things pretty quickly, but I’ve happened across some older jars before and I can say that they’re fine after a good year. As long as everything is sanitary then things should keep for at least this long, if not longer, especially when stored in a cool, dark place. If the seal is bad you’ll likely see mould growing after a while, so make sure your jars and lids are good!

  2. Helen Smith says

    January 9, 2011 at 01:10

    Definitely going to follow this recipe as methods I have tried in the past have been messy and tedious. It looks really good.

    Reply
  3. Heather says

    January 6, 2012 at 00:55

    Just watched the video of the marmalade. I bought oranges on sale with the intention of making marmalade with them, thank you so much for the quick overview! (And I’ll have to bake bread to go along with the fresh jelly!)

    Reply
    • Charles says

      January 7, 2012 at 01:15

      Thanks so much Heather – so nice of you to drop by! If you’re going to make bread too, may I suggest this one? I found it to really be incredibly good!

      Reply
  4. Angel says

    December 12, 2012 at 06:01

    Well my friend, thank you for this recipe, I follow it step by step, perfect, now I have, an excellent Christmas gift to share with family and friends. Thank you un millon.

    Angel

    Reply
    • Charles says

      December 15, 2012 at 01:59

      Thanks Angel – so glad it worked out well. If you liked this one you might also appreciate my lemon marmalade recipe too – that’s really lovely πŸ™‚

      Reply
  5. Jean | Delightful Repast says

    January 31, 2013 at 19:41

    Hello Charles, hope you’re enjoying your blogging break! I just posted my marmalade and thought I’d check your blog and see if you had posted marmalade. If you get a chance, pop in and take a look at mine. Doesn’t it make the kitchen smell wonderful!

    Reply
    • Charles says

      March 14, 2014 at 00:13

      Hi Jean, totally agree – my favourite marmalade is dark stuff which is cooked for a really long time. Of course, this one I like too, but the dark stuff just smells amazing. You’ve inspired me – I think I’ll make some on the weekend. It’s been AGES since I had some marmalade! Thanks for dropping by!

      Reply
  6. Jean | DelightfulRepast.com says

    March 6, 2014 at 17:36

    Hi Charles, I just posted Tangerine Marmalade so wanted to check all the blogs I visit today for marmalade. It’s amazing to me how there are sooooo many methods for the same simple set of ingredients!

    Reply
    • Charles says

      March 14, 2014 at 00:15

      Oops, just noticed you wrote again – thanks for letting me know. I’ll check out your post in a bit. Would you believe, this recipe is my most popular recipe on YouTube. Almost 58,000 views to date, and the video is horrendously bad… one of my early attempts! πŸ˜€

      Reply
  7. Marianne says

    May 19, 2016 at 08:11

    Hi Charles,
    Thank you for this great recipe. I made some of your marmelade yesterday. It was really easy and turned out very well. We’ll never use store-bought again.
    Marianne

    P.S subtitles made life a lot easier.

    Reply
    • Charles says

      May 24, 2016 at 23:17

      Hi Marianne, I’m really happy to hear this! Thanks for letting me know πŸ™‚

      Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Granary Bread - Five Euro Food says:
    January 18, 2011 at 10:23

    […] with some good strong cheese, some pickled onions, or even just spread with some butter and jam or marmalade! Now I know that not everyone has access to granary flour so I’ll make a post for slightly […]

    Reply
  2. Lemon Marmalade | Five Euro Food says:
    July 3, 2012 at 11:18

    […] have no problem picking it out from the line-up above. I was going to use the same recipe as for my fast marmalade, from last year but in reading up online, I found a great tip. Boiling up the lemons first will […]

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




Primary Sidebar

Welcome!

So nice of you to drop by! I'll be sharing more about my cooking and pottery here so do check back often! Read More…

Never miss a post

Signup to receive new posts straight to your email inbox

Copyright © 2023 Home Sweet Sweden