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Marmalade

Preserve made from citrus fruits


Preserve made from citrus fruits

FieldValue
nameMarmalade
imageHomemade marmalade, England.jpg
altA jar filled with orange marmalade.
captionA jar of homemade marmalade
place_of_originPortugal
United Kingdom
regionEurope
typeFruit preserve
servedRoom temperature or slightly less
main_ingredientJuice and peel of citrus fruits, sugar, and water
serving_size100 grams
calories246
protein0.3
fat0
carbohydrate66.3
similar_dishJam

United Kingdom

Marmalade is a sweet, tangy fruit preserve made from the juice and peel of citrus fruits boiled with sugar and water. The well-known version is made from bitter orange, but other citrus fruits such as lemons and limes can also be used. The bitter orange is mostly used in marmalade because of its high pectin content, which gives a thick consistency to its marmalade. In addition, the balance of acid and pectin is needed for consistency. Fruits with low pectin have it added to make the marmalade.

Historically, the term marmalade was often used for non-citrus preserves. Mango, pineapple, apricot, and cocoa beans, have been made into marmalade in those cases. In the 21st century, the term refers mainly to jam made with citrus fruits. White sugar (sucrose) is typically used to sweeten marmalade, but sugar substitutes, such as sucralose, aspartame, or saccharin may be used. Artificial dyes and flavouring agents are added to marmalade to enhance taste, flavour, and appearance.

Originally marmalade was made from quince, and meant quince cheese. Mary Kettilby's 1714 cookery book, A Collection of Above Three Hundred Receipts (pages 78–79) discusses how to make marmalade. Modern marmalade has existed since the 1700s when the Scottish added water to marmalade to make it less solid than before. The Scottish were the people who made marmalade a breakfast item, and soon after the rest of Britain followed.

The word marmalade in the English language comes from French which came from the Portuguese word marmelada*,* starting with the Greek word melimēlon that means 'sweet apple'.

The preserve has been mentioned in various books and is the fictional character Paddington Bear's favourite food. The 2014 movie Paddington made slight increase in marmalade sales in the United Kingdom.

Origins

Early history

Main article: Quince cheese

In the 1500s, marmalade was made from quince, and was imported to England from Spain and Italy. The quince jam or quince cheese, was a firm, sticky, sweet reddish hard paste made by slowly cooking quince fruit with sugar, and is still made today.

''A Collection of Above Three Hundred Receipts''

Scottish and English influence

The Scottish are credited with developing marmalade as a spread, with Scottish recipes in the 18th century using more water to produce a less solid preserve than before.

The Scottish were the people who made marmalade a breakfast item. James Boswell and Samuel Johnson were given it at breakfast while in Scotland in 1773. In the 19th century, the English followed the Scottish and began to eat marmalade in the morning. The American writer Louisa May Alcott visited Britain, and later described "a choice pot of marmalade and a slice of cold ham" to be "essentials of English table comfort".

Etymology

Actual

An antique brown and tan marmalade cutter used to cut citrus fruit peel into thin slices.
Antique marmalade cutter, used to cut citrus fruit peel into thin slices

The word marmalade in the English language comes from French marmelade which, in turn, came from the Portuguese word marmelada. According to José Pedro Machado's Dicionário Etimológico da Língua Portuguesa, the oldest known document where this Portuguese word is to be found is Gil Vicente's play Comédia de Rubena, written in 1521:

: Temos tanta marmelada () : Que a minha mãe vai me dar um pouco ()

The Portuguese word comes from the Latin melimelum or "a sweet apple", in turn from Greek μελίμηλον melimēlon 'sweet apple', from μέλη 'honey' + μῆλον mēlon 'apple, round fruit', became Galician-Portuguese marmelo 'quince'. The name originated in the 16th century from Middle French marmelade and Portuguese, where marmelada applied to quince jam. The English recipe book of Eliza Cholmondeley, dated from 1677 and held at the Chester Record Office in the Cheshire county archives, has one of the earliest marmalade recipes ("Marmelet of Oranges") which produced a firm, thick dark paste. The modern definition of marmalade is a jam made from citrus fruits rather than quince.

Folk

According to a Scottish legend, the creation of orange marmalade in the Scottish city of Dundee occurred by accident. The legend tells of a ship carrying a cargo of oranges that broke down in the port, resulting in some ingenious locals making marmalade out of the cargo. Since then, the city has had a long association with marmalade. However, this legend was "decisively disproved by food historians", according to a New York Times report.

A folk etymology asserts that Mary, Queen of Scots ate marmalade as a treatment for seasickness, and that the name is derived from her maids' whisper of Marie est malade ('Mary is ill'). The word's origin has nothing to do with Mary though.

Creation

Recipe

Common ingredients

Marmalade is made from the juice and peel of citrus fruits boiled with sugar and water. It can be made from bitter orange, lemons, limes, grapefruits, mandarins, sweet oranges, bergamots, blood oranges, clementines, kumquats, navel oranges, citrus taiwanica, or a combination. Citrus is the most typical choice of fruit for marmalade, though historically the term has often been used for non-citrus preserves. Marmalade made from citrus taiwanica has earned international awards and has won, eight bronze, eight silver, and three gold medals at the Dalemain World Marmalade Awards in the United Kingdom.

In Britain, marmalade is usually made from the bitter or Seville orange. It is favoured because of its naturally high pectin content, which gives a thick consistency to the marmalade, in addition to the fruit also having tart flesh and rough skin. There is needed a balance between fruit acid and the pectin. Fruits with normally low pectin, like strawberries, cherries, and figs, have it added to make the marmalade a jelly.

Other ingredients

Marmalade has been made from fruits like mango and pineapple in mixed fruit marmalades. Apricots are in addition made into marmalade. Mucilage from cocoa beans has also been produced into marmalade. Analyses did not show any significant difference in taste, color, or consistency compared to apricot marmalade.

Process

There are generally five steps of the creation of citrus marmalade: washing, peeling, pre-treatment for peel (de-bittering and sugar-dipping), mixing, and boiling. White sugar has traditionally been used as the main sweetener in marmalades, although sugar substitutes, such as sucralose and saccharin may be used. The choice of sugar substitute depends partly on heat stability, texture effect, and aftertaste.

Serving

Marmalade can be served at room temperature or slightly colder. Some bitter orange marmalade can last for up to 6 months after opened, while some only lasts until 3. Marmalade can be served on toast, cookies, biscuits, smoothies, and other bakery products.

Characteristics

Marmalade has a sweet and tangy taste, with a texture similar to jam.

Citrus peel is a main ingredient of marmalade which contains not only numerous functional constituents but also gives the product a different aroma. However, it also contains a variety of bitter compounds which may affect the flavour of marmalade.

Nutrition

Orange marmalade is 33% water and 66% carbohydrates, with negligible protein and fat content (table). In a reference amount of 100 g, orange marmalade supplies 246 calories of food energy, with low amounts or no micronutrients present.

Some demand for healthier marmalade, like lowered calories, has been observed in some consumer groups.

Commerce

Production companies

James Keiller and his mother, Janet, ran a small sweet and preserves shop in the Seagate area of Dundee. They then began to produce "Dundee Marmalade". The business prospered, and remains a signature marmalade producer today.

The Frank Cooper Oxford Marmalade manufacturing business sold marmalade in 1874. It started out first for just for Oxford students, but the business expanded all over England and abroad.

Robertson's was founded in 1864 by James and Marion Robertson in Paisley, Renfrewshire. The business was known for making Golden Shred marmalade. Today, it no longer exists, and is now owned by Premier Foods, though they still make the same product Golden Shred.

Market

As of 2021, the international market for jams and preserves was US$ 8.46 billion. Global value has been projected to increase in the future with almost US$ 9.90 billion expected in 2027, with an average annual growth of about 3.5% between now and then.

References

Sources

References

  1. Wilson, C. Anne. (2000-01-02). "The Book of Marmalade". University of Pennsylvania Press.
  2. "Quince Jelly".
  3. Bateman, Michael. (3 January 1993). "Hail marmalade, great chieftain o' the jammy race: Mrs Keiller of Dundee added chunks in the 1790s, thus finally defining a uniquely British gift to gastronomy".
  4. (8 June 2015). "Spread over centuries". [[The Age]].
  5. Henry, Diana. (2012). "Salt sugar smoke: how to preserve fruit, vegetables, meat and fish". London : Mitchell Beazley.
  6. "Marmalade {{!}} Meaning & Definition for UK English".
  7. Translation: We have so much quince jelly / That my mother will give me some. [http://www.quimera-editores.com/vicente/pdf/Rubena.pdf Maria João Amaral, ed. Gil Vicente, ''Rubena'' (Lisbon:Quimera) 1961 (e-book)]
  8. [https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2366024 Melimelon], Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, ''A Greek–English Lexicon'', on Perseus Digital Library
  9. {{harvnb. Wilson. 1999
  10. (2020). "Marmalade". Online Etymology Dictionary, Douglas Harper.
  11. Legislative Services Branch. (12 January 2002). "EUR-lex".
  12. "Features – Scottish Food, Traditions and Customs – Dundee Marmalade". scotsindependent.org.
  13. C. Anne Wilson, ''The Book of Marmalade''. [[Constable & Robinson. Constable]], London. 1985. {{ISBN. 0-09-465670-3.
  14. "Features – Scottish Food, Traditions and Customs – Dundee Marmalade". The British Food Trust.
  15. Apple Jr., R. W.. (27 March 2002). "This Blessed Plot, This Realm of Tea, This Marmalade". [[The New York Times]].
  16. "Marmalade myths - Recipes from Scotland - National Library of Scotland".
  17. "Marmalade".
  18. Toussaint-Samat, Maguelonne. (2009). "A History of Food".
  19. Glatz, Peter. "Orange marmalade". [[Illinois Times]].
  20. Stark, Michelle. (April 3, 2020). "Got fruit? Got time? Here's how to make marmalade at home".
  21. Lee, Olivia. (2025-04-26). "Oranges are not the only fruit: Cumbrian marmalade awards offer unusual blends". [[The Guardian]].
  22. Yang, Carol. (2025-06-24). "Taiwan's unique citrus jam wins big at world jam competition {{!}} Taiwan News {{!}} Jun. 24, 2025 14:47".
  23. Ngo, Hope. (2023-03-05). "The Unique Type Of Orange Used For British Marmalades".
  24. Malcolm, Liz. (2012). "My little jams & preserves book : more than 80 irresistible recipes". [[Murdoch Books]].
  25. (2012). "Studies on the Development of Mixed Fruit Marmalade". Journal of Environmental Science and Natural Resources.
  26. (2009). "Production and characterization of juice from mucilage of cocoa beans and its transformation into marmalade.". Pakistan Journal of Nutrition.
  27. (30 January 2025). "How to Make and Can Citrus Marmalades". University of Maine, Cooperative Extension Services.
  28. (2016). "Behaviour of spirotetramat residues and its four metabolites in citrus marmalade during home processing". Food Additives & Contaminants.
  29. (2016). "Development of Lemon Marmalade Formulated with New Sweeteners (Isomaltulose and Tagatose): Effect on Antioxidant, Rheological and Optical Properties". [[Journal of Food Process Engineering]].
  30. (2015). "Influence of Healthy Sweeteners (Tagatose and Oligofructose) on the Physicochemical Characteristics of Orange Marmalade: Orange Marmalade with Healthy Sweeteners". [[Journal of Texture Studies]].
  31. (3 September 2019). "Let's Preserve: Ingredients Used in Home Food Preservation". Extension Services, Pennsylvania State University.
  32. (April 2018). "Orange marmalade". National Center for Home Food Preservation, University of Georgia.
  33. Mims, Ben. (2022-01-27). "Master Orange Marmalade".
  34. Amendt, Linda J.. (2008). "175 best jams, jellies, marmalades & other soft spreads". Toronto, Ont. : Robert Rose.
  35. "Marmalade, orange".
  36. "The Hierarchical Utility of Credence Attributes of Orange Marmalade: What do Consumers Look for in a Multi-Claim Food Product?". Journal of Marketing Communications.
  37. W.M. Matthew, ''The Keiller Dynasty 1800–1879'' narrates the history of Keillers; [https://www.bbc.co.uk/legacies/work/scotland/perth_tayside/article_2.shtml BBC News "Legacies: Keiller's: Sticky Success"]: offers an abbreviated version.
  38. "Frank Cooper Ltd. 1881-1992".
  39. (2015-02-07). "A chance to take marmalade back to its Scottish roots".
  40. (2019-06-03). "Marmalade". Consolidated Federal Laws of Canada, Food and Drug Regulations, Government of Canada.
  41. "Orange Marmalade Grades and Standards {{!}} Agricultural Marketing Service".
  42. Tetens, Katrin. (2024-06-03). "Are you ready for the updated EU Breakfast Directives?".
  43. "Fruit jams and other products {{!}} EUR-Lex".
  44. Bond, Michael. (2008). "Paddington: My Book of Marmalade". [[HarperCollins]] Children's.
  45. Bowcott, Owen. (23 August 2001). "Time runs out for Robertson's golly". The Guardian.
  46. Davies, Caroline. (24 February 2017). "Marmalade in decline as Paddington struggles to lift sales". [[The Guardian]].
  47. Baucekova, Silvia. (2015). "Dining Room Detectives: Analysing Food in the Novels of Agatha Christie". [[Cambridge Scholars Publishing]].
  48. Allen Ford, Susan. (2022). "Thoughts on the Education of Daughters in Sense and Sensibility".
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