Regardless, she is the sweetest person, and she made it known on Facebook that she was in possession of a bodacious amount of kumquats at her home in Florida, just hanging on the tree waiting to drop off and rot. So, social media being what it is, we made a pact for her to send citrus from Florida to Washington so that I could make some yummy marmalade . . . and I did.
What I ought to
disclose now—before you get too far down this road:
This is a multi-day
process to make kumquat marmalade.
Don’t get into this
unless you have two days to devote.
This makes a tart marmalade.
If you want it sweeter, add more sugar.
METHOD: After much internet searching, recollections of botched kumquat experiences, and trial and error, I ended with this process:
Prepping:
METHOD: After much internet searching, recollections of botched kumquat experiences, and trial and error, I ended with this process:
Prepping:
·
Cut
off the stem end—be brutal.
·
Quarter
the fruit.
·
Pull
the segment off the peel.
·
Put
pulp/segment into the reserve bowl.
·
Put
peel into the keeper bowl.
·
Slice
the peel into strip.
·
Put
the pulp into a net bag or cheesecloth. Tie off. Put into a bowl to catch juice.
·
Weigh
the peels.
·
Add
the same weight of sugar to the peels.
For these big kumquats, I quartered and then sectioned them. For smaller ones, you can cut in half and turn inside out. |
Resting: stir peels and sugar. Let set overnight. Set
pulp aside in separate bowl.
(The pulp and seeds make the pectin. If you save them, you will not need to add any manufactured pectin.)
Cooking:
·
The next day put the peel/sugar mixture
into a big pot. Start to cook.
·
Add
any juice from the pulp/segment net bag collected overnight.
·
Place
the net bag (still enclosed) with pulp and seeds into the bubbling peel broth.
·
Simmer
for about 30 minutes, then squeeze and remove the bag.
· Simmer peel mix until it shows shimmering on cold plate. Est. 30-60 minutes.
·
Test
for pectin by dropping juice on a cold plate. If it globs, then it is ready.
·
Put
into sterilized pint canning jars and process in water bath for 12 minutes (at
sea level). We are at 2,500 altitude, so
I processed mine for 15 minutes.
Yummilicous marmalade all finished and ready for toast! |
Wow! What fantastic marmalade. And just to show you how awesome I am, here's a picture of me and Flavor-Flav getting our timers out to make sure the marmalade is cooked just right!
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