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Meyer Lemon Marmalade

02.22.2015 by J. Doe // 1 Comment

The first time I made marmalade was more than 20 years ago; it involved an expensive can of mix from Williams-Sonoma, and intense anxiety that everyone who received a jar would perish an agonizing death by botulism. That didn’t happen, of course, but the significant cost and dread involved was enough to send me back to the supermarket and its little imported jars of citrus delight.

My success with several kinds of jam last summer alleviated the worst of my botulism fears; six months later, we’re still enjoying my Strawberry-Rhubarb Jam, with no signs of illness. Since I grew the rhubarb myself, it cost hardly anything to make. It remains crazy delicious; The Child refuses to allow me to give any of it away. She was willing to part with the Spiced Blackberry Jam, which my father seems to have taken a liking to.

My true love, though, is marmalade.

There isn’t a lot of jam-type fruit at the stores currently, but when February rolled around, I began my annual hunt for blood oranges, and as I was doing so ran across boxes of Meyer lemons at Costco. I don’t know a thing about Meyer lemons, but the internet told me they would make many lovely things, especially marmalade.

I began with this Meyer Lemon Marmalade recipe from Serious Eats. Now, my experience with making marmalade is admittedly limited – not counting the mix, I’ve made it once – but I know a few things. For example, you don’t need pectin to make marmalade. I also have bad experiences with recipes that suddenly tell me to include add ingredients that they haven’t mentioned on the ingredient list.

I know better than to attempt recipes that spring unspecified quantities of candied ginger on me partway through, and I certainly know better than to add butter to marmalade before toast has come into the equation. I may not have made much marmalade, but I’ve eaten enough of it to know how it should work.

I move on, pleased that I’ve increased my kitchen confidence to the point where I can look at a recipe and know that I’m right and it isn’t. But I like the idea of including ginger in the marmalade – mostly because I like the idea of adding ginger to anything – so I search out Meyer Lemon Ginger Marmalade recipes, and find this one on Williams-Sonoma’s website. It suggests using a mandoline to slice the lemons.

I don’t own a mandoline, but I’ve been looking for an excuse to buy one, and as an added bonus, Amazon is trialing same-day delivery in my area and offering a coupon for a free trial, which will spare me the trouble of leaving my home to use these lemons before they go bad. I order a highly rated mandoline that is available for the same day offer, and it arrives as expected, at 7pm that night, along with a box of gel pens and a wall-mounted broom organizer.

Five days later,  I make marmalade.

I start out slicing the lemons with the mandoline, which seems like it should be a straightforward process, but isn’t: There’s juice everywhere, and the mandoline leaves large end pieces lemon peel over. It could be that the recipe’s instructions are at fault, since I believe it’s by now well established that there are no requirements that anyone actually follow their own recipe instructions before posting said recipe on the internet. It could be the Amazon reviews, which often have no relationship to the product whose page they are posted on (“Well packaged, but I ordered red and this is blue.”). Or it could simply be that I have some especially juicy lemons on my hands – all over my hands, the counter, and the floor, as it happens.

Whatever the issue, I have a Costco case of Meyer lemons that are nearing their expiration date, so I research a little further – after washing my hands, obviously – and locate a very simple recipe for Meyer lemon marmalade from Gourmet magazine. I then take out my trusty chef’s knife, slice the lemons as thinly as I can, and mostly follow the directions.

The directions call for simmering the lemons for 45 minutes, then adding sugar, but by the time I got to that stage of things, I simply added the sugar and set the pan to simmer, then realized I’d done it in the wrong order.

It was delicious.

I still have more lemons, though, so after I’m done canning the first batch, I slice up more of the lemons, leave them to soak for 24 hours, and the following evening, make a second batch of marmalade, following the directions more closely.

It was delicious, too.

The second batch of marmalade was lighter colored than the first, and less sweet – not surprising, since the sugar didn’t cook down and concentrate the way it did in the first batch. Both were excellent, with a wonderful peel-to-jam ratio.

I still have more lemons, as well as nine jars of marmalade. Even I can’t eat this much marmalade, so I begin sending it around the country, to friends and family – it turns out there are more marmalade lovers among them than I knew. But what’s not to love?

This is lovely on scones or a crispy, buttery English muffin.

Meyer Lemon Marmalade

 

Meyer Lemon Marmalade
 
Print
Author: adapted from Gourmet Magazine
Ingredients
  • 1½ lbs Meyer lemons
  • 4 cups water
  • 4 cups sugar
Instructions
  1. Halve lemons crosswise and remove seeds. Tie seeds in a cheesecloth bag. Quarter each lemon half and thinly slice. Combine with bag of seeds and water in a large heavy pot and let mixture stand, covered, at room temperature 24 hours.
  2. Add sugar to lemon mixture, and bring to a boil over moderate heat. Reduce heat and simmer, uncovered, about 45 minutes. Stir occasionally, skimming off any foam that appears.
  3. Marmalade is ready when until a teaspoon of lemon mixture dropped on a cold plate gels.
  4. Ladle hot marmalade into jars, filling to within ¼ inch of top. Seal jars with lids, and process 15 minutes in a boiling water bath.
Notes
The original recipe calls for adding the sugar after the lemon-water mixture have been boiled for 45 minutes. Boil an additional five minutes, then begin checking if mixture gels on a plate, and proceed with directions.

Both methods work fine; adding the sugar earlier will result in a sweeter marmalade that is darker in color. Adding the sugar later will result in a lighter taste and color.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // jam, lemons

Spiced Blackberry Jam

09.03.2014 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

The laptop surprise was a helpful reminder of two things: first, that I need to really, really budget carefully, to make sure that all The Child’s school costs are covered, and second, that there are a lot of ways to cut costs, if you take the time to look for them.

Which brings me to the blackberries. Last year, I picked and froze several pounds of blackberries, which lasted through spring. I baked a couple of coffee cakes with them, and then The Child found the bags and I would discover her nibbling on bowls of thawed berries, so I left them for her to finish. They were gone in late spring, but it was only a couple of months until they were back in season.

This time of year, all I have to do is bring a bag with me when I walk the Red Dog, and I come home with blackberries. On the weekend, when we have time for a long walk, I can come home with a pound or more of fresh berries.

The Red Dog loves his walks, barking joyfully when I attach his leash, then dancing wildly until the door is opened, then trying to stand still while I untangle him so that we can, finally, go out. We wander through the college together, and he stays patiently by my side, watching as I use sticks to pull branches to that I can reach a cluster of berries without getting pricked by sharp thorns. I struggle a bit with the leash, at times, because holding it prevents me from reaching as far as I need to, so I finally let go of it.

He walks a few steps away, and sits down, quietly watching. Content.

When it is time for me to move on, I say his name, and he follows, and sits near the new spot, and after a couple of moves, I don’t say his name anymore. He’s just there, wherever I am.

We come home one Saturday with two pounds of berries, and after my success with Rhubarb-Strawberry Jam, I decide to try my hand at another jam, and finally settled on this spiced blackberry jam by Gloria Nichol, from her book 100 Jams, Jellies, Preserves and Pickles. (The book also has a recipe for a variation, which includes nectarines.)

This jam was decidedly trickier to make, since I did not want the seeds and centers that can make blackberries unpleasant, so I ran the jam through a food mill. It’s an optional step, but I wouldn’t skip it: it’s worth the time for the resulting smooth berry jam.

The spices give a subtle layer of flavor, a taste that will warm you up when spread on hot toast on a chilly autumn day. It’s also not for everyone, because the star anise gives a hint of licorice, which I love, but others might not. It is complex and thoroughly unexpected and comforting all at once.

I had no trouble processing the jam and getting a seal; the recipe makes a bit less than four cups – which means three jars for later, and almost a full jar to enjoy right now.

Spiced Blackberry Jam

Spiced Blackberry Jam
 
Print
Author: Gloria Nichol, 100 Jams, Jellies, Preserves & Pickles
Ingredients
  • 2 lbs blackberries
  • 1 star anise
  • 3 cloves
  • 1 small cinnamon stick
  • juice of 2 lemons
  • 1 lb 9 oz sugar
Instructions
  1. Place the blackberries and spices in a sauce pan with about 2 tablespoons of water (just enough to prevent fruit from sticking). Bring to a simmer, cooking until the berries are tender and juicy, mashing with the back of a spoon or potato masher.
  2. Run the berries through a food mill.
  3. Return the berries to a pan and add the lemon juice; heat through, stirring often.
  4. Add sugar, stirring until dissolved.
  5. Turn up the heat and boil rapidly until the jam has reached the setting point (holds its shape when a spoonful is put on a chilled plate).
  6. Pour hot jam into sterilized jars, leaving ¼″ headspace, cover with sterilized lids and rings.
  7. Process in a hot water bath for 10 minutes.
  8. Remove from water bath and let jars cool on a kitchen towel. If lids snap, jars are sealed; if they don't snap, refrigerate the jar.
Notes
This recipe filled three one-cup jam jars, with a bit of extra that went in the fridge. Put the water for the water bath on to boil before you begin cooking the berries; put the jars and lids in boiling water for about ten minutes to sterilize them. Leave them in the water until just before you fill them.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // blackberries, jam

Rhubarb–Strawberry Jam

08.26.2014 by J. Doe // 2 Comments

My garden is, for the most part, not really producing much again this year, even though I’ve conquered the slugs and the aphids and the cabbage worms and the thrips and all their various friends. I think partly the problem is that I put things in a bit too late, or in some cases, a bit too small. Another part of the problem is that I developed some bad habits last year, in my attempt to solve the problems I believed were plaguing my garden when the problem was, in fact, slugs.

For example, I had cut back on the amount of watering I was doing, in the mistaken belief that the mysterious problem in my garden was overwatering. This year, my strawberries started doing really well when I started watering them – sadly, a bit late in the season to get maximum enjoyment from our fresh strawberries. Still, The Child makes regular visits to the backyard and returns with a handful of bright red berries that she swears are the most delicious berries she’s ever eaten.

I’ll have to take her word for it. I’ve never gotten out there fast enough to get one before she does.

I planted the strawberries in their own special area, a spot that is suddenly sunny following the removal of two small trees that previously resided there. The berries are mostly for The Child, whose school nickname is Strawberry Girl. Alongside them, I planted rhubarb, mostly for me. I don’t have a rhubarb-related nickname, but I do love the stuff, and have fond memories of my grandma’s rhubarb plants and, mostly, her rhubarb pies.

The rhubarb grew like crazy: huge green stalks emerged only a month after I put the plant in, and though all the advice I found on the internet said not to pick rhubarb the first year you put the plant in, I realized that this was the same internet that told me I was overwatering when, in fact, I had slugs.

So, I researched a little harder, and asked different questions, and finally came to the conclusion that when a rhubarb plant is producing this much, it’s quite alright to pick some. So I waited for the rhubarb to turn its familiar red hue.

The rhubarb continued to grow – vast, leafy, green stalks. Stalks that never turned red.

I finally caught a glimpse of a bit of pink at the base of one stalk, and got all excited, and … nothing happened.

I googled some more and learned a fun fact: Not all rhubarb is red.

Green rhubarb, which is apparently what I planted – I should really stop reading the internet and start reading labels – isn’t very pretty, but it is crazy delicious, and I decided to resolve the prettiness issue by simply marrying rhubarb with its traditional partner, strawberries. Since all our strawberries are consumed as soon as they ripen, I bought a bag of frozen strawberries from Trader Joe’s, found a recipe for jam, and then broke open my three-year-old, never-used, Learn To Can At Home kit.

The jam recipe I chose was from Saveur magazine, and very easy to make and follow. I appreciate that I didn’t have to add any pectin, and the fruit cooked down and jelled just fine. The hardest part was not eating it all right out of the pot, because it’s so delicious that it’s hard to restrain yourself. It is all perfectly tart from the rhubarb, and perfectly sweet from the strawberries and sugar. The Child pronounced it fantastic.

As satisfying as the jam is – even using frozen strawberries! – there was an even more satisfying moment in making it. I took the jars out of the water bath and set them on a towel to cool as instructed, and moments later, heard the snap of a jar sealing itself, and then another, and then another. I made jam for the first time, I canned something for the first time, and I did it all correctly because it worked. Even with green rhubarb and freezer-case strawberries.

Rhubarb–Strawberry Jam

 

Rhubarb–Strawberry Jam
 
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Author: Sasha Chapman, Saveur Magazine
Ingredients
  • 5 cups rhubarb (about 1 1⁄4 lbs.), cut into 3⁄4" x 1⁄2" cubes
  • 2 cups hulled and quartered strawberries (about 1⁄2 lb.)
  • 2¼ cups sugar
  • 1 tbsp fresh lemon juice
Instructions
  1. Combine the ingredients in a 4-qt. saucepan over medium heat. Bring to a boil and reduce heat to medium-low; cook, stirring occasionally, until the rhubarb breaks down and the jam has thickened, about 1 hour. To determine whether jam has set, place a small spoonful on a chilled plate; if the dollop of jam holds firm and doesn't get runny around the edges, it is ready for canning. If it runs, continue to cook for another 10 minutes.
  2. Meanwhile, submerge three 1-cup canning jars, along with their lids and ring bands, in a large pot of boiling water and sterilize over high heat for 10 minutes. Transfer sterilized jars, lids, and bands to a clean dish towel. Fill each jar with hot jam, leaving at least 1⁄4" of space at the top. Wipe jar rims with a clean dish towel, place lids on jars, and secure ring bands.
  3. Transfer filled jars to a canning rack; place rack in a pot of gently boiling water so that jars are submerged by at least 1"; let boil for 10 minutes. Transfer jars, set at least 1" apart, to a dish towel and let cool, undisturbed, for 24 hours. To test that jars have properly sealed, unscrew bands and lift each jar by the edge of the lid; if the lid holds, the jar is sealed. If it loosens, jar is not fully sealed, and jam should be refrigerated and used within 2 weeks. Sealed jars will keep, in a cool, dark place, for up to a year.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // jam, rhubarb, strawberries

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