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Marmalade

Webpages concerning "Marmalade"

Recipe for grapefruit marmalade which makes 4 half pints.
http://southernfood.about.com/od/jamsjellies/r/bln361.htm
Keywords:
recipes, marmalade, grapefruit, sugar, lemon, fruit, chop, canning, jars, water, bath

http://southernfood.about.com/od/jamsjellies/r/bln361.htm

Restaurants, Restaurant review, Dining Guides, Menus, Glossaries, pricing, maps, and recipes.
http://www.hungrymonster.com/recipe/recipe-search.cfm?Course_vch=Jelly&ttl=1&Recipe_id_int=5372
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Jelly recipes

http://www.hungrymonster.com/recipe/recipe-search.cfm?Course_vch=Jelly&ttl=1&Recipe_id_int=5372

YumYum.Com is the recipe website for everyday cooks, featuring 20,000 free recipes, free recipe software and more!.
http://search.yumyum.com/recipe.htm?ID=16084
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http://search.yumyum.com/recipe.htm?ID=16084

Peach marmalade recipe with orange and lemon, along with pectin and sugar. A peach marmalade recipe.
http://southernfood.about.com/library/rec98/bl80711e.htm
Keywords:
peach, marmalade, recipe, orange, lemon

http://southernfood.about.com/library/rec98/bl80711e.htm

Our Best Recipes - Share your finest recipe!
http://www.ourbestrecipes.com/REC1065149073.html
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http://www.ourbestrecipes.com/REC1065149073.html

Sunbeam Products, Inc.
http://www.sunbeam.com/recipedetail.aspx?RId=145

http://www.sunbeam.com/recipedetail.aspx?RId=145

Cranberry-Orange Marmalade Recipe. Grand Marnier and brandy mix with cranberries and oranges in this marmalade perfect for gift-giving.
http://homecooking.about.com/library/archive/bljelly29.htm
Keywords:
cranberry, orange, marmalade, recipe, fruit, jelly, jam, preserves, conserve, spread, homemade, home, cooking, cook, food, menu, recipe, resipe, receipt, reciept, recipie, resipie, resipe, resepe, recepe, resipy, recipy, recetas, recetta, oppscrifter, history, nutritional, information

http://homecooking.about.com/library/archive/bljelly29.htm

USA Pears - USA Pears from Oregon and Washington are the sweet and juicy varieties that grow best in the Pacific Northwest. Of over 3,000 known pear varieties in the world, only a few are grown for commercial production, and those varieties differ throughout the world.
http://www.usapears.com/delicious/recipeCard.asp?recID=30&catID=11&chapter=Miscellaneous
Keywords:
pears, USA Pears, Northwest pears, pear recipes, poached pears, pear varieties, bartlett, red barletts, winter pears, anjou, red anjou, bosc, comice, seckel, forelle, produce displays, pear variety, fruit recipe, pear recipe, recipes for pears, ripening pears, northwest pear growers, pear tree, fruit orchardist, fruit tree, Oregon, Washington, cream cheese, cottage cheese, salad, wine, brie, ...

http://www.usapears.com/delicious/recipeCard.asp?recID=30&catID=11&chapter=Miscellaneous

http://ppewww.ph.gla.ac.uk/~flavell/marmalade.html

http://ppewww.ph.gla.ac.uk/~flavell/marmalade.html

http://www.cyber-kitchen.com/rfcj/SPICESandCONDIMENTS/Lemon-Ginger_CitronEstrogEsrog_Marmalade_-_pareve.html

http://www.cyber-kitchen.com/rfcj/SPICESandCONDIMENTS/Lemon-Ginger_CitronEstrogEsrog_Marmalade_-_pareve.html

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Wikipedia-Article "Marmalade"

For other uses, see Marmalade (disambiguation).

Marmalade (Media:marmalade.ogg) is a sweet conserve made from fruit, sugar, and (usually) a gelling agent. In Anglo-American usage the term almost invariably refers to a conserve derived from oranges or from some other citrus fruit. Typically the recipe will include sliced fruit peel and will prescribe a long cooking time in order to soften the peel; indeed marmalade is sometimes described as jam with fruit peel. Such marmalade is most often consumed on toasted bread as part of a full English breakfast. The favoured orange variety for marmalade production is a large, sour, late ripening variety originally from Seville in Spain.

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, "marmalade" appeared in English in 1480, borrowed from French marmelade which, in turn, came from the Portuguese marmelada. Originally, according to the root of the word, which is marmelo or quince, a preserve made from quinces was intended. There is no truth whatsoever to the common belief that the word derives from "Marie malade", referring to Mary, Queen of Scots, because she used it as a medicine for upset stomach.

The Romans learned from the Greeks that quinces slowly cooked with honey would "set" when cool (though they did not know about fruit pectin). Greek melimelon or "honey fruit"—for most quinces are too astringent to be used without honey, and in Greek "melos" or "apple" stands for all globular fruits—was transformed into "marmelo." The Roman cookbook attributed to Apicius gives a recipe for preserving whole quinces with their stems and leaves attached in a bath of honey diluted with defrutum: Roman marmalade.

The extension of "marmalade" in the English language to refer to citrus fruits was made in the 17th century, when citrus first began to be plentiful enough in England for the usage to become common. In some languages of continental Europe a word sharing a root with "marmalade" refers to all gelled fruit conserves, and those derived from citrus fruits merit no special word of their own. This linguistic difference has occasionally been claimed as emblematic of the irreconcibility of anglophone and continental world views.

The Scottish city of Dundee has a long association with marmalade. The oft-related story of how this came about begins sometime in the 1700s when a Spanish ship with a cargo of Seville oranges docked in Dundee harbour to shelter from storms. A grocer by the name of James Keiller bought a vast amount of the cargo at a knockdown price, but found it impossible to sell the bitter oranges to his customers. He passed the oranges on to his wife Janet who used them instead of the normal quinces to make a fruit preserve. The marmalade proved extremely popular and the Keiller family went in to business producing marmalade. However this is almost complete fiction. The truth is that in 1797, James Keiller, who was unmarried at the time, and his mother Janet opened a factory to produce "Dundee Marmalade", that is marmalade containing thick chunks of orange rind, this recipe (probably invented by his mother) being a new twist on the already well-known fruit preserve of orange marmalade.

Paddington Bear's favourite food was the marmalade sandwich.

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