Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Clementine Vanilla Marmalade

Yield: 2 cups
Ingredients

10 small clementines (you may substitute an equivalent weight of any other citrus fruit)
Granulated sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla bean paste or scrapings from 1 vanilla pod
Instructions

Place a small plate in the freezer to test your marmalade for doneness later.
Juice enough clementines to yield 1/2 cup of fresh juice (about 3 clementines). Set the juiced fruit aside.
Slice the remaining 7 whole, unpeeled clementines in very thin pieces. Set the clementine pieces in a saucepan and pour enough cold water into the pan to cover the fruit.
Bring the fruit and water to a boil. Turn down the heat and continue simmering the mixture for about 10 minutes.
Drain the water from the fruit and repeat the process, covering the fruit again with cold water, boiling the mixture, and then simmering it for 10 minutes before draining.
Let the slices cool. Remove them from the pan and dice them into small pieces or pulse them in a food processor until they reach your desired consistency.
Weigh the sliced fruit and measure an equivalent weight of sugar. Place both the sugar and fruit in a heavy-bottomed pot. Add the fresh-squeezed fruit juice to the pot.
Bring the mixture to a boil, stirring occasionally, until the marmalade measures 220 degrees Fahrenheit on a candy thermometer, about 10 to 15 minutes.
If you don't have a thermometer, test the marmalade with the plate you stuck in the freezer. To do it, remove the plate from the freezer and put a small spoonful of marmalade on it. Press a trail through the marmalade with your finger. If it wrinkles up and leaves a clear path, it's finished cooking. If the marmalade runs back together in the path, it's not done yet. Continue cooking and test again several minutes later.
When the marmalade is done, take it off the heat and skim off any excess foam. Stir in the vanilla paste or vanilla scrapings. Pour the marmalade into clean jars, and let the marmalade cool for several minutes before capping the jars.

Refrigerate the marmalade for short-term use (within a week) or can the marmalade with a hot water bath for long-term use and storage.

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