Marmalade
For years figures have shown marmalade sales continually dropping, but Tim Hayward visits the quirky marmalade awards in Cumbria to see who is championing it and making the best.
Each January, with the arrival of the seville oranges, hundreds of people across the UK ritually boil and jar batches of marmalade, following family recipes and leaving their kitchens sticky and fragrant with citrus. But who's eating it? For years sales figures have been in decline and the under 25s say it's 'boring'.
So Tim Hayward heads out to a little corner of Cumbria to the Dalemain estate where the amber preserve is celebrated at the Marmalade Championships. From 'dark and chunky' to 'any citrus' hundreds of home-made and artisan examples have been entered for judging while enthusiasts dressed in orange accessories browse the presentations.
He asks whether marmalade, once commonplace on British breakfast tables, is dying a slow death or becoming the preserve of the wealthy or an enthusiastic elite. He also learns a worrying truth - could foreign marmalade makers now be beating us at making the best?
Produced in Bristol by Anne-Marie Bullock.
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Blanka Milfaitov谩's recipe for her award-winning lemon marmalade
To start, put聽one kilogram of聽lemons聽into聽a pan and boil them for聽around 2 hours, or until the peel聽has softened. You will then need to remove the pips. Cut all the fruits together with pulp to聽very thin slices. Then add聽one kilogram聽of sugar mixed with pure citrus pectin,聽and stir until all the sugar is dissolved. Boil rapidly for 20 minutes until marmalade sets when tested. Finally put the marmalade into the jars, and to each jar add聽a little bit of enthusiasm and passion!
Broadcasts
- Sun 24 Mar 2013 12:32大象传媒 Radio 4
- Mon 25 Mar 2013 15:30大象传媒 Radio 4
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