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Seville Orange Marmalade

This time of year brings Seville oranges to the markets in Paris. For the past few years, I kept wondering why they were so hard to find since itโ€™s perhaps my favorite of all jams and jellies to make, and eat. But lately, theyโ€™ve been everywhere. ย And I found myself busy making a lot of marmalade, which was easier since I came up with aโ€ฆ

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Apple Jelly

I was recently reunited with something I miss very much โ€“ a loaded apple tree! Friends of mine who had a house in the French countryside had a tree that, come fall, had so many apples, the limbs threatened to break off. Not wanting to be an accomplice in apple-cide, I decided to do my part to save the tree, and the apples, and makeโ€ฆ

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Kumquat Marmalade

Iโ€™ve been on a marmalade bender lately. Well, itโ€™s actually been for the last few weeks. Winter, of course, is marmalade season and the markets in Paris are heaped with citrus: Corsican clementines, pretty yellow bergamots, hefty pink grapefruits from Florida (although some infer appellations from elsewhere โ€“ namely, the Louvre), leafy lemons from Nice, and lots and lots of oranges. The stands are soโ€ฆ

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Sweet Lemon (bergamot or Meyer lemon) Marmalade

Bergamots arenโ€™t something one runs across every day in the supermarket, or even at greengrocers. But mid-winter, depending on where you live, you just might get lucky and happen across some, as I recently did in Paris. But no matter, this recipe can be made with otherย kinds of lemon, especially โ€œsweetโ€ lemons, such as Meyer lemons. Thereโ€™s conflicting information on what a bergamot actually is,โ€ฆ

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Strawberry Jam

I was recently gifted an overload of strawberries: I bought four baskets from a vendor at the market, whose booth I shop at often, and he threw in two extra baskets for free, the equivalent of a carte de fidelitรฉ (loyalty card) in Paris. So Iโ€™ve spent the past few days washing, hulling, cutting and cooking my unexpected bounty. Iโ€™ve been making a number ofโ€ฆ

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Cherry Jam

One of the first โ€œrecipesโ€ on this blog was No-Recipe Cherry Jam, posted in 2005. Why some hyperventilated about making something without an exact recipe, a lot of people successfully used those guidelines to make cherry jam over the last fifteen years. The basis for it was how Iโ€™ve been making jam forever; use 3 parts sugar to 4 parts fruit puree. The standard ratioโ€ฆ

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Pink Grapefruit Marmalade

Iโ€™ve been making my own jams and marmalades for many years, so with apologies to those whoโ€™ve asked me which French jam to buy when they come to Paris, theyโ€™re often disappointed when I canโ€™t guide them in the right direction. (Unless they want me to guide them to my jam-crowded kitchen cupboard.) Unless someone has given me a jar of theirs, I have soโ€ฆ

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Salzburger Nockerl

When I saw the cover of Alpine Cooking, before it came out, it quickly rose to the top of the list of books I needed to get my hands on. I was fortunate to get a preview when I was asked to write a quote for the book jacket, and was thrilled to find the inside of the book was even more compelling than theโ€ฆ

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