276°
Posted 20 hours ago

Mackays The Dundee Marmalade, Orange, 340g

£9.9£99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

An example of marmeladi candies in Finland is Vihreät kuulat ( Finnish for "green balls"), a brand of pear-flavored gummy candies created by Finnish confectioner Karl Fazer from a recipe from St. Alton’s Allen Gallery is an intimate setting for one of the nation’s most outstanding collections of ceramics.

To enable personalised advertising (like interest-based ads), we may share your data with our marketing and advertising partners using cookies and other technologies. Paddington Bear is known for his liking of marmalade, particularly in sandwiches, and kept it in his briefcase wherever he went. If pectin is added, the marmalade must contain at least 27% of peel, pulp, or juice of citrus fruit. I know that many people do like this type of marmalade, with a lot of jelly and just a few shreds, but I prefer a less jellied set with more shred content. However, this legend was "decisively disproved by food historians", according to a New York Times report.

Matthew, The Keiller Dynasty 1800–1879 narrates the history of Keillers; BBC News "Legacies: Keiller's: Sticky Success": offers an abbreviated version. A traditional method used by artisanal jam makers and our grandmothers: the width of the pan spreads the heat so the fruit cooks evenly without overcooking. In Jane Austen's 1811 novel Sense and Sensibility an over-indulgent mother feeds apricot marmalade to her fussy three-year-old child who has been slightly scratched by a pin in the mother's hair. The name "marmalade" originates from the Portuguese word "marmelo" or quince, the fruit which made up the preserve with thin bits of peel.

The Keiller contribution was to add the bits of the peel to the marmalade which are the signature of Seville orange marmalades to this day. Medieval quince preserves, which went by the French name cotignac, produced in a clear version and a fruit pulp version, began to lose their medieval seasoning of spices in the 16th century. In 1876, when the British Trademark Registry Act came into force, Keiller's Dundee Orange Marmalade was one of the first brands to be formally registered. According to the story, they first produced marmalade in 1797, when the mother of James Keiller, Janet’s husband, bought a “distressed” cargo of Seville oranges. You can change your choices at any time by visiting Cookie preferences, as described in the Cookie notice.

The shipload was probably no more than some boxes, particularly of Seville oranges, which were used medicinally and in a few recipes but not really a fruit consumed fresh. They were awarded the “Only Prize for Marmalade, London 1862” at the International Exhibition of 1862, at which 28,000 exhibitors from 36 countries descended on South Kensington. Marmalade existed in Spain and Portugal since at least the 15th century and a Scottish recipe for orange marmalade appears in "Mrs McLintoch's Receipts (sic)" of 1736. Our signature product is made with the original Marmalade recipe by Mackays, still made traditionally in copper pans!

The legend tells of a ship carrying a cargo of oranges that broke down in the port, resulting in some ingenious locals making marmalade out of the cargo. The 103 third parties who use cookies on this service do so for their purposes of displaying and measuring personalized ads, generating audience insights, and developing and improving products. Sugar, Seville oranges, concentrated orange juice, concentrated lemon juice, gelling agent: fruit pectin, acidity regulator: citric acid, orange essential oil. The translated versions of this document keep the English definition of "marmalade" as referring to citrus fruits, even if the other languages use the corresponding word normally in the broader sense of a "jam".In Finnish, Russian and former Soviet cuisine, marmalade (Finnish: marmeladi and Russian: мармелад, marmelad) refers to a sugar-coated gummy candy made from agar and adapted from a French confectionery in the late 18th century. There is an apocryphal story that Mary, Queen of Scots consumed marmalade as a treatment for seasickness, [14] and that the name is derived from her maids' whisper of Marie est malade ('Mary is ill').

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment