QUINCE MARMALADE

The Book of Household Management · Beeton, Mrs. (Isabella Mary) · 1861
Source
The Book of Household Management
Time
Cook: 225 min Total: 225 min
Yield
1.0 lb pot
Status
success · extracted 14 days ago
Not a recipe
No
Ingredients (2)
Instructions (9)
Mode
  1. Slice the quinces into a preserving-pan, adding sufficient water for them to float.
  2. Place them on the fire to stew, until reduced to a pulp, keeping them stirred occasionally from the bottom, to prevent their burning.
  3. Pass the pulp through a hair sieve, to keep back the skin and seeds.
  4. Weigh the pulp, and to each lb. add lump sugar in the above proportion, broken very small.
  5. Place the whole on the fire, and keep it well stirred from the bottom of the pan with a wooden spoon, until reduced to a marmalade.
  6. The marmalade is done when dropping a little on a cold plate causes it to jelly.
  7. Put it into jars whilst hot.
  8. Let it cool, and cover with pieces of oiled paper cut to the size of the mouths of the jars.
  9. The tops of them may be afterwards covered with pieces of bladder, or tissue-paper brushed over on both sides with the white of an egg.
Original Text
QUINCE MARMALADE. 1586. INGREDIENTS.—To every lb. of quince pulp allow 3/4 lb. of loaf sugar. Mode.—Slice the quinces into a preserving-pan, adding sufficient water for them to float; place them on the fire to stew, until reduced to a pulp, keeping them stirred occasionally from the bottom, to prevent their burning; then pass the pulp through a hair sieve, to keep back the skin and seeds. Weigh the pulp, and to each lb. add lump sugar in the above proportion, broken very small. Place the whole on the fire, and keep it well stirred from the bottom of the pan with a wooden spoon, until reduced to a marmalade, which may be known by dropping a little on a cold plate, when, if it jellies, it is done. Put it into jars whilst hot; let it cool, and cover with pieces of oiled paper cut to the size of the mouths of the jars. The tops of them may be afterwards covered with pieces of bladder, or tissue-paper brushed over on both sides with the white of an egg. Time.—3 hours to boil the quinces without the sugar; 3/4 hour to boil the pulp with the sugar. Average cost, from 8d. to 9d. per lb. pot. Sufficient.—Allow 1 pint of sliced quinces for a lb. pot. Seasonable in August, September, and October.
Notes