My husband has a love of marmalade, sweet and bitter and bright. I never really cared for it until I met him, and then I came to appreciate its floral bitter notes, vibrant acidity and the candied texture of its orange rind.
We visited Ireland a few years ago researching recipes, some of which you'll see in my new cookbook Broth and Stock out this May and available for preorder now. It was autumn, just as the leaves turned from emerald green to a rusty golden orange and the air took a decided chill, and we had just come from visiting the organic dairy farms at Kingdom Cheese.
Finding Inspiration in Irish Cooking
It rained most days, and we spent our time huddled next to the fire in our cottage, or chatting over mugs of strong, dark tea with our hosts at a gorgeous Irish farm stay. On a particularly grey and wet day, we bundled up and ventured into Limerick to visit the historic Milk Market, which has been in operation since the 1850s and features some of the best local, artisan foods in the region. There we plucked up some items for a picnic we'd take later that week: whole-grain sourdough breads, artisan cheese, and jams and jellies.
Among the few items we picked up was a lovely Whiskey Marmalade - the brightness of bitter Seville oranges tempered by the well-rounded, smooth intensity of Irish whiskey. For us, learning to make Whiskey and Honey Marmalade brings us back to Ireland, to the wet days, to the inky mugs of tea, to the low-hanging clouds and wildly variable landscape that rolls with green hills before dropping suddenly in craggy limestone cliffs into the Atlantic ocean. Food is memory.
Whiskey and Honey Marmalade
Good marmalade depends on fragrant and perfumed bitter Seville oranges. Their season is fleeting, and the window for making marmalade is brief. Seedy and knobby things, Seville oranges aren't for eating out of hand. They're too bitter, and too tart for that, but they are perfect for marmalade. This year, we ordered a bushel of them straight from the growers Local Harvest, just for making Whiskey and Honey Marmalade. And if you live in citrus-growing regions, you might find them at farmers markets.
You can make marmalade from sweet oranges too, but it lacks the complex character and perfume of Seville Orange marmalade. Check out this recipe for Honey-Sweetened Orange Marmalade using sweet oranges.
Both honey and whiskey add character to the marmalade. Honey adds its own notes of wildflowers or clover or orchard blossoms to the marmalade, while whiskey provides a deep, intense smoothness that's rich and complex, but not alcoholic.
Softening the Oranges with a Pressure Cooker
Marmalade makes use of the whole orange save the seeds. You'll use the peel, pith and flesh. That tough rind needs softening first before you can make the marmalade. You can boil the oranges for a few hours, nudging and rotating them to ensure even cooking, or use an electric pressure cooker (This is the model I use.) which softens the rinds in a fraction of the time, giving greater efficiency and much less monitoring.
Allison says
This marmalade is my favorite!!! So good and so easy to make.
Polly says
Hi Jenny
I am curious if you changed this recipe since your original posting. I printed it previously, but misplaced it, so looked it up again — wasn't sure it was the same, but it was similar enough to what I could remember, and I couldn't find another that was honey whiskey, so...
I don't remember as much time on the stove, and I remembered shorter cooking time in the instant pot. Anyhow, I certainly am not known for either my exact cooking or my precise recollections, but this is bugging me! I thought I had previously pressure cooked the oranges for 7 or 8 minutes, so sure that I only cooked these for 10, and I would have preferred them cooked a bit less.
But it will be good, either way. I always hated marmalade as a kid, but since I had my first taste of homemade marmalade I have been hooked. And as I can't have many kinds of sweeteners, I really appreciated finding this recipe.
Amanda says
How many jars does this recipe fill?
Jenny says
The recipe makes 8 cups. The number of jars it fills depends on the size of your jars.
Calah says
How do you do the second part in the pressure cooker?
Theodora Holt says
When do you add the whisky?
Jenny says
After cooling for 5 minutes (See paragraph 4 in the instructions).
Maria-Elena says
How about Mandarins? (I happen to have a bunch of those around right now.) What would you say the weight of the fruit should be?
Raegan Ouzts says
Could you also do this with apples?
Jenny says
You could try and let us know how it goes.