Candied Orange Peel
adapted from Martha Stewart
3 medium navel oranges
3 cups granulated sugar, plus more for rolling
3 cups water
Directions:
Using a paring knife, make six shallow cuts in each orange from top to bottom, cutting through the rind but not into the fruit. Use your fingers to gently loosen the six sections of rind off each orange. Use a longer, sharp knife to carefully slice off any extra white pith. Slice rind sections lengthwise into 1/4-inch to 1/8-inch strips. I got four strips out of each section of peel. Place strips in a pot, cover with cold water, cook on high heat just until the water starts boiling. Drain and repeat (cover with cold water, bring to a boil, drain and set aside).
Combine water and 3 cups sugar in a large, wide-mouth pot, cook over medium-high heat until mixture is boiling and sugar has completely dissolved. Carefully add sliced rinds into pot, turn heat down to medium, leave on a rapid simmer for about an hour, until rinds are translucent. Remove pot from heat, use tongs or a slotted spoon to fish out all the slices from the syrup & arrange in a single layer on a wire rack placed over a baking sheet or old newspaper. Pat a couple of paper towels on top of rinds to lightly blot up any excess syrup but do not dry completely. Dredge slices in extra granulated sugar until well coated, return to wire rack to cool completely. Store in an airtight container at room temperature.
Bring on the limes and grapefruit peel gummies!!
ReplyDeletei've been wanting to make these for ages! now that oranges are everywhere, i'll definitely make some :)
ReplyDeleteI love candied orange peel (all citrus peel actually) and I remember the first time i made it being so surprised by how easy and quick it was to do! Somehow it was one of those things that seemed super special until I actually did it.
ReplyDeleteI would love to put those in a quick bread. I bet they would be delicious! Hmmm, maybe I will :)
ReplyDeleteI feel like if I made a huge batch, I'd probably end up sticking them into all sorts of desserts, dipping them into chocolate and wrapping them up in pretty paper for friends. Great idea!
ReplyDeleteI've made multiple versions of this, and I gotta say, Martha's recipe ALWAYS turns out best. Yours look great.
ReplyDeleteI like the sound of making your own candied orange peel. They look great!
ReplyDeleteHey, I tried making my own candied orange peel a couple weeks ago! It worked pretty well. The recipe I used called for triple-blanching the orange peel, thus avoiding the trimming of the pith. Mine weren't bitter at all.
ReplyDeleteYour recipe looks good. I have done it without removing the white part. When I boiled it once and discarded the water, I lost a lot of flavor. My grandmother made it with grapefruit peels as well as orange, and others, and died them red and green for Christmas.
ReplyDeleteRuss Brown
March 14, 2010
Anyone know how long these will keep? Can I freeze them...? Thanks!
ReplyDelete