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Bitter orange marmalade: A sweet taste of nostalgia

Marmalade is more than a breakfast spread for your toast. The history of this jam stretches back over ancient trade routes and involves shipwrecks, controversy and sweet bears from Peru.

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Bitter orange marmalade: A sweet taste of nostalgia

Despite protests and complaints from the 1970s on, it wasn't until the 2000s that customers finally convinced Robinson's to lose the golliwog as their mascot. Today, the golliwog character has become - thankfully - a thing of the past.

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Bitter orange marmalade: A sweet taste of nostalgia

Marmalade is a part of British life. And it reflects British life, with its controversies over racism and nationalism, with its close identification to a beloved literary bear, and to the fact that at the end of the day, there is nothing really British about it. It is made from a fruit that comes from foreign lands. But there is no denying that a breakfast where marmalade is available is a much more pleasant affair. Maybe it is due to the chemicals inherent in bitter orange that affect the brain, causing our hearts to beat faster.

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Bitter orange marmalade: A sweet taste of nostalgia

With fewer young people enjoying marmalade today, perhaps for many eating their morning marmalade is just a taste of childhood, a nostalgic twinge of the past. But whatever the reason, be it nostalgia or increased heart rate, marmalade will remain a favorite and staple part of the British breakfast.

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Bitter orange marmalade: A sweet taste of nostalgia

And now that we are aware that the Seville bitter orange grows in abundance in Antalya, marmalade production will probably increase in our family. The process of slicing, juicing, cutting and cooking is one that brings the family together, and the resulting sticky, bittersweet spread is one that we will continue to enjoy.