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Food

The perennial appeal of oranges

The citrus fruit has made a fascinating contribution to the culinary history of Europe and Israel

March 8, 2013 11:00
Home-made Jaffa cakes — just one way to enjoy the flavour of this most versatile of citrus fruits (Photo: Ryan Bartley)
2 min read

If the orange is the king of the citrus family, then the exotic Seville and the ravishing, marbled blood orange, all but disappeared from the shelves after their too-short season, are the golden girls, their innate attractions enhanced by the part they play in the history of this most fascinating of fruits.

Oranges may not be the only fruit, but the world would be drabber without them. The classic fruit of the winter months, the joyful orbs shine brightly through the murk and gloom; one can appreciate the lure of 1950s advertisements for juicy Jaffa oranges on London Routemasters trundling through the grey city streets.

In Israel, Jew and Arab once worked alongside each other to grow, pick and pack this fruit with ancient origins in the region. By the early 20th century, around 20,000 wooden crates of Jaffa oranges were shipped each year to Britain where they gave their name to the little cakes first commercially introduced in 1927 by McVitie and Price.

The shamouti, Palestine Jaffa or Cyprus oval had originated around 1844 near Jaffa, then part of the Ottoman Empire. It was a mutation of the local beledi strain and produced a fruit with outstanding flavour.