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Kumquat jam turns a tart little citrus that most people don’t know what to do with into a bright, full-flavored spread for your morning toast. All that zing mellows into something glorious once it cooks down with a bit of sugar.

Homemade kumquat jam in a jar with fresh kumquats

Kumquats are eaten whole, peel and all, which throws a lot of people the first time. The inside is sharply tart, but the skin is mild and sweet, so together they’re a treat with a bit of zip. Bite into one without the peel, and it’s sour enough to make your eyes water.

That whole-fruit quality raises a fair question: is this a jam or a marmalade?

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Marmalade is usually a citrus spread that includes the peel to add bitter notes that balance the sweetness. But kumquat peel isn’t bitter, and you can’t really eat the fruit without it. I call it kumquat jam. You can call it marmalade if you like. My kids just call it delicious.

This is a small batch jam that sets without any store-bought pectin, using the natural pectin tucked inside the kumquat seeds, the same way my raspberry jam relies on the fruit’s own pectin instead of a box.

If you’re newer to preserves, it helps to read up on how to make jam from scratch before you start.

Bowl of fresh kumquats ready to make jam

Kumquats show up in stores through the winter citrus season, right alongside the other fun ones worth putting up. If you’ve got a citrus haul, this jam is good company for orange jam with warm spices, a batch of canned lemons, or any of the other ways to preserve lemons, or even a bottle of homemade lemon wine, when the boxes show up cheap.

Notes from My Kitchen

The first time I tried a kumquat was right off the tree in California, back in high school. I grew up among the citrus groves and had still never heard of them until one afternoon when my team played on a new field with a giant kumquat tree hanging over the dugout fence. We were all curious, so I plucked one, carefully peeled it, and got the surprise of my life. So incredibly tart. Nobody had told me you’re supposed to eat the whole thing, skin and all.

These days I’m up in Vermont, a long way from any citrus grove, so kumquats are a winter treat I grab when they turn up in the store. A couple of bags becomes a few jars of this jam, and it’s a little bit of that California sunshine on toast in the middle of a gray northern February. I make the sweeter version for my mom, who has a serious sweet tooth, and a tarter low-sugar batch for myself.

Ingredients for Kumquat Jam

This is a short ingredient list, and the kumquats do almost all the work, including the gelling. Here’s what each part does.

  • Kumquats (sliced, seeds reserved): Use them whole, peel and all, since the sweet skin is what balances the tart flesh. Slice them into rounds across the equator and pick out the seeds as you go, but don’t throw the seeds away. They’re your pectin.
  • Water: The kumquats soak in water with the seed packet so the natural pectin can draw out before cooking. The water cooks off as the jam simmers down and thickens.
  • Granulated sugar: Sugar sweetens and helps the jam set and keep. The full amount makes a sweet jam that’s just barely tart. You can cut it in half for a sharper, lower-sugar jam, which is how I usually make it for myself.

The seeds are the secret here. Citrus fruit is naturally high in pectin, and the seeds hold the most concentrated dose of it. Tied up in a bit of cheesecloth, they go into the pot as a thickener and come back out before jarring, so you get a clean, seedless jam that still gels on its own.

It’s the same trick behind natural citrus seed pectin, and it’s why this works without a pectin box. The same idea boosts the set in mango jam, where a little citrus juice helps the set along.

Kumquat seeds wrapped in cheesecloth as a natural pectin source for jam

How to Make Kumquat Jam

There are two stages to this jam: a long soak and first simmer to pull pectin from the fruit and seeds, then a short, hard boil with the sugar to bring it to set. Don’t rush the boil at the end, since that’s where most batches go wrong.

Preparing the Kumquats

Slice the kumquats into thin rounds across their equator. For such a small fruit, they have surprisingly large seeds, and you’ll find a pocket of them toward the center of each slice. Use the tip of your knife to flick the seeds out as you go, and set them aside in a bowl.

Kumquats sliced into thin rounds for jam

The rounds make a striking jam, since there’s no other citrus tiny enough to slice into little wheels. If you’d rather a look closer to traditional marmalade, slice the fruit into thin strips instead, so the peel runs through the jam like confetti.

Either way, gather up all those reserved seeds and tie them into a small square of cheesecloth.

Large kumquat seeds removed from the sliced fruit

Cooking the Jam

Put the sliced kumquats, the cheesecloth seed packet, and the water in your jam pot, and let it all soak for 3 to 4 hours. That rest gives the pectin time to draw out of the fruit and seeds, and it makes a real difference in how well the jam sets. You can skip the soak if you’re pressed, but expect a softer set and a slightly lower yield.

Bring the pot to a simmer with the lid off and cook for 35 to 45 minutes, until the fruit is soft and the mixture has started to thicken. Keep the lid off the whole time, since part of the job here is cooking off that extra water. Now lift out the seed packet, squeezing it against the side of the pot to release the gel it’s holding, and stir in the sugar.

Once the sugar is in, turn the heat up and bring the jam to a full, rolling boil. This is the step that makes or breaks it. A gentle simmer won’t get you there, because you need a hard boil to climb past the boiling point of water up to gel stage at 220 degrees F. Boil hard, stirring often, until it reaches that temperature or passes the frozen plate test, then ladle it into prepared jars.

Kumquat jam boiling and reaching gel stage at 220 degrees

Testing for Gel Stage

Most runny kumquat jam comes down to one thing: it never got hot enough at the end. Here’s how to land the set.

  • Boil hard, don’t simmer: Once the sugar is in, you need a full rolling boil to reach 220 degrees F. A simmer tops out near the boiling point of water and will never gel.
  • Thermometer test: Jam gels at 220 degrees F at sea level. That drops about 1 degree for every 500 feet of elevation, so at 1,000 feet gel stage is 218 degrees F.
  • Frozen plate test: Spoon a little jam onto a plate chilled in the freezer. If it wrinkles when you push it with a finger, it’s ready.
  • It thickens as it cools: The jam will look looser in the pot than it does in the jar. Give it a full 24 hours to finish setting before you decide it didn’t work.

Canning Kumquat Jam

You don’t have to can this jam. Let it cool and keep it in the refrigerator for a few weeks or the freezer for up to 6 months. I like to can it so it’s shelf stable through the year, and kumquats are high-acid citrus, so they’re safe for water bath canning. If you’re new to it, walk through my water bath canning for beginners guide first.

To can it, prepare a water bath canner before you start. Funnel the finished jam into clean jars, leaving 1/4 inch headspace, remove air bubbles, and recheck the headspace.

Cap with two-part lids and process for 10 minutes for half-pints and pints. When the time is up, turn off the heat and let the jars rest in the canner for 5 minutes before lifting them out to cool. Check the seals after 24 hours.

Altitude Adjustments

Adjust your processing time for elevation:

  • 0 to 6,000 feet: 10 minutes
  • Above 6,000 feet: 15 minutes

Yield Notes

This is a small batch, sized to gel reliably from the natural pectin.

  • Fruit: About 2 cups of sliced kumquats, roughly 3/4 pound.
  • Yield: About 2 half-pint (8 oz) jars.
  • Don’t double it: A bigger batch takes much longer to cook down and reach gel stage, and doubled batches are the most common reason this jam stays runny. Make single batches back-to-back instead.
Finished jar of homemade kumquat jam made with natural pectin

Storage Options

However you make it, here’s how long kumquat jam keeps:

  • Refrigerator: 3 to 4 weeks in a covered jar.
  • Freezer: Up to 6 months.
  • Canned: 12 to 18 months at room temperature in a sealed jar. Once opened, refrigerate and use within a few weeks.

Recipe Tips and Variations

  • Honey kumquat jam: You can swap honey for the sugar, but watch it extra careful as honey can scorch as it cooks. I’d suggest substituting just half the sugar for honey for better results than all the sugar.
  • Keep the color bright: Long boils can turn the jam brownish. Use plain white cane sugar rather than raw or evaporated cane juice, since the bit of molasses in those darkens preserves during a long cook.
  • Don’t cover the pot: Cook with the lid off start to finish. A lid traps the water you’re trying to cook away and leaves you with a runny jam.

Ways to Use Kumquat Jam

Kumquat jam is bright and citrusy, so it does more than sit on toast. It’s lovely over a wheel of warm brie, spooned onto yogurt or oatmeal, or stirred into a pan sauce for chicken or duck. The little rounds of peel make it pretty enough to give as a gift, which is exactly what I do with half of every batch.

It also bakes beautifully into thumbprint cookies or a citrus tart, and a spoonful whisked into vinaigrette wakes up a winter salad. For a pile more ideas, I rounded up 100+ ways to use up a jar of jam.

Kumquat Jam FAQs

Is kumquat jam the same as marmalade?

They’re very close. Marmalade is a citrus spread that includes the peel for a touch of bitterness, while jam is usually just fruit and sugar. Kumquat peel is sweet rather than bitter, and you eat the fruit whole, so this sits right between the two. Call it kumquat jam or kumquat marmalade, the recipe is the same.

Do you need pectin to make kumquat jam?

No store-bought pectin needed. Kumquats are citrus, and citrus is naturally high in pectin, with the most concentrated amount in the seeds. Tie the reserved seeds in cheesecloth, cook them in the pot, then remove them before jarring, and the jam gels on its own.

Why didn’t my kumquat jam set?

Almost always because it didn’t get hot enough at the end. Once the sugar is in, you need a full rolling boil to reach gel stage at 220 degrees F, since a simmer never gets there. Cook with the lid off, don’t double the batch, and remember the jam keeps thickening for 24 hours after it’s jarred. If it’s still too thin, pour it back in the pot and boil it harder.

How do you make low sugar kumquat jam?

Use 1/2 cup of sugar instead of the full cup. It makes a tarter jam with a slightly lower yield, and it still gels because the pectin comes from the seeds rather than the sugar. To go with no sugar at all, switch to a low-sugar pectin like Pomona’s.

Do you have to remove the seeds from kumquats?

Yes, take the seeds out of the fruit so they don’t end up in the finished jam, but don’t throw them away. Wrap them in cheesecloth and cook them in the pot as your pectin source, then lift the packet out before you jar the jam.

Ways to Preserve Citrus

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Homemade kumquat jam recipe
4.41 from 127 votes
Servings: 16 servings (2 half pints)

Kumquat Jam

Kumquat jam is a great way to use an otherwise tart fruit. It makes a beautiful presentation and is perfect for your morning toast or an exotic treat.
Prep: 4 hours
Cook: 50 minutes
Canning Time: 10 minutes
Total: 5 hours
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Equipment

Ingredients 

  • 2 cups sliced kumquats
  • 3 cups water
  • 1 cup sugar

Instructions 

  • Slice the kumquats into thin rounds across their equator, picking out the seeds as you go and setting them aside. Don't discard the seeds.
  • Wrap the reserved seeds in a square of cheesecloth, tie it closed, and drop the packet into your jam pot.
  • Add the water and sliced kumquats to the pot with the seed packet.
  • Let the fruit, seeds, and water soak for 3 to 4 hours so the natural pectin can draw out. This step can be skipped in a pinch, but expect a softer set and a slightly lower yield.
  • Bring the pot to a simmer with the lid off and cook for 35 to 45 minutes, until the fruit is soft and the mixture has started to thicken. Keep the lid off so the extra water cooks away.
  • Lift out the seed packet, pressing it against the side of the pot to release the gel, then stir in the sugar.
  • Turn the heat to high and bring the jam to a full rolling boil. Boil hard, stirring often, until it reaches gel stage at 220 degrees F or gels promptly on a plate chilled in the freezer. A gentle simmer will not reach gel stage, which is the most common reason this jam turns out runny.
  • Funnel the finished jam into prepared jars, leaving 1/4 inch headspace. Remove air bubbles, wipe the rims, and apply two-part canning lids.
  • For immediate use, store in the refrigerator. For shelf-stable jars, process in a water bath canner for 10 minutes (10 minutes below 6,000 feet, 15 minutes above). Let the jars rest in the canner 5 minutes, then cool and check the seals after 24 hours.

Notes

Yield: This recipe makes about 2 half-pint jars. The jam thickens as it cools, so it will look looser in the pot than in the finished jar.  Two cups of sliced kumquats is about 3/4 pound by weight.
Reaching Gel Stage: After adding the sugar, bring the jam to a full rolling boil. A gentle simmer tops out near the boiling point of water and will not reach gel stage at 220 degrees F. This is the most common reason kumquat jam turns out runny.
Doubling: Don’t double this recipe. Larger batches take much longer to cook down and often fail to set. Make single batches back to back instead.
Low Sugar Kumquat Jam: Use 1/2 cup of sugar instead of the full cup for a tarter jam. It still gels from the seed pectin, with a slightly lower yield. For no sugar at all, use a low-sugar pectin like Pomona’s.
The Seeds Are the Pectin: Reserve the seeds, tie them in cheesecloth, and cook them in the pot, then remove the packet before jarring. They are the natural pectin source that sets this jam.
Cook Uncovered: Keep the lid off the whole time so the extra water can cook away. A covered pot leaves the jam runny.
Altitude Adjustment: Process for 10 minutes at elevations below 6,000 feet, or 15 minutes above 6,000 feet.

Nutrition

Serving: 1Tbsp, Calories: 58kcal, Carbohydrates: 15g, Protein: 0.3g, Fat: 0.2g, Saturated Fat: 0.01g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.02g, Monounsaturated Fat: 0.02g, Sodium: 4mg, Potassium: 27mg, Fiber: 1g, Sugar: 14g, Vitamin A: 41IU, Vitamin C: 6mg, Calcium: 10mg, Iron: 0.1mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

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How to make kumquat jam with natural pectin

About Ashley Adamant

I'm an off grid homesteader in rural Vermont and the author of Practical Self Reliance, a blog that helps people find practical ways to become more self reliant.

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73 Comments

  1. Brenda says:

    5 stars
    I just made this fun recipe ( Florida)
    It’s good! I used 4 cups Kumquats to 1 cup sugar. I did add some lemon juice from one lemon because I had it. It made 3- 6 ounce jars. Thank you so much!

    1. Ashley Adamant says:

      So glad you enjoyed it!

  2. Maureen Martin says:

    Hi Ashley! Can you please tell me the shelf life after processing and also how long it stays good once opened in the fridge? Thank you in advance!

    1. Ashley Adamant says:

      These maintain quality on the pantry shelf for 12-18 months sealed. In the fridge, they’ll last several weeks once opened.

  3. Chandra lekha Gandhi says:

    5 stars
    I make jam and marmalade without water only boiling it in the sugar. Our cumwuays are very very thin skinned

  4. Elsie Scott says:

    5 stars
    I absolutely love this recipe, seen so many, but definately too much sugar. And the kumquat rings caught my eye. Love, love, love
    Thank you for this recipe!

    Regards
    Elsie Scott from South Africa

    1. Ashley Adamant says:

      So glad you loved it!

  5. Linda says:

    5 stars
    Thanks for sharing this recipe. I’ve made it a few times now. And every time, it’s taken a while to set. And with all that time boiling, the color is more brown than that lovely deep orange. The taste and consistency is on point. But, what can I do differently to get that brighter color?

    1. Ashley Adamant says:

      Hmmm, that is a good question. Two things you can try.

      First, use white cane sugar (instead of organic or evaporated cane juice). There’s a bit of molasses in the nice stuff, and it can turn preserves brown in long cooks. If you are using white sugar, then I’d guess the kumquats you’re using are a bit lower in pectin than mine. It can help to use a marmalade technique instead.

      Try my recipe for kumquat marmalade, which uses a bit of orange peel in there to help it set: https://creativecanning.com/kumquat-marmalade/

  6. Pablo says:

    Do you think you could use honey in place of sugar? I have TONS of both.

    1. Moderator says:

      You could definitely use honey but you would probably want to use a low sugar pectin.

  7. Liz says:

    I made this recipe and like many of you my jam didn’t set. I was simmering it after adding the sugar and it didn’t get hot enough. You have to bring it to a rolling boil at the highest setting on your stove to reach 220F. I did this in the end and my jam set, but was somewhat overcooked. It’s tasty and a lovely color. I would suggest changing the word simmer to rolling boil after adding the sugar to help clarify the recipe.

  8. Kim Toth says:

    Are you supposed to simmer with or without the lid on? That detail may be why people are getting different results. Unfortunately, I put the lid on and it is very watery currently at the second simmer stage.

    1. Administrator says:

      The lid should be off. When you’re simmering jam, part of the process is meant to cook off the excess liquid. I would say that in general if a recipe doesn’t specifically tell you to cover the pot that you should keep the lid off.

  9. Lorraine says:

    4 stars
    I had a 9 lb yield of kumquats from our tree. So first I made 1x the recipe, then 2x, then 3x and tomorrow I will finish them up with 4x the recipe. The jam is delicious. However, I had to cook it a long time to reach 220 degrees, even with 1x the recipe. At 3x, after the initial 45 minute cook (I actually did 50), I added the sugar and cooked it for an additional hour to get it to reach 220 degrees. I got five 1/2 pint jars of jam. For 1x the recipe I used 3/4 cup sugar, used 1-1/2 c for 2x, and 2-1/4 c for 3x., I added a cinnamon stick during the soaking and first stage of cooking which added quite a nice taste. This is a great recipe, just be aware that cooking times may vary.

  10. Karen says:

    Can I ask why the sugar is only added after the boiling tine? I’ve always added the sugar from the beginning of the cooking process for jams.

    1. Administrator says:

      It depends on the type of fruit that you are using. Tough skinned fruits are often simmered before adding the sugar to soften the skins.

  11. James Reitano says:

    We just tried this recipe ( my son got a bag of kumquats ) and we’re almost done simmering. I am noticing the mixture seems watery and hoping this congeals a bit when it cools.

    1. Administrator says:

      Yes, the mixture should thicken as it cools.

  12. Bessie Solins says:

    Can I freeze this jam? I usually make freezer jam which you don’t have to cook.
    But will it freeze well?

    1. Administrator says:

      I haven’t personally tried it but I don’t see why it wouldn’t work.

  13. Cindy says:

    I doubled the recipe, using 2 lbs of kumquats and 6 cups of water. I also soaked the seeds and fruit for almost 5 hours before cooking as directed and put the jam in a 10 min water bath for 10 mins. That was last night. This morning, the jam is still very watery.
    Should I reprocess to cook off some of the water?
    Maybe turn up the flame from a simmer to a light boil?
    If you suggest adding pectin, how much?

    1. Administrator says:

      Doubling the recipe most likely affected the gel in the jam. It’s often better to do individual batches rather than a double batch in order to ensure that it cooks down properly. I wouldn’t recommend turning the heat up. You will most likely end up burning the jam instead. You can definitely reprocess the jam. Always wait 24-48 hours before doing so though because sometimes the extra time will allow it to set. You don’t want to recook more than 8 cups at one time. For every 4 cups of jam, you can mix together 1/4 cup of sugar and 1 Tablespoon of powdered pectin if you choose to use it. Add this mixture to your jam when you cook it.

  14. Gayle says:

    3 stars
    The info on other recipes is very helpful. How to cut the kumquats was a great tip. However, please half the amount of water as it is way too much and dilutes the flavor.

  15. Kat says:

    5 stars
    Thank you for this wonderful recipe! My jam has a beautiful consistency and flavour! Not too stiff, not too runny, but just right! I could spoon it in like pudding. Addictive. I let my fruit sit in water with the pip-bag for 4 hours and added the full amount of sugar as per recipe, but had to boil my jam for about half an hour until it gelled on the plate. I think various factors influence the gelling stage, so taste your jam if you add less sugar at first and do the plate test. If it’s not sweet enough, add a little more sugar. If it’s not gelling, let it cook some more. Patience is key! 🙂

  16. Dr. Jonathan says:

    I used Meiwa kumquats from my tree. I too thought the 3 cups of water was too much initially but it did thicken and the
    jam was better than any I’ve had. Use the seed pouch in the first boil and just simmer “forever” in the second boil for heaven on toast. Thanks fopr this.

    1. Administrator says:

      You’re very welcome. So glad you enjoyed it.

  17. Docgoose says:

    What if instead of water i add brandy. And then instead of cooking it i just blend it. I feel like that would turn down the color intensity but the flavor would be even more fantastic.

    1. Administrator says:

      You could certainly try it. It wouldn’t really be jam then. Let us know if you decide to give it a try.

  18. Nicole says:

    I made this last year and it came out wonderful. I even doubled the recipe. I have a new batch of kumquats ready to go!
    This is the best. Thanks so much for the wonderful recipe.

    1. Administrator says:

      You’re so welcome. We’re glad you enjoyed the recipe.

  19. Karen says:

    I’ve made this several times and it’s great! Today I made it and my jam never did set up. It’s yummy, but very runny. I used the same amounts of ingredients. Wonder why?

    1. Administrator says:

      Maybe you just needed to cook it longer.

  20. Pinks says:

    4 stars
    Delicious! Like others commented, mine was too runny even after significant additional time of boiling. Next year, I will try making this with 2 cups of water. which seems to be a compromise from the 3 cups in this recipe and 1 cup I’m seeing in others. Also, as much as I love the visual of the kumquat rings, I also found them a little fragile so may consider cutting the kumquats into 8ths around the circumference.

    For funsies (definitely not necessary but had these items lying around), I added a little grated ginger (1/2 in) and also steeped 1 star anise after adding the sugar.