Taiwanese jam and preserve maker Ke Ya (柯亞) lauded the importance of using local ingredients in cuisine, after winning top prizes in a prestigious marmalade competition in the UK on Friday last week.
Since 2005, the World’s Original Marmalade Awards have celebrated the citrus fruit preserve as a quintessentially British part of breakfast.
Ke, the founder of Keya Jams, said that she was as surprised as anyone to be going home from the competition in Penrith, England, with two gold, two silver and two bronze awards — an unprecedented honor for a Taiwanese participant.
Photo: CNA
“It is like if Taiwan held a braised pork on rice competition and some foreigner took the top prize,” she said, adding that the event this year involved close to 3,500 marmalade samples from 40 nations.
One marmalade, which uses kumquats from Yilan County as its base, with a splash of bitter orange and yellow lemon, won gold for having interesting ingredients and another because it pairs well with fish dishes, Ke said.
The company’s signature marmalade, a mandarin orange and Kavalan whiskey mix, won silver in the interesting ingredients category and another for pairing well with meat dishes, as well as bronze in the alcoholic marmalades category, she said.
The last entry, another kumquat-based recipe flavored with Earl Gray tea and white wine, won bronze for pairing well with fish dishes, Ke said.
Two other preserve makers, one based in the Netherlands and another in Syria, also went home with two gold medals, although Keya Jam’s kumquat, bitter orange and yellow lemon was the only marmalade to receive a perfect score of 20, she said.
Making jams and preserves is a passion she accidentally discovered a decade ago while recuperating from an illness at her family home in Changhua County, Ke said.
Her interest in jams and preserves was piqued when her foray into making strawberry jam from a spur-of-the-moment purchase at the local traditional market went badly, she said, adding that she had rarely cooked prior to that.
She researched seasonal fruits, experimented with tea and wine pairings and collected sugars from around the world for jam making, which turned into a career, Ke said.
Taiwanese agriculture is highly developed and the nation possess the rare ability to cultivate temperate and tropical fruits in the same soil, she said, adding that she is proud her marmalades could raise the profile of the nation’s fruits on the international stage.
Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairman Eric Chu (朱立倫), spokeswoman Yang Chih-yu (楊智伃) and Legislator Hsieh Lung-chieh (謝龍介) would be summoned by police for questioning for leading an illegal assembly on Thursday evening last week, Minister of the Interior Liu Shyh-fang (劉世芳) said today. The three KMT officials led an assembly outside the Taipei City Prosecutors’ Office, a restricted area where public assembly is not allowed, protesting the questioning of several KMT staff and searches of KMT headquarters and offices in a recall petition forgery case. Chu, Yang and Hsieh are all suspected of contravening the Assembly and Parade Act (集會遊行法) by holding
PRAISE: Japanese visitor Takashi Kubota said the Taiwanese temple architecture images showcased in the AI Art Gallery were the most impressive displays he saw Taiwan does not have an official pavilion at the World Expo in Osaka, Japan, because of its diplomatic predicament, but the government-backed Tech World pavilion is drawing interest with its unique recreations of works by Taiwanese artists. The pavilion features an artificial intelligence (AI)-based art gallery showcasing works of famous Taiwanese artists from the Japanese colonial period using innovative technologies. Among its main simulated displays are Eastern gouache paintings by Chen Chin (陳進), Lin Yu-shan (林玉山) and Kuo Hsueh-hu (郭雪湖), who were the three young Taiwanese painters selected for the East Asian Painting exhibition in 1927. Gouache is a water-based
Taiwan would welcome the return of Honduras as a diplomatic ally if its next president decides to make such a move, Minister of Foreign Affairs Lin Chia-lung (林佳龍) said yesterday. “Of course, we would welcome Honduras if they want to restore diplomatic ties with Taiwan after their elections,” Lin said at a meeting of the legislature’s Foreign Affairs and National Defense Committee, when asked to comment on statements made by two of the three Honduran presidential candidates during the presidential campaign in the Central American country. Taiwan is paying close attention to the region as a whole in the wake of a
OFF-TARGET: More than 30,000 participants were expected to take part in the Games next month, but only 6,550 foreign and 19,400 Taiwanese athletes have registered Taipei city councilors yesterday blasted the organizers of next month’s World Masters Games over sudden timetable and venue changes, which they said have caused thousands of participants to back out of the international sporting event, among other organizational issues. They also cited visa delays and political interference by China as reasons many foreign athletes are requesting refunds for the event, to be held from May 17 to 30. Jointly organized by the Taipei and New Taipei City governments, the games have been rocked by numerous controversies since preparations began in 2020. Taipei City Councilor Lin Yen-feng (林延鳳) said yesterday that new measures by