Juices and Products
Oranges are widely grown in warm climates worldwide, and the flavours of oranges vary from sweet to sour.
The fruit is commonly peeled and eaten fresh, or squeezed for its juice.
It has a thick bitter rind that is usually discarded, but can be processed into animal feed by removing water, using pressure and heat.
It is also used in certain recipes as flavouring or a garnish. The outer-most layer of the rind can be grated or thinly veneered with a tool called a zester, to produce orange zest.
Zest is popular in cooking because it contains the oil glands and has a strong flavour similar to the fleshy inner part of the orange.
The white part of the rind, called the pericarp or albedo and including the pith, is a source of pectin and has nearly the same amount of vitamin C as the flesh.
Products made from oranges
Orange juice is one of the commodities traded on the New York Board of Trade.
Brazil is the largest producer of orange juice in the world, followed by the USA.
It is made by squeezing the fruit on a special instrument called a "juicer" or a "squeezer."
The juice is collected in a small tray underneath.
This is mainly done in the home, and in industry is done on a much larger scale.
Frozen orange juice concentrate is made from freshly squeezed and filtered orange juice.
The orange blossom, which is the state flower of Florida, is highly fragrant and traditionally associated with good fortune.
It has long been popular in bridal bouquets and head wreaths for weddings.
Sweet orange oil is a by-product of the juice industry produced by pressing the peel.
It is used as a flavouring of food and drink and for its fragrance in perfume and aromatherapy.
Sweet orange oil consists of about 90% d-Limonene, a solvent used in various household chemicals, such as to condition wooden furniture, and along with other citrus oils in grease removal and as a hand-cleansing agent.
It is an efficient cleaning agent which is promoted as being environmentally friendly and preferable to petroleum distillates.
However, d-Limonene is classified from slightly toxic to humans to very toxic to marine life in different countries.
Its smell is considered more pleasant by some than those of other cleaning agents.
Although once thought to cause renal cancer in rats, limonene now is known as a significant chemopreventive agent with potential value as a dietary anti-cancer tool in humans.
There is no evidence for carcinogenicity or genotoxicity in humans.
Marmalade, a conserve usually made with Seville oranges.
All parts of the orange are used to make marmalade: the pith and pips are separated, and typically placed in a muslin bag where they are boiled in the juice (and sliced peel) to extract their pectin, aiding the setting process.