Photograph: Dan Matthews/The Guardian
Can I join the search to find the oldest marmalade-making Guardian readers (Letters , 31 January)? At 92 and a half, I have just made enough marmalade to last a year with help in lifting a heavy jam pan! I use a family recipe older than me, originating in 1926 with a master baker in Cinderford.Elizabeth Green Brockenhurst, Hampshire
Forget printing articles about wellness. It seems that marmalade holds the key to a long, healthy life.Pat Wakeling Nottingham
4 February Its about 45 years ago since the Guardian last ran a lengthy correspondence on growing loofahs (Letters , 1 February). We tried to grow them at the time on our bathroom windowsill but only produced fruit the size of small gherkins a horticultural triumph but useless for washing purposes. I wonder if global warming would make it worth our while to repeat the experiment? And might loofahs perhaps replace marmalade as your next topic thread?Jane McAdoo London
5 February I had a serious head injury a year ago and was told that, among other things, it might have an effect on my taste buds. It has where marmalade is concerned (Letters , 1 February). I used to love it the chunkier and more bitter the better. Now I hate it. What on earth can I put on my toast? / What I loved I now hate the most. / January wont be the same. / When the pan doesnt boil oer the flame. Elizabeth Earl Winsham, Somerset
6 February May I, a 95-year-old, second-generation Guardian reader, join the marmalade marathon (Letters , 5 February). This year I have made 6lb of grapefruit marmalade and 20lb of Seville orange. I hope to live to enjoy it all!Joy Nalpanis Reading, Berkshire
I have never made marmalade. But I still do create jams/chutneys for my friends. To keep them on their toes, I also write the labels. Rosepetal and Earwig was a favourite!Yvonne Malik Wray, Lancashire
7 February Im very glad that Jane McAdoo remembers the Great Guardian Diary Loofahs from all those years ago (Letters , 4 February). I still have them: one skinned, one unskinned. They dont get a lot of use now but are often admired. Until the seeds finally worked their way out, the unskinned one was also a handy rattle/baby distracter. My wife and I have interrupted our marmalade-making to send this.Martin Wainwright (Guardian Diary editor in the good old loofah days) Thrupp, Oxfordshire
Atrophied (Wordwheel, G2, 4 February)? This 88-year-old made Aphrodite (and marmalade).Judith Bennett Sturminster Newton, Dorset
8 February My dear husband, who at 80-plus makes delicious marmalade (Letters , 7 February), has just labelled this years batch The Last Hurrah. Oh dear.Hazel Harrison Norwich
Join the discussion send your letters about marmalade (or any other subject) to guardian.letters@theguardian.com
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