this post was submitted on 02 Jun 2024
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Generic orange juice is a commodified product (ie, you can order a standard 1 tonne of frozen orange juice whenever).
The freezing process destroys a lot of the flavour, so some rind extract is included to bulk up the taste.
Freshly squeezed still has the original flavour, and not the added rind flavour.
(I didn't look this up, mind, it's possibly I've just repeated an old wives tale!)
can I just use the zester to get some of the acidic bite back into a fresh sqeeuzed thing?
The zest of an orange isn't particularly acidic. A bit of lime juice or straight citric acid would do it, or use a different variety or less-ripe orange.
The zest has a very concentrated flavor, but not really any acidity.
However, ook into "super juice" it had a moment in fancy cocktail circles somewhat recently as a way to get more citrus juice from less fruit and also a product that will last longer in the fridge without the taste degrading.
Basically you peel your citrus, mix the peels with some powdered citric and malic acid (the ratio of acids depends on which citrus, I think lemon juice gets straight citric, lime and orange get a mix) and let them sit for a while, the acid pulls some of the oils and such out of the peels making "oleo citrate", then you blend the oleo citrate and peels with water and strain out the solids and you're left with something that is nearly identical to actual juice (and you could, of course, mix in the actual juice from the fruits as well)
I feel like there is probably something there you could work with to punch up your juice a bit. Maybe if you're able to separate out the oleo citrate you could use that as sort of a citrus extract. Or if you just want more acidity and don't need the flavor enhanced you could just add a bit of acid to the juice.