Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (2024)

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This simmering Christmas potpourri recipe makes a yummy and cheerful smelling potpourri that’s sure to get you in the mood for the holidays!

Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (2)

Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe

This is a great recipe to have simmering any time during the holidays.

1 lemon
1 orange
3 three inch cinnamon sticks
6 bay leaves
1/2 cup whole cloves
2 quarts water

Combine all ingredients except water in a clear bag or jar.

If giving as a gift, attach the following instructions to the jar:

Cut lemon and orange into slices or quarters. Combine fruit, spices, and 2 quarts of water in a large saucepan. Bring to a boil and simmer. Add more water as needed. Cover any left over mixture, refrigerate and reuse. Makes 8 cups.

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (7)Bea

    I love citrusy and cinnamony scents, so I will try this.

    Reply

  2. Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (8)Mari

    I’m just making this right now – I can’t wait till Christmas! My house smells lovely……. :)

    Reply

  3. Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (9)Mari

    OK – I’ve made it, and the smell is divine…..I might be a bit thick here, but how do I use it??!!!! I’ve got the juice reduced so it’s like a thickish syrup and of course all the fruit and cinnamon sticks and cloves etc – should I put it in a jar and mix some dried pine cones in it or something? :)

    Reply

    • Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (10)Jill

      So sorry Mari. I’m not sure if I am understanding you right or if the recipe was confusing. What you do is when you are giving it as a gift or saving it for later for yourself put the whole orange, lemon and the spices in a jar or container. Then when you are ready to use it you slice or quarter the fruits and add it all to the water to just slightly simmer all day. If it starts to get thick you can just add more water to it and keep simmering it for several days. You can also pour it in a jar and store in the fridge for awhile, pull it out add more water and simmer some more.

      All is not lost though if you have a bunch made up and in the water. You can just put it in the fridge and store it like I said. Let me know if this makes sense and is clear or if you have other questions.

      Also it wasn’t in the recipe but you can use dried orange and lemon peels if you want. You don’t need a dehydrator for this either. I just take and when I peel my orange I lay the peels on a plate or the counter and let them sit until they become dry and hard.

      Reply

  4. Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (11)Mari

    Hi Jill

    It’s probably me being a bit thick!! I thought I’d make some so I could use it now, to make my house smell nice. I’m just not sure how I should use it, once I’d simmered the fruit in the liquid, or how it should end up looking. Do I have to simmer till all the liquid is gone, and I end up with just the quarters of orange and lemon, or do I use the liquid in some way afterwards? If I put it in a bowl so that the fragrance spreads round the room, wouldn’t insects and flies be attracted to it?!!! (You’re probably laughing your socks off here LOL!!)

    Reply

  5. Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (12)Mari

    Just read your recipe again, and the very first line – is the idea to have it simmering on your stove, so that the scent wafts round your house?!!

    Reply

    • Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (13)Jill

      You got it. Just let it simmer slowly in a pan and add more water as it boils down and it will last for a long time. If you aren’t going to use it for a day or 2 just put it in the fridge in a container and then pull it out and pour it in a pan and simmer again. We have little mini like crock pots which we can simmer ours in too. I don’t think the flies will bother especially this time of year and in the summer I think the spices might help keep them away.

      Reply

  6. Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (14)Mari

    Thanks Jill!

    I was just a bit confused – I didn’t know if I simmered it and then put it in a bowl, but then of course it’s the simmering that brings out the aroma…it’s almost made me feel like getting my Christmas tree out!

    I set it simmering again earlier when I was cooking the evening meal, and the smell was amazing….and so much cheaper than store-bought home scents, especially at his time of year when all the prices seem to go up!!!

    Mari x

    • Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (15)Jill

      Don’t feel bad Mari. The first time Tawra showed me it I wasn’t sure either what to do with it because it was different from the usual dry you just set out.

      Reply

  7. Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (16)Mari

    Well the wonderful smell makes it all worthwhile! I’ve now got it in a jar in the fridge, ready for next time I want to make my house smell like a home :) Love all the tips on here – loads of great ideas and even more in your book! xx

    Reply

  8. Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (17)Danni

    I miss all the air fresheners I used to be able to afford..so I put all the ingredients together from this recipe my sister gave me in about three minutes and chose to slice the fruit. As I started to simmer it, within five minutes, the whole house was immediately filled with the most warm inviting scents of the holiday season…I didn’t have to wait an hour or so for the smell to arrive like the chemical simmer liquids available in stores. I opened my front windows and I can see people sniff the air as they walk by!!! thank you so much from a single mom of three on a very low budget.

    Reply

  9. Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (18)Nicole

    I used the dried orange peel in mine when I make this. Also, I found a potpourri pot that you put the ingredients (obviously a smaller amount) and water in the top and put a tea lite in the bottom. I’ve left it in the pot for several weeks, just adding more water to it. The fragrance gets better each time you use it. (Don’t leave it in the pot without adding more water to it or without burning the tea lite for a while as it will get moldy –opps;)

    Reply

  10. Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (19)Char

    This is WONDERFUL! Thank you so much for sharing the recipe. Next year I will be giving this as gifts instead of candles. It’s sooooo much better!
    Thank you again :)

    Reply

  11. Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (20)Barbara

    Just a bit of a side note…..using tangerine peel smells exactly like a Balsam Fir Christmas tree….add that and it only enhances that wonderful aroma….thanks, Jill, for the recipe….almost gave away my little potpourri pot until I saw this wonderful recipe….Merry Christmas from Upstate South Carolina near the Blue Ridge and Smokey Mountains!

    Reply

  12. Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (21)Lauren

    I’m not overly impressed with this potpourri…guess I was looking for something a little more “woodsy” smelling. I did add an extra cup of whole cloves and even a few tsp. of cinnammon as well as the cinnammon sticks but the smell was just too “citrusy.” Not a smell I associate with Christmas. However, I will keep searching. Thank you.

    Reply

    • Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (22)Tawra

      All you have to do is add some pine needlees to it and take out some of the citrus if you want it more “woodsy” smelling. Also if you added the extra spices it would not be woodsy but more spicy.

      Reply

    • Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (23)Jill

      This recipe is our citrus recipe. So that is why it has the citrus smell kind of like the oranges with cloves in it that many people make at Christmas. We have other recipes with a more woodsy scent in Dining on a Dime because some like citrus others woodsy, some spicy and still others peppermint.

      Reply

  13. Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (24)Bea

    I made this last week and loved it. It was on a Sunday and the house smelled so good. I do like Citrus Scents though and cinnamon and spice. It’s like something baking in the oven and so homey.

    Reply

  14. Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (25)Bea

    I was thinking about citrus and Christmas and the reason citrus can remind someone of Christmas is because in the “olden days” oranges were a Christmas gift. I remember reading a Laura Ingalls book and how the children were so happy to get an orange at Christmas. We don’t know how good we have it these days. An orange for Christmas wouldn’t impress a lot of people these days.

    Reply

    • Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (26)Jill

      I know citrus use to be a real treat and the kids would get an orange, peppermint stick (or small bag of candy)and maybe a little toy. They usually only got 1 present and often it was a practical one. You are so right we have no idea how lucky we are.

      Reply

      • Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (27)Irene

        I am 70 years old now and remember what we got in our Christmas stockings when growing up. We kids each got one orange, one grapefruit, a handful of nuts and all together we got one huge pepperment stick that was so very wonderful. And at the program at church on Christmas Eve we each got a small bag of the old timey hard candy. We were poor farmers but then so was every family we knew. We got a nickel soda maybe twice in the summer, usually split two to a bottle. My most memorable gift was a bride doll and I so wanted a toy pistol like my older brother got. I was such a tomboy and my mother tried so hard to make me a little lady. The year round fruits and veggies nowadays was unheard of back then. And sometimes we had to give up our grapefruit to my father to brew up some concoction for our colds that included grapefruit and lemons and who knows what else that he boiled for awhile and then had us drink hot. We didn’t often have colds so guess his doctoring worked. Or maybe it was the THREAT of his doctoring that kept us well. Like mother and her constant threat of castor oil.

        Reply

  15. Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (28)Michele

    This smells wonderful. I’ve done for about 3 years now.

    Reply

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Simmering Christmas Potpourri Recipe - Another Homemade Gift (2024)

FAQs

How to make Christmas potpourri in a jar? ›

How to make holiday stove top potpourri. Begin first by washing and drying your Ball jars and lids. To fill an 8 ounce jar you will need about 3 orange slices, 3 sprigs of fresh or dried rosemary, 6 star anise, 3 cinnamon sticks, 14 cup cranberries, and a tablespoon or so of cloves.

How long does simmering potpourri last? ›

You can simmer the potpourri for as long as desired! If you feel that the scent is becoming too strong, simply turn off the stove and cover the pot. How long does stovetop potpourri last? I find that I can use the same batch of stovetop potpourri for 3-4 days.

What spices make your house smell like Christmas? ›

The must-haves in my opinion are cinnamon, citrus, ginger and vanilla. Nothing makes it feel more like the holidays than those smells. So good.

Can you give potpourri as a gift? ›

It's much stronger than a candle! This stovetop potpourri also makes a nice inexpensive gift to give out to friends and family. All you have to do is package it up nicely in a glass jar, add some ribbon, and wrap it up!

How do you make potpourri fragrance? ›

How do you make rose petal potpourri? In a bowl, combine 1 cup of dried rose petals with 1/4 cup of dried rosemary and 1/2 cup of dried lavender. Toss in 1/8 teaspoon of ground cloves, cinnamon, dried rosebuds, and orange peels. Add a few drops of rose or lavender oil.

How do I make my house smell like potpourri? ›

Try cinnamon sticks, whole cloves, bay leaves or even whole peppercorns. Star anise are a beautiful, fun addition with their star shaped pods. I've also been known to toss in a chunk of ginger root. (You can substitute ground spices – they'll still work but your simmer pot won't be as pretty.)

How to use simmering potpourri? ›

Here's how it's done:

Bring to a boil. Reduce heat to a simmer, give everything a quick stir, and let the potpourri do it's thing! Once the water starts cooking off, just add more and repeat the process. Leave simmering until your house smells so good it makes the neighbors jealous.

How do you make potpourri stronger? ›

How do you make potpourri smell stronger? If you want to make your potpourri smell longer, you can simply give it an occasional stir or shake to release more scent. Alternatively, if your potpourri contains essential oils, just add a few more drops even now and then.

When should you throw out potpourri? ›

Well-made potpourri can last anywhere from a few months to a few years, although this can differ depending on the types of flowers and other ingredients used.

How do you activate potpourri? ›

Use a pot or crockware that you will not want to cook food in. Add 3 tablespoons of any of our potpourris to 1 cup of boiling water. Simmer on the stove or in a simmering pot. The scent will last for hours.

What can I cook on the stove to make my house smell good? ›

Turn on the heat and fill your pot with ingredients like cinnamon sticks, apple peels, orange rinds, cloves, apple juice, vanilla, anise, and nutmeg, and in no time at all this stovetop potpourri will have your home smelling like you've been baking all day.

What essential oils make it smell like Christmas? ›

Cinnamon bark, fir, orange, and clove essential oils can turn your space into a festive haven, recreating the magic of those special holiday moments.

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