The best cookbook recipe:
Use kirby cucumbers
Thoroughly drain the vegetables discarding liquid and add to a large pot or kettle:
Put pot over medium heat and stir until sugar is dissolved. Increase heat to boiling, add chopped vegetables and cucumbers and simmer for 5 min. Immediately pack pickles into drained jars and seal tightly. Water bath for 10 minutes.
About: “A good friend gave me this recipe many years ago after I munched down nearly a quart while visiting! I threw out ALL my other dill pickle recipes because THIS ONE is the best. Several years ago, it occurred to me to enter my pickles in the County Fair. So I did. Since I'm superintendent over in the Junior Foods & Nutrition Department, I don't get to watch the Open Class judging. So later in the day (after judging in both classes was over), I went to see how my pickles (and other canned goods) fared [pun intended!]. I couldn't find my jar of pickles. They weren't on any of the shelves, neither were they in with the “disqualified” items. Hmmm. Then I spied them! Not only did they have a big blue ribbon on them, but they also received Best of Show AND the canning award! What a thrill!!! There's nothing like winning at the fair–amongst all those good cooks–to feel validated as a successful home-canner. NOTE: I did NOT list an amount for the cucumbers since I've never measured how many pounds I use–sorry! SERVING SIZE is the number of ounces in a quart jar–to facilitate nutritional information.”
http://www.food.com/recipe/blue-ribbon-dill-pickles-241139?scaleto=4&mode=null&st=true There's an ingredient calculator at the website. I made the amounts for '4 quarts' and got 5 pints outta it. That was about 2.5 lbs of cukes. Ingredients
Brine
Directions
Then TIGHTLY load the cukes into the jar to the NECK of the jar (depending on size you may get two nice layers with a few small cukes in the top–). Squeeze cukes into the jar tightly–uniform size helps; add a few TINY spriglets of dill at the top, too, and another garlic clove if desired.
This really helps make your jars look nicer, if you have uniform sizes (and this impresses the judges too!). And makes for easier packing, too.
From Mark Bittman, New York Times
1. In a large bowl, combine the salt and boiling water; stir to dissolve the salt. Add a handful of ice cubes to cool down the mixture, then add all remaining ingredients.
2. Add cold water to cover. Use a plate slightly smaller than the diameter of the bowl and a small weight to hold the cucumbers under the water. Keep at room temperature.
3. Begin sampling the cucumbers after 2 hours if they are quartered, 4 hours if they are halved. In either case, it will probably take from 12 to 24 hours, or even 48 hours, for them to taste “pickly” enough to suit your taste. When they are, refrigerate them, still in the brine. The pickles will continue to ferment as they sit, more quickly at room temperature, more slowly in the refrigerator.
Yield: About 30 pickle quarters.
3 c vinegar - preferably wine, cider or champagne vinegar 2.5 c brown sugar
1 tblsp ea. celery seed mustard seed dry mustard cloves peppercorns
some onions, half a lemon. sliced
cook all tog and then add if desired,
green tomatoes (about 7.5 lbs) 6 good sized onions, sliced thin half lemon, sliced thin 2 sweet red peppers
32 parts vinegar ( e.g 2 quarts ) 1/2 part brown sugar (1/4 c ) 1 part each whole mustard seed ( e.g. 1/2 cup ) & pickling salt 2 fresh dill heads or other herb
Ingredients
Directions
Ingredients
Directions
(from Flavors of India by Madhur Jaffrey)
Here's a pickle that is addictive to eat as it is easy to make. This carrot, radish and cauliflower pickle is tangy sweet with a mild bite of mustard from the mustard oil and brown mustard seeds in the brine. Similar to a chow-chow or mustard piccallili, or even an Italian giardinera, this flavorful veggie combo can serve as a side dish accent to a main meal or as a condiment or ingredient in other dishes. We crave it with almost every Indian meal, but also serve with grilled or roasted meats, and chop it up and stir into tuna, pasta and grain salads. For pasta, rice or grain salads, I've also used the unctuous spicy brine as a shortcut to making a dressing for the salad. In the photo below, chopped vegetable pickles and the brine were added to sweet potatoes, peas, pineapple and couscous to make a filling for stuffed artichokes. This is a pantry staple for us now, too — it's versatility seems to know no bounds!
1 cup (240ml) mustard oil 1 small onion, finely diced 1 small coin of ginger, peeled and julienned 3-4 cloves of garlic, minced 1/2 medium cauliflower, washed and divided into florets 1 small daikon (1 lb/450g), peeled and cut into 1-in/2.5cm cubes 2 medium carrots, peeled and cut into 1-in/2.5cm cubes 2 tsp. garam masala 1-2 TBL cayenne pepper powder 4 tsp. ground cumin 2 TBL. brown mustard seeds, gently crushed 1 TBL. kosher or sea salt 2/3 cup (130g) raw sugar 1/2 cup (120ml) white vinegar
Heat mustard oil in wok or dutch oven over medium-high heat. Add onions, reduce heat to medium and cook until onions lightly brown. Add ginger and garlic, and stir fry 1 minute. Add cauliflower, daikon and carrots and fry together 1 minute. Add garam masala, pepper, cumin, mustard seeds and salt, and stir through. Mix sugar into vinegar, then add to pan. Stir through and cook for 30 seconds. Remove from heat, and allow to cool.
Sterilize a large quart jar, and transfer pickle to jar. Cover with cheesecloth or paper towel secured with a rubber band to allow excess moisture to evaporate.. Keep jar in a dry, sunny spot for 2 days. Occasionally shake the jars to distribute spices. On the third day, remove the cheesecloth and seal with a tight-fitting lid. Leave on countertop in a warm, sunny spot for another 4-7 days. Once pickle has soured a little, it is ready and can be kept in the refrigerator after use.
Serve as part of an Indian meal, or with roasted or grilled chicken. Add to couscous, rice or other grains, along with vegetables of your choice to make a quick salad or stuffing for cooked and de-choked artichokes.
Thursday, May 03, 2007
Even though we know–intellectually–that for centuries people have preserved food via lacto-fermentation, again, as with cultured milk, it is a head trip for grocery store kids like us to soak some veggies in brine for a few weeks, open them up and chow down.
Lacto-Fermentation is a process in which naturally occurring lactic acid producing bacteria are allowed to multiply. The lactic acid that they produce prevents the growth of the kinds of bacteria that cause spoilage. Thus lacto-fermentation is a method of preserving foods as well as a way of creating a distinct flavor. Lacto-fermented foods include sauerkraut, kimchi, Swiss cheese, and sourdough bread among many others.
Lactic acid producing bacterias, and there are many different varieties, tend to have a high tolerance for salt unlike their unwanted bacterial cousins. The process of lacto-fermentation begins with creating a brine, which is the is the way pickles used to be made–most store bought pickles are now made with vinegar due to unwarranted safety concerns over lacto-fermentation.
Today, sauerkraut is the best known lacto-fermented food. Dill pickles are traditionally made this way too. In an old country store pickle barrel, lacto fermented pickles would sit out all winter long. All they'd do is make sure the brine always covered the pickles. They'd get stronger flavored, and softer textured as the year went on, but they lasted.
We look forward to trying this with cucumbers, but for this first experiment we used a big, pretty daikon from the farmers market. The entire process is amazingly simple:
Stir up a brine solution of 2 Tablespoons sea salt (un-iodized salt) to 1 quart water. Note that you must use salt that has no additives-check the ingredients of your salt to make sure that it contains nothing but salt. Additives in salt can prevent the lacto-fermentation process from occurring. Bottled water is best, but we used LA tap with no ill effects. The worry is that the chlorine in tap water will also interfere with the culture.
Peel and slice the daikon, and pack it into a very clean quart sized mason jar. Add a peeled garlic clove if you want. Pour the brine over the slices until the jar is nearly full. Leave just a little room at the top for gas expansion. Put the lid on, and place it your cupboard for as long as you can wait. A week, two weeks, a month–the flavor changes over time. We waited 2 weeks.
When we opened the jar it hissed and fizzed, and let off the powerful aroma of sauerkraut. We fished out the first slice, sniffed it and eyeballed it like curious but frightened monkeys. An uninformed and vague discussion of botulism followed. Finally the gauntlet was thrown down, and the challenge could not be ignored: are we wimps or are we homesteaders? So we ate of the fruit. Or one of us did. The other stood by ready to dial 911.
Yum! Our pickled daikons are salty and garlic-y and firm, and taste a lot like a good garlic dill, only with a different texture. Now that the jar is open, we're keeping it in the fridge.
“I wrote this recipe for one quart canning jar at a time although it can be doubled easily; each quart seems to hold approximately 1lb of cukes. I've also recently been doing this with spears but soaking for two days - so good! Enjoy :)”
Add all of the seeds, herbs, garlic, and peppers into the bottom of a cleaned quart canning jar. Add the cukes and onions the best you can to get them all in there. Combine the sugar, salt, vinegar, and water in a pot and heat until the salt and sugar are dissolved. If you aren't canning these, then there is no real temperature requirement. Pour into jar, close lid, and give it a good shake; let rest in the refrigerator over night or for several hours.�