Showing posts with label pickling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pickling. Show all posts

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Pickled Cherries = Manhattan Time

Though the lack of space in our fridge might tell a different story (it's hard to find what you're looking for sometimes amid all those jars), quick pickles or refrigerator pickles are just so easy! And there's no reason to stick to veggies. Lots of fruits make excellent pickles, and their true sweet-and-sour flavor profile is just the thing for cocktails. If you love a Manhattan like I do, try this version out immediately. It is a long weekend after all...










Pickled Cherries
This recipe allows for extra pickling brine to use in cocktails and still ensure proper coverage for the remaining cherries, so you could easily increase the amount of cherries to 1½-2 pounds if you're planning to have a party or just want more on hand.

1 pound ripe but firm Bing cherries
1½ cups red wine vinegar
½ cup water
 cups sugar
2 tablespoons kosher salt
2 large strips of orange peel, removed with a vegetable peeler
1 tablespoon whole black peppercorns
2 cinnamon sticks
1 tablespoon coriander seeds
1 bay leaf

After washing your cherries, prick each one a few times with a fork and place in a large bowl.

Mix the rest of the ingredients in a large non-reactive pot and bring to a boil over medium heat. Reduce to a simmer and cook for 10 minutes.

Remove from heat and let cool for 10 minutes.

Place cherries in a quart-sized jar, spoon in the orange peel, cinnamon sticks and spices, and then cover completely with the pickling liquid.

Store in the fridge for 1 month, but wait at least 24 hours before eating so there's time for the flavors to infuse.





Sweet & Sour Manhattans
This cocktail is best made one at a time.

2 ounces good quality bourbon
½ ounce sweet vermouth
2 dashes of Angostura bitters
½ ounce of pickled cherry brine
1 pickled cherry

Pour the liquid ingredients into a cocktail shaker filled with ice. Shake well and strain into a chilled cocktail glass. Garnish with a pickled cherry. Lean back and enjoy.

These cocktail cherries also make an excellent cocktail garnish.

Pickled Cherries and Sweet & Sour Manhattans on Punk Domestics

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Small Batch Preserving: Szechuan Pickled Green Beans

As I've undoubtedly mentioned before, I am a big public library fan, and am particularly in favor of checking out cookbooks. It's a great way to explore a lot of cooking styles without shelling a lot of cash, and it also ensures that I don't add to my already overflowing cookbook collection which I can never seem to pare down. And c'mon, let's face it  how many cookbooks do you really end up loving so much you want to own them? (Answering this question is optional.)

Anyhow, I've really loved reading Put 'Em Up by Sherri Brooks Vinton, and my 3x renewal rate is a testament to the fact I want to make a lot of these recipes. Maybe I will invest in it down the road, but for now here is the first of a few small batch preserving recipes adapted from it.

The modifications I made are ultimately based on the fact I wanted the beans to have some good spiciness to them, and that I didn't quite have all the exact ingredients on hand. The book calls for using whole peppercorns, preferably Szechuan, but as those are absent from my current spice arsenal, I used black peppercorns and added some red pepper flakes for additional flavor. The original recipe also calls for dark sesame oil. I only had regular sesame oil, but then recalled my nearly finished jar of Spicy Sichuan Oil by Sue May from the October food swap. I was thrilled to have such a perfect use for it, so essentially split the oil needed between the two types I had in the pantry.







So far I can attest that these are perfect for an antipasti-like sandwich (think salami, sweet peppers and spicy beans) and as a topping for leftover rice cooked with egg, peppers, salt + pepper and hot sauce. I am sure they will end up garnishing a cocktail or two before they are gone too.




Szechuan Pickled Green Beans
Adapted from Put 'Em Up by Sherri Brooks Vinton

1 pound green beans, washed and tailed
1 cup cider vinegar
1/2 cup water
1/4 cup soy sauce
1/4 cup sugar
3 tablespoons sesame oil
1.5 tablespoons sichuan oil
1 tablespoon whole black peppercorns
1 (1-inch) piece of ginger, peeled and sliced into coins
1 large (or 2 small) garlic cloves, sliced
1/8 teaspoon red pepper flakes

Wash and tail green beans. I left the tops on because I like the way it looks, but remove according to preference or to enable fitting well in the jar.

Prepare an ice water bath in a large bowl while bringing a large pot of water to boil. Drop the beans into the boiling water (if multiplying the batch, do no more than 1 pound at a time) and return to a boil. Blanch for 1 minute and then drain into a colander. Place immediately into the ice water bath until completely cool, approximately 3-5 minutes. Once cool, pour into a colander again to drain.

Turn a quart jar on its side to make stacking the beans neatly inside easier.

Combine the vinegar, water, soy sauce, sugar, oils, peppercorns, ginger, garlic and pepper flakes in a nonreactive saucepan. Bring to a boil and let simmer for 1 minute. Pour the hot brine over the beans. Push them down as needed to ensure they are completely covered by the liquid. If not, heat a small amount of cider vinegar, water and sugar to top up jar.

Once cool, store in fridge for up to 1 month.




Szechuan Pickled Green Beans on Punk Domestics

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Backyard Harvest: Pickling Nasturtium Capers


Our lush backyard nasturtium carpet has gone from its spring green finery to a more scraggly patch this year, punctuated with starlike splashes of orange and yellow. I've always wanted to harvest the "capers" to pickle them, so today was the day.





After a mere 10 minutes or so of picking the seedpods, I had my 1 cup's worth.



I decided to go for this recipe  or at least some version of it, so after boiling 1 cup of water with 2 tablespoons of salt, I poured the brine over the washed and separated pods.






They'll sit at room temperature for the next 3 days, at which point I will drain them and make the pickling brine. After another 3 days soaking in the vinegar mixture, they will be ready. This was an instantly satisfying preserving project, even if it means I won't actually taste these for a week or so.

I will of course report back once I've savored the fruits of my modest Sunday harvest.

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Jalapeño-a-go-go

I admit I may have overdone it a bit on the jalapeño front during a recent u-pick adventure with my friend Jennifer. Partly it was because we made our trip out to Brentwood a little late in the season, and in general there wasn't that much on offer that we could pick ourselves. After checking out a bunch of different farms, we scored and landed at Smith Family Farm. First off they have a fantastic farmstand if you're not up for hitting the fields. Great variety, top quality and very reasonable prices. They did have nectarines, peaches, chard, herbs and LOTS of peppers available for picking - and everything is $1 a pound! This is always the price for u-pick, and they stay open to December, with a rotation of seasonal crops available at different times. I'm thinking pomegranate season might just bring me out there again...

Anyhow, we walked the rows of peach and nectarine trees for awhile, mostly just enjoying the inland heat and chatting. Occasionally we added a couple of fruits to our buckets, but really they were still virtually empty by the time we hit the rows of lush peppers.

A fraction of my u-pick pepper haul
The first four rows of peppers (jalapeños, anchos, Anaheim and poblanos) we were warned were all hot. Even with the typically milder varietals mixed in, they said we were not to be fooled. They also had bell peppers and another sweet variety I can't recall. They were all beautiful though and with a few pickling recipes in mind, I just couldn't seem to hold back. I picked a peck of peppers just like you-know-who.

After getting some chard and fresh sage, we paid up. Mine was $10, which for the amount of produce I had was ridiculously awesome, but also meant I had at least a good 8 lbs of peppers!

We picked up some gorgeous heirloom tomatoes, garlic and pickling cucumbers from the stand and then drove off for a cold beer to compensate for all our "hard work".

Sweet Garlic Dills, Pepper Jelly & Pickled Jalapeños
Using a recipe from Ellie Topp's excellent book The Complete Book of Small-Batch Preserving which I had just gotten from the library, I turned my cucumbers into my first ever batch of Sweet Garlic Dills. Then I made a half batch of the Pepper Jelly I had gotten inspired by the Shibaguyz doing a live demo of during the Canning Across America Canvolution. Finally I turned a couple pounds of the abundant jalapeños into pretty looking pickled rounds.

That was Day 1 of jalapeños.

Day 2 had me set on making some Jalapeño Bread & Butter Pickles which I think the fabulous Well Preserved folks had recommended. After selecting more peppers from my stash, I washed them and then donned protective latex gloves. Never underestimate the potential pain of working with hot peppers! You may think they're not that hot or that it won't bother you, but slicing and deveining 2 lbs of them had me feeling it in my lungs and eyes just from the fumes. Luckily I had a chance to recover since my recipe came with a built-in four hour break while the salted peppers and onions chilled in the fridge. After that it was as simple as adding the spices, cooking a few minutes, putting them into jars, and processing in a water bath for 10 minutes. Oh, and let's not forget the most important step: standing back and admiring your work.

Freshly picked jalapeños
Salted & sliced
In the pot with spices
End result: Bread & Butter'd
I did have grand plans of making hot sauce, and roasting peppers, and all kinds of other good stuff with the remaining peppers, but had to turn my attention to other projects so into the dehydrator they went. I'm sure they'll find their way into an interesting recipe this winter though and will spice up a cold winter day or night just right.