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8
Sep 09

New pickle horizons

Editors Note: Please join us for a pickle tasting on Thursday, September 10 from 6-8 p.m. at the  Growing Center in Somerville. Bring pickles of any kind: homemade, naturally fermented, (local) store-bought, cucumbers, fruit, kimchi - anything you’ve pickled. We’ll be provided some, including samples from Moon Brine, Real Pickles, Rick’s Picks and our own kitchen.

New pickle horizons . . . Torshi, the Persian pickle

With two pounds of basil, a box of peaches, and an extra CSA share and a half for volunteering (and extra carrots from Ryan), the labor in Labor dscn0245Day was no joke. Luckily my sister was town, so I promptly put her to work with my housemate. And why call it labor when it is so FUN? I tested out the peach chutney recipe I’ve been wanting (delish), Daniel churned out the vegan pesto (secret ingredient: nutritional yeast), and we discovered a new pickle! Torshi is the Farsi word for pickle as far as I can tell. Among the infinite spice combinations, most included some combination of tarragon, mint, basil, and dill. Here is the recipe I ended up using, though I just used the vegetables I had (carrot, beets, squash, peppers). I never found dried lime powder, decreasing the authenticity, I suppose. But hey, we’re in Cambridge, not Iran. Please.

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Torshi

2 medium eggplants, peeled and chopped
2 large cucumbers, peeled and finely chopped
2 green peppers, washed, cleaned and finely chopped
3 large carrots, washed, peeled, finely chopped (steamed for 10 min.) or shredded
3 red medium onions, peeled and finely diced
1 small cauliflower, washed, finely chopped
1 small celery, washed and finely chopped
½ cup shredded white cabbage
(or five beets, fifteen carrots, six star-shaped squash, three peppers . . . you get the idea)

1 cup of each of the following herbs: (parsley, coriander, dill), finely chopped (I subbed dried for dill cause that shit’s expensive.)
2 tablespoons of tarragon, mint, basil

*2 tablespoons dried lime powder (limoo amani)
2 tablespoons crushed angelica (golpar) (Found at Harvest & Christina’s in Inman)
2 tablespoons caraway seeds (siah daneh)
2 tablespoon fennel seeds (razianeh)
2 tablespoons coriander seeds (tokhm-e geshneez)
6-7 garlic cloves, finely chopped
4-5 tablespoons salt (save this for a teaspoon a jar, not with the spice mix)
2 red hot peppers, dried or fresh, chopped
2 teaspoons turmeric

4 quarts white vinegar (white wine vinegar if you’re fancy)

Directions: Chop vegetables coarsely (half an inch sq?). Mix all the herbs in one bowl (very pretty). Mix vegs and herbs to coat all the vegs. (The recipe kept emphasizing that everything be dried off? Don’t mix any water in, I guess. All my stuff was pretty dry.) Boil the vinegar, stuff the veg/spice mix into the jars, one teaspoon of salt poured on top of veg/spices in each jar, pour vinegar over whole thing. Use your stick/spoon/something to get the air bubbles out. There is a lot of air, so wait a few minutes, then top off with more vinegar. Then process! (Sterilize jars and lids of course first, then leave in boiling water for 20 min.)

This will be a perfect pickle to have when it starts snowing, which I expect any day now.


28
Jul 09

Pickling whatever you can get your hands on . . .

picklesProbably when you think of pickles you think of cucumbers, maybe peppers. But you can pickle everything.

Pickling can be a great way to put up all that produce coming from your CSA to be eaten later. One of my favorites is pickled okra, which is all over the place where I grew up in East Tennessee, but I don’t find it very much at farmers’ markets here. So sad, very little okra these days. For want of okra, I pickle green beans, yellow squash, radishes (all kinds including daikon), peppers, beets, carrots, cucumbers and then mixes of all of the above with onions and garlic. (Editor’s note: The way Sarah mixes vegetables and pickles the shit out of them is a revelation). I recently branched out into making relish from yellow squash, which turned out fabulously. Then there is also exciting wild fermentation and sauerkraut and kimchee, but that’s for another post and a better expert.

The thing about pickling that is too often lost is that it is SUPER easy. You don’t need any fancy kitchen equipment, and you aren’t going to die if it goes wrong somehow in the process. Worst case scenario, the texture and taste are off. But then you try again.

Here’s a good starter recipe for pickled green beans:

2 lbs. green beans (take any stems off but no need to trim the ends, cut off any mushy or brown parts)

Pack lengthwise in hot, squeaky clean jars (go ahead and boil the jars for a sec, or run them through the dishwasher)

Add to each jar:
1/4 tsp. cayenne pepper
1 clove garlic, whole
1 head of dill or 1 1/2 tbsp. dill seed
(The spices are the fun part. Increase the cayenne if you want, or the garlic. Or switch out the dill with something else, curry, celery seed, mustard seed, anything.)

Boil together:
2 1/2 c. water
2 1/2 c. vinegar
1/4 c. salt

Pour this over the beans in the jars, leaving about 1/4 of an inch at the top. Put the lids on, and put the jars into boiling water in the pot. Boil for about 15 minutes. Let them sit on the counter for about 30 minutes, or until you hear the seals pop. You know the jars are sealed when you push the center of the lid and it doesn’t pop back up. But don’t do this until they’ve been on the counter awhile. You want it to seal itself.

They’ll be ready to eat in a couple of weeks, or save them for the winter.

You will need the following stuff in the kitchen:

Canning jars with sealable lids (go to the hardware store and buy a case of the canning set—jars, lids, rings; you will use them all eventually, believe me)

A big pot—tall enough that you can put your jars of goodness in, the water covers them, and the water can boil without wreaking havoc

Something to put in the bottom of the pot to prevent the jars from sitting directly on the bottom (I use one of the steamers that folds in on itself, unfolded of course.)

Something to get the jars out of the boiling hot water with (I use tongs, sometimes a bit sketchy but no big disasters yet.)

(You can also go to the hardware store and buy a canning set up with pot, rack, funnel, etc. I have my own set up that works for me, but it does get pretty messy.)

You could use this recipe for any vegetable. Or switch to apple cider vinegar and sugar instead of salt for sweet pickles. The internet is very useful for unusual and creative pickling recipes, among other things.

I’d love to hear of other interesting recipes that people have. So please send them on!