Help Isom IGA recover from devasting floods
Help Isom IGA recover from devasting floods
If you are looking to brighten up your summer dishes, nothing packs a bigger punch than pickling! Pickled food adds a nice tangy bite to your summer menu. Quick pickling doesn’t involve the multi-step canning process of preserving vegetables to store in the pantry but rather adds extra flavor quickly by marinating and brining.
Quick pickling requires food to be refrigerated and consumed within a week or two. The marinade or brine is usually an equal mixture of vinegar and water, sugar or a sweetener, along with herbs, spices, and aromatics added to give it a distinctive taste. Another added bonus is quick pickling allows for a lot of experimentation with different types of vinegar, sweeteners, and spices! And it’s not just vegetables that can be quick pickled, check out the pickled shrimp recipe below.
To get you started, here are a few basics:
Almost any vegetable can be quick pickled as long as its fresh. Asparagus, beets, carrots, red and green peppers, green beans, radishes, cucumbers, onions, summer squash, and mushrooms are all options. Peel, trim, slice, quarter, and cut your vegetables into any shape as long as they’re similar sized spears, slices, chunks, or pieces. Equal size means equal brining! Jars of pickled vegetables need not be exclusive to one vegetable; go ahead and make a veggie mix.
For quick pickling, a basic brine is equal parts vinegar and water and sweetener. Any basic vinegar works—white vinegar, apple cider, white wine, and rice vinegar are all good options. Heavier and concentrated vinegars like balsamic or malt vinegar don’t fare too well in pickling. Sweeteners such as granulated sugar, brown sugar, honey, or maple syrup are all options that provide a custom taste.
Here is a basic template for a pint of quick pickled vegetables.
Ingredients
Instructions
Pickling is not just for vegetables! That briny spicy marinade that is so delicious on vegetables, also gives plumb shrimp a delicious transformation. This recipe makes an impressive buffet appetizer for any season and can be made a day or so ahead of time. Add to a leftover rice or grain for an easy one bowl meal.
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Instructions
Serves 4 as a side dish
This is a great summer side dish that has never lost its popularity. Change it up by adding sliced tomatoes, brown sugar instead of granulated sugar or add a pinch of dill.
Ingredients
Instructions
Toss all ingredients together in a bowl and let stand at room temperature for at least 30 minutes. If preparing ahead, cover and keep refrigerated for up to 2 days. Flavor gets spicier as it marinates but the cucumbers will begin to lose their crunch after a couple days.
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