How to Make Quick Pickles



For a few years, I had the distinction of being the pickle chef at a seaside restaurant called The Back Eddy. The job title might sound a bit out there, especially at a casual fish-and-barbecue restaurant, but the pickles we served on the side were tremendously important. Bright and spice-laden, they provided a much-appreciated crunch and burst of acid to cleanse the palate between bites of rich, tender meat or fish and added variety to the meal without overpowering the proteins on the plate.

As the pickle chef, I became an aficionado of quick pickles because they could be whipped up as easily as a salad to complement whatever was on the menu that day. Unlike making fermented pickles, which involves soaking vegetables for days or weeks in a salty brine (see Pickling to learn more), quick pickling is really about infusing vegetables with vinegar and other flavors, and it takes only a few hours.

If I’m using vegetables with high water content, like cucumbers or cabbage, I start by salting them for an hour or two to draw out some water, which makes the pickles crunchy. After that, I make a pickling liquid of vinegar, water, spices, and salt, sugar, or both. Then I submerge the vegetables in it and let them sit to absorb the flavor. That’s it. That’s all it takes to make crunchy pickles that I think taste fresher than canned pickles. And because the acid in the vinegar slows bacterial growth, these pickles will keep in the fridge for weeks—if you don’t eat them all right away, of course.

by Dan George

fromFine Cooking
Issue 129 


More from the Arabic Food kitchen:   

How To Julienne Vegetables 
How To Braise Vegetables 
How to prepare Chillies   
Tips on Keeping Food Fresh   
How To Find Halal Food Products   
How To Compare Olive Oils  

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