Straight to the head of the class! Here in New England late summer harvest is in full swing so The Joy of Pickling, Revised Edition: 250 Flavor-Packed Flavor-Packed Recipes arrived last week right on time to be put to good use. And put to use it has certainly been - with luscious ...

The Joy of Pickling: 250 Flavor-Packed Recipes for Vegetables and More from Garden or Market (Revised Edition) Buy this product from Amazon
 
4.5
Author : Linda Ziedrich
Edition : Revised
Number of Pages : 432
Publisher : Harvard Common Press
List Price: $18.95
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  • ISBN13: 9781558323759
  • Condition: New
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Product Description

Since its original publication in 1998, this book has been considered the go-to guide for those who like it sour, salty, and tangy. Author Ziedrich goes far beyond the classic bread-and-butters and dills with recipes that showcase the worldwide popularity of pickling. There are chapters on fermented pickles, from Half-Sours to Turkish Mixed Pickles; on fresh pickles such as Pickled Beets; on cabbage pickles from around the world like Kimchi and Curtido; and miso and soy sauce pickles. Twenty-five of the recipes are brand new, and the indispensable pickling primer has been fully updated with the latest in equipment, ingredients, and techniques.

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Customer reviews

Straight to the head of the class! 5 by .. Grandma (NH, USA)
Here in New England late summer harvest is in full swing so The Joy of Pickling, Revised Edition: 250 Flavor-Packed Flavor-Packed Recipes arrived last week right on time to be put to good use. And put to use it has certainly been - with luscious results.

One thing our Grandmas knew was that pickles sparked up dull winter fare like nothing else could, so much so that our Pennsylvania Dutch Grandmas were famous for serving "seven sweets and seven sours" on their dinner tables! What they might not have known is that pickles are good for you, loaded with Vitamin C, and sometimes the B vitamins. Now, if you're looking for 101 varieties of pickles like your Grandma and her Grandma used to make by the bushel, then there are better - or at least more extensive - books to be had and you'll find a multitude of recipes for them in just about every general American cookbook to boot.

However, if what you are looking for is the unusual, then send The Joy of Pickling straight to the head of the class. Whether you are looking for Polish Pickled Mushrooms (big jar sitting in the fridge) or Korean style Pickled Garlic (Mrs. Kim's - sitting on the counter) or the Pickled Limes featured in Little Women, you'll find the recipe here.

Perhaps what you want is Moroccan Pickled Lemons? Or would you prefer the sweeter Indian version? Some Pickled Blueberries to set off your Thanksgiving meal? Or perhaps some Thai Pickled Carrots that you can serve with dinner an hour from now? (We had that two nights ago - yum!) Linda Ziedrich gives us recipes for a world of pickles - pickles from Russia and Japan, from India and Italy and about every place in between. These are the lost recipes your Grandma brought from the old country, the right pickles to go into the bento box, to provide the real flavors of "elsewhere." All of them easy, nothing complicated. And a good many of them that can be ready to eat tonight, tomorrow or at least by the end of the week.

And because she does, The Joy of Pickling makes my very short list of books that live on my kitchen counter, that move in my hands rather than the 17 boxes I'm still unpacking. This is a book that I will pass on to my daughters along with Mastering The Art of French Cooking, the Joy of Cooking and Charleston Receipts. Kudos for a job extremely well done. If I could give it 6 stars, I would!

Pickle Me This 5 by .. Aceto (Meilhan Sur Garonne)
Making pickles now belongs to that class of human activity that has lost its original raison d'etre and exist now chiefly (or is that chefly?) as an art form, done for its own sake. Pickling has become for cook or gardner what a manual transmission is to the driving enthusiast, or, more retro, horses. Or what calligraphy is to a letter writer in the age of email and texting. You do it not for the easy and unthinking way of coasting through your days.

We had to pickle in the days before refrigeration. Now it is done for the sake of special flavors that can be had with salt and vinegar over time. There are not many real books on the subject. You see far more on canning and preserves. The Joy of Pickling is a slightly tongue in cheek title on the best book I haver ever seen on the subject. It helps to have a faintly daft teacher such as Ms. Ziedrich in these briny arts. She is a monomaniac with a mission, sustained now well over a decade. As with Madame Curie, her calling was not a result of selfish pursuits. She never even cared much for pickled vegetables (cucumbers are only the beginning) herself, but ushered in by the cares of close ones that has taken over her life.

For us novitiates, Ms. Ziedrich begins with basics -- helpful discussions of vinegar, salt, spices, tools and equipment. She understands the chemistry of pickling, therefore presenting things as simple proportions. Then off we go into Part 2: Fermentation, covering twenty-five applications after a few more basics. You can pickle from just a pint at a time, for those of you daunted by visions of vats, barrels and $400 crocks (I kid you not). This second edition updated a sturdy working original of ten years past. The addition of the venerable Lower East Side "Full Sour" dill is reason enough, but she has added many relishes and other fine points. She also took considerable pains to clarify the recipes and the discussions of mechanics. We are ever more assured of success across a broad array of tasty bits.

Part 3 is devoted to Fresh Pickles, meaning, not fermented. For those of you who must minimize salt use, this is the domain of vinegar.
Part 4 conquers cabbages. I still remember the dressing down when my father discovered I poured out the sauerkraut juice. Now I know why.
Part 5 takes us from Kimchi into the deep waters of Asian Pickling
Part 6 is Sweet Pickles. If you guess nothing is here for you, 2/3 of this section is for fruit.
Part 7 is Quick pickles of all sorts in two or fewer days. Do some of these while waiting for fermentation to kick-in on day three.
Part 8 is completely new to me: Freezer Pickles. Just six sweet recipes for a year's storage, even if only in freezer bags.
Part 9 is her beefed-up relish section. I am an old-fashioned relisher of these. They were popular so long for reasons only recently undone by tired and gooked-up store bought stuff. Time to revive:
- Piccalili
- Chow-Chow
- Corn relishes
- Mango chutney
- Walnut ketchup
- Chili Sauce
- Prepared Horseradish (hi-test)

All tried and true powerhouses to amplify or accent your food.

Finally, Part 10 leaves off the leaves and goes for meat, fish and eggs.

To the tune of Catch a Falling Star:

"Catch a Pickled Herring
Put in in a Barrel
Save it for a Rainy Day
Never let it Rot Away..."

Ms. Ziedrich will encourage the timid and satisfy the accomplished. Corned Beef is your PhD dissertation. You want souce? You have a delightful, achievable one here. Once you get going, you can push the barrel. Recommended ages 13 to 93.

Pickles, Pickles, Pickles 5 by .. Captain Katie (Long Beach, CA and the Sunny Caribbean)
Hubby Dub and I live half the year on a sailboat in the Caribbean and he loves his pickles. Till I got this book I just made my plain old fashioned Sun Pickles. You know, 1 cup of vinegar, 3 cups of water, dill to suit (we get it along with the cukes from the Saturday Market in Trinidad), four cloves of garlic, salt (up to but not more than a quarter cup), some hot peppers and whole cucumbers, though you can slice them if you want. Then you mix the salt, vinegar and agua together and when the salt dissolves you put the cukes, peppers, dill & garlic in a gallon jar, add the liquid and let it sit on deck in the hot sun for about a week, being sure to shake the jar a couple times a day.

Those pickles are great and I never thought of varying my pickle recipe till I got this book. I tried the mixed pickling spices on page 15 and those pickles came out scrupchulicious. The Mustardy Dill Pickles on page 49 are do die for, as is the Sweet Pickled Daikon on page 123, Daikons are plentiful in the Caribbean and you can see them in plenty of American supermarkets now. Hubby Dub calls them Giant White Radishes.

I have not tried the sauerkraut recipes or kimchi ones, but I'm going to. This is a nifty book, one I'll be using a lot. Five big stars from me.

Excellent 5 by .. Kitten Kisser ()
We already have the Joy of Jams, Jellies, and other Sweet Preserves & absolutely love it! So when I saw that the same author had a book on pickling, I couldn't resist!
I am not disappointed! This book meets the high expectations I had of it due to my delight with the book mentioned.
If you can think of it, she has a pickling recipe for it! She also goes into fermentation & that is something we are always trying & interested in. As usual the beginning of the book provides the reader with essential information that you should of course read before following any recipes.
To give you an idea of some of the recipes offered there are: Robert's Tea Pickles, an assortment of Dill pickles, pickled apples, turnips, radish, mushrooms, onions, tomatillos, tomatoes, artichokes, grapes, peppers, mangos, pickles in rice-bran mash, ginger gherkins, quince, pears, baby corn, carrots, onion rings, and more. Plus freezer pickles, chutneys, salsas, meat, fish, and eggs!!! This only names a few...yes a few! I told you, if you can name it, I think it's in here! There are enough recipes to keep me pickling our farm fresh crops & eggs as well our local farmers market delights for years as well as giving me ideas for new things to plant come Spring! YUM!
Bottom line, if you love pickling or know someone who does it will make a valuable addition to your library or a much appreciated gift! Highly recommend!

The BEST pickling book I own! 5 by .. MotherLodeBeth (Sierras of California)
The book came just as I was getting ready to can a variety of pickles, and wanting to find some new pickling recipes. Am so pleased with the book because it has a variety of pickling recipes from Asia, Europe, the states , France and places in between. There are crock made pickles, quick pickles and refrigerator pickles and conventional pickles we grew up with.

Unlike most pickling books this book goes further and deals with vinegars and salts. Two topics that came up on a preserving board I belong to online.

The book also has a good section on pickling meat, fish,eggs, corn, fruits and exotics like kimchi. As well as the history of pickling foods. Also loved the nice section on chutneys, salsas,relishes and even homemade ketchup. Once you have had homemade ketchup you will not buy ketchup!

With an easy to read font or print, which for an avid reader like myself is important. The directions are extremely easy to follow.