Pickling

Pickling is the process of preparing a food by soaking and storing it in a brine (salt) or vinegar solution, a process which can preserve otherwise perishable foods for months. The resulting food is called a pickle. Pickles are made in one of three ways:
  • Processed pickles are made the old-fashioned way, by a process of fermentation. The bacteria in the cucumber are allowed to reduce the sugars present. This usually takes about five weeks, and the resulting pickles have a shelf life of many months.
  • Fresh-packed pickles are made by pasteurizing cucumbers to kill bacteria or make bacterial spores dormant. Fresh-packed pickles have a shelf life of many months. Many commercially-produced pickles are fresh-packed.
  • Refrigerated pickles (sometimes called overnight pickles) are made by placing cucumbers in a vinegar solution and refrigerating them. Compared to processed or fresh-pack pickles, refrigerated pickles have a relatively short shelf life, and even unopened jars should be kept refrigerated.
If the food contains sufficient moisture a pickling brine may be produced simply by adding dry salt. Some pickling forms, most notably Korean Kim Chi, salt the vegetables to draw out excess water, then allow natural fermentation of the vegetable to create a vinegar-like solution. Unlike the canning process, pickling does not require the food to be made completely sterile before it is sealed. The acidity or salinity of the solution makes it an environment in which bacteria or fungi do not easily grow. Pickling began as a way to preserve food for out-of-season use and for long journeys, especially by sea. Salt pork and salt beef were common staples for sailors before the days of steam engines. Although the process was originally used to preserve foods, pickling is frequently done because people enjoy the resulting flavor. Fruits are sometimes pickled in high-sugar or solutions with flavorings such as cinnamon, mustard, or dill seed. It is believed that cucumbers were first pickled 4500 years ago in Mesopotamia. Cleopatra thought pickled cucumbers made her beautiful. The armies of Julius Caesar and Napoleon were fed pickles. During World War II, forty percent of the gherkins produced in the US went to the armed forces.

Pickles popular in different places

The USA pickle market is dominated by cucumber pickles such as gherkins. In the US, the word "pickle" by itself usually refers to a pickled cucumber. Cucumbers may be cooked in spiced sugar syrup (sweet pickles), pickled in brine with dill (dill pickles), or with dill and garlic (kosher dills). Pickle relish, a traditional condiment for hot dogs, is made from sweet pickles. In the UK, the most common type of pickle in British cuisine is the pickled onion. They are often sold in Fish 'n' Chip shops, as are pickled eggs. Pickled beetroot and condiments such as "Branston pickle" are typically eaten as an accompaniment to pork pies and cold meats or a ploughman's lunch. China is home to a huge variety of pickled vegetables, including radish, cabbage, chili pepper and cucumber, among many others. In Taiwan, popular pickled food includes: plum, cucumber, cabbage, radish and eggs. Japanese tsukemono include daikon, plums, turnips, and lettuce, among other vegetables. Korean kimchi is usually made from pickled cabbage. Indian mixed pickles consist of various pickled fruits and vegetables (invariably including chile peppers) suspended in vegetable oil. Pickled herring and rollmops are pickled fish dishes popular typically in Scandinavia. Lox may be brine-pickled. Capers are almost invariable served pickled, rather than fresh. Other foods that are commonly pickled include:

External link

Other uses of the word "pickle"

Pickle may also refer to the pickling solution, or similar solutions used for different purposes, such as removing scale from metal or preserving wood. Pickling may also refer to a metallurgical process in which stainless steel is chemically treated (usually with a solution of nitric acid and hydrofluoric acid) to remove any scale and contaminants from processing, with the goal of improving corrosion resistance. For Java programming, "Pickling" is the process of creating a serialized representation of objects. A detailed explanation of pickling can be found at http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/riggs96pickling.html

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
the hunchback of notre dame
open translation engine
trivial file transfer protocol
humidity
dialectic
sierra entertainment
county leitrim
county londonderry
resident evil
county tyrone
orange juice
fountain valley, california
fremont, california
volumetric heat capacity
lindsay davenport
drew carey
charon (moon)
kirkwood gap
tom swift
valve software
gesso
children's literature
mortal kombat
australian constitutional crisis of 1975
alice's adventures in wonderland
alice in wonderland
pseudopod
baltic republics
seasoning
marination
brining
cooking weights and measures
xylophone
flashbake
braising
broiling
marimba
vibraphone
glockenspiel
people of the book
celesta
gerard kuiper
lavon affair
logo (disambiguation)