FabulousFusionFood's Pickle Recipes 5th Page

Jam, jelly, marmalade, curd. Four different fruit preserve types. Left to right: sauerkraut, pickled red cabbage,
pickled eggs, Indian tomato and coriander chatnis and sweet pickled bilberries.
Welcome to FabulousFusionFood's Pickled Recipes Page — Pickling is the process of preserving or extending the shelf life of food by either anaerobic fermentation in brine or immersion in vinegar. The pickling procedure typically affects the food's texture and flavour. The resulting food is called a pickle, or, if named, the name is prefaced with the word pickled". Foods that are pickled include vegetables, fruit, mushrooms, meats, fish, seafood, dairy and eggs.


Pickling solutions are typically highly acidic, with a pH of 4.6 or lower, and high in salt, preventing enzymes from working and micro-organisms from multiplying. Pickling can preserve perishable foods for months, or in some cases years. Antimicrobial herbs and spices, such as mustard seed, garlic, cinnamon or cloves, are often added. If the food contains sufficient moisture, a pickling brine may be produced simply by adding dry salt. For example, sauerkraut and Korean kimchi are produced by salting the vegetables to draw out excess water. Natural fermentation at room temperature, by lactic acid bacteria, produces the required acidity. Other pickles are made by placing vegetables in vinegar. Like the canning process, pickling (which includes fermentation) does not require that the food be completely sterile before it is sealed. The acidity or salinity of the solution, the temperature of fermentation, and the exclusion of oxygen determine which microorganisms dominate, and determine the flavour of the end product.

Pickling with vinegar likely originated in ancient Mesopotamia around 2400 BCE. There is archaeological evidence of cucumbers being pickled in the Tigris Valley in 2030 BCE. Pickling vegetables in vinegar continued to develop in the Middle East region before spreading to the Maghreb, to Sicily and to Spain. From Spain it spread to the Americas. On the other hand, fermented salt pickling reportedly has its origins in China.

The English term "pickle" first appears around 1400 CE. It is from Middle English pikel, a spicy sauce served with meat or fish, borrowed from Middle Dutch or Middle Low German pekel ("brine") but later referred to preserving in brine or vinegar. Pickle recipes in English were first published in the middle ages, with an example being a mixed pickle from the 15 century found in Curye on Inglysch, IV. 103.

In Britain, pickled onions and pickled eggs are often sold in pubs and fish and chip shops. Pickled beetroot, walnuts, and gherkins, and condiments such as Branston Pickle and piccalilli are typically eaten as an accompaniment to pork pies and cold meats, sandwiches or a ploughman's lunch. Other popular pickles in the UK are pickled mussels, cockles, red cabbage, mango chutney, sauerkraut, and olives. Rollmops are also quite widely available under a range of names from various producers both within and out of the UK

This page is a continuation of the list of recipes from the Pickling process held on the FabulousFusionFood site. If you are specifically looking for this site's brief information about pickling then please go back to the First Page of the Pickles Recipes entry on this site.


The alphabetical list of all the Pickle recipes on this site follows, (limited to 100 recipes per page). There are 448 recipes in total:

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Stuffed Mallow Leaves
     Origin: Britain
To Dry Fruit Pulp
     Origin: Britain
Tyros eis Halmen
(Pickled Cheese)
     Origin: Roman
Suet-less Mincemeat
     Origin: Britain
To Make Paco Lilla or Indian Pickle
     Origin: Britain
Tyttebærsyltetøy
(Norwegian Lingonberry Jam)
     Origin: Norway
Summer Truffle Paste
     Origin: Britain
To make Syrup of Violets
     Origin: Britain
Unakkameen Thenga Chammanthy
(Dry Fish Chutney)
     Origin: India
Superlative Mincemeat
     Origin: British
To make Verjuyce.
     Origin: Britain
Uruguayan Salsa Criolla
     Origin: Uruguay
Sur kirsebærsyltetøy
(Sour Cherry Jam)
     Origin: Norway
To pickle any kind of Flowers.
     Origin: Britain
Victorian Jujube Long Plum Pickle
     Origin: Anglo-Indian
Sweet Pickle Relish
     Origin: American
To Pickle Eggs
     Origin: British
Victorian Pickled Vindaloo
     Origin: Anglo-Indian
Sweet Pickled Reedmace Hearts and
Fennel

     Origin: Britain
To Pickle Pork
     Origin: British
Victorian Tamarind Chutney
     Origin: Anglo-Indian
Sweet-pickled Fiddleheads
     Origin: Canada
To pickle Samphire, Broom-buds,
Kitkeys, Crucifix Pease, Purslane, or
the like Otherways.

     Origin: Britain
Victorian Tomato Chutney
     Origin: Anglo-Indian
Taiwan Pickled Cabbage
     Origin: Taiwan
To Preserve Broom Capers
     Origin: British
Vinegar and Oil Pickled Mushrooms
     Origin: Britain
Tarragon Vinegar II
     Origin: British
To Preserve Cucumbers
     Origin: Britain
Weihnachtlich Eingelegter
Kürbis

(Christmas Pickled Pumpkin)
     Origin: Germany
Tartare d'algues
fraîches

(Tartare of Fresh Seaweed)
     Origin: France
Tomato Achar
     Origin: Guyana
Wild Carrot Greens Pickle
     Origin: Britain
The Most Kindely Way to Preserve
Plums, Cherries, Gooseberries, &c.

     Origin: England
Tomato and Peanut Relish
     Origin: Zambia
Wild Greens Kimchi
     Origin: Fusion
Thee Sone Thanut
(Vegetable Pickle)
     Origin: Myanmar
Tomato Ketchup
     Origin: Britain
Wild Mushroom Stuffed Potato Cakes
     Origin: Britain
To Candy Flowers for Sallets, as
Violets, Cowslips, Clove-gilliflowers,
Roses, Primroses, Borrage, Bugloss,
&c.

     Origin: Britain
Tomato Relish
     Origin: British
Wild Plum Ketchup
     Origin: Fusion
To Candy Goos-berries.
     Origin: England
Torta di patate e Funghi selvatici
(Wild Mushroom and Potato Cake)
     Origin: Italy
Wild Plum Sauce for Roast Pork
     Origin: Britain
To Drie Apricocks, Peaches, Pippins or
Pearplums

     Origin: England
Traditional Mincemeat
     Origin: Britain
Wisteria Flower Jam
     Origin: Britain

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