Archive for September, 2011|Monthly archive page
The Art of Farming Heirloom Vegetable Auction is tomorrow!
We’re thrilled to be a part of the Art of Farming dinner and heirloom vegetable auction tomorrow night at Sotheby’s. We made a special pickle just for the event… Sweet and Sassy Mixed Vegetable Pickles. Tickets are still available… and the proceeds benefit GROWnyc and The Sylvia Center.
Here’s the recipe for the pickle… but if you want to taste it in all its glory, by a ticket and come out tomorrow night!
Sweet and Sassy Mixed Pickles
For the pickles:
3lbs kirby cucumbers
2 medium onions
2 large bell peppers (one red, one yellow if possible)
1 lb. carrots
2 oz Kosher salt
1 lb ice cubes
For the brine:
32 oz cider vinegar (5% acidity)
16 oz water
4 oz brown sugar (less if you prefer)
½ bunch lemon thyme
2 tablespoons pink peppercorns, cracked
1 tablespoon yellow mustard seed
2 teaspoons whole allspice berries, cracked
2 teaspoons coriander seeds, toasted and cracked
1 teaspoon fennel seed
1 teaspoon ground cloves
4 bay leaves
- Rinse cucumbers in cold water. Trim tips and slice the cucumbers into ¼-inch rounds.
- Peel skins off of onions and slice onions into ¼ rounds, then slice the rounds into half-moons.
- Combine the cucumbers and onions with the ice and salt and mix thoroughly. Place in a refrigerator for at least one hour.
- Peel the carrots and chop into ½ inch chunks.
- Rinse the peppers and slice them in half to remove the seeds. Cut into 1-inch squares.
- In a large stockpot, mix together the cider vinegar, water, sugar and lemon thyme. Bring brine to a boil and then simmer over medium heat.
- Crack the pink peppercorns and the allspice berries using a mortar and pestle and combine with the fennel, bay leaves, yellow mustard seed and cloves in two cheesecloth bundles. Cinch with butcher twine and add to the brine pot.
- Toast the coriander seeds over medium heat, shaking frequently, until a little wisp of smoke appears, usually about two to three minutes. Set aside.
- Remove the bowl with the cucumbers and onions from the refrigerator and rinse the contents under cold water to remove the salt. Place them in another bowl and mix well with the peppers, carrots and coriander seeds.
- Pack the vegetable mixture evenly into 2 half-gallon or 4 quart jars.
- Return the brine to a boil and pour the brine over the vegetables, making sure to completely cover them (you may have some extra brine). If you want your pickles to be extra aromatic, steep the spice bundles for 30-60 minutes at a low temperature before bringing the brine to a boil.
- Screw the lids on to the jars firmly.
- Allow the jars to come to room temperature and then place them in a refrigerator. The pickles will be ready to eat in 24 hours and will last for one month under refrigeration.
Notes on the vegetables: there are numerous varieties of heirloom cucumbers and kirbies that will be appropriate for this pickle. Smaller cucumbers (1 ½ inch diameter maximum) are preferred as they will be less seedy and typically have more firm flesh. What makes this pickle visually appealing is the play of different bright colors, which is why the red and yellow peppers are preferred to contrast the green kirby cucumbers. If you were using yellow lemon cucumbers, you might want to substitute green bell peppers.
This recipe was adapted from one in Quick Pickles, by Chris Schlesinger, John Willoughby and Dan George. A great book!
For more information about Rick’s Picks and to order pickles please visit rickspicksnyc.com and also check out the cookbook co-authored by founder Rick Field, The Art of Preserving, available at our website and also amazon.com. Another great book!
Welcome the Brinery, in all its Finery
Our friends at Whole Foods Bowery have converted their cheese cave into a pickle palace of the highest order. We’ll be on hand for the launch party tonight and sampling our wares, and tasting those of our friends, including McClure’s, Sourpuss and Brooklyn Brine. We’ve made a special pickle just for the occasion… Sweet and Sassy Mixed Pickles. Please come on down to the Brinery at Bowery… we’ll be sampling up a storm under a big poster that looks a little bit like this:
And here’s the recipe for Sweet and Sassy Mixed Pickles.
For the pickles:
3lbs kirby cucumbers
2 medium onions
2 large bell peppers (one red, one yellow if possible)
1 lb. carrots
2 oz Kosher salt
1 lb ice cubes
For the brine:
32 oz cider vinegar (5% acidity)
16 oz water
4 oz brown sugar (less if you prefer)
½ bunch lemon thyme
2 tablespoons pink peppercorns, cracked
1 tablespoon yellow mustard seed
2 teaspoons whole allspice berries, cracked
2 teaspoons coriander seeds, toasted and cracked
1 teaspoon ground fennel
1 teaspoon ground cloves
4 bay leaves
- Rinse cucumbers in cold water. Trim tips and slice the cucumbers into ¼-inch rounds.
- Peel skins off of onions and slice onions into ¼ rounds, then slice the rounds into half-moons.
- Combine the cucumbers and onions with the ice and salt and mix thoroughly. Place in a refrigerator for at least one hour.
- Peel the carrots and chop into ½ inch chunks.
- Rinse the peppers and slice them in half to remove the seeds. Cut into 1-inch squares.
- In a large stockpot, mix together the cider vinegar, water, sugar, lemon thyme, mustard seed, fennel, cloves and bay leaves. Bring brine to a boil and then simmer over medium heat.
- Crack the pink peppercorns and the allspice berries using a mortar and pestle and add to the brine pot.
- Toast the coriander seeds over medium heat, shaking frequently, until a little wisp of smoke appears, usually about two to three minutes. Set aside.
- Remove the bowl with the cucumbers and onions from the refrigerator and rinse the contents under cold water to remove the salt. Place them in another bowl and mix well with the peppers, carrots and coriander seeds.
- Pack the vegetable mixture evenly into 2 half-gallon or 4 quart jars.
- Return the brine to a boil and pour the brine over the vegetables, making sure to completely cover them (you may have some extra brine). Screw the lid on to the jars firmly.
- Allow the jars to come to room temperature and then place them in a refrigerator. The pickles will be ready to eat in 24 hours and will last for one month under refrigeration.
Notes on the vegetables: there are numerous varieties of heirloom cucumbers and kirbies that will be appropriate for this pickle. Smaller cucumbers (1 ½ inch diameter maximum) are preferred as they will be less seedy and typically have more firm flesh. What makes this pickle visually appealing is the play of different bright colors, which is why the red and yellow peppers are preferred to contrast the green kirby cucumbers. If you were using yellow lemon cucumbers, you might want to substitute green bell peppers.
This recipe was adapted from one in Quick Pickles, by Chris Schlesinger, John Willoughby and Dan George. A great book!
For more information about Rick’s Picks and to order pickles please visit rickspicksnyc.com and also check out the cookbook co-authored by founder Rick Field, The Art of Preserving, available at our website and also amazon.com. Another great book!
Pickles are the Big Idea
How did Rick get his Big Idea? That’s what the writers at Big Think www.bigthink.com wanted to know during their interview last week. Read on for the inside scoop on Rick’s career 180, and the surprising similarities between pickling and TV.
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What’s the Big Idea?
What do TV and pickle production have in common? There’s really only one person you can ask, and according to him, there’s a lot of overlap. At the height of his television career, Rick Field was writing, directing, and producing for VH1 and PBS’ Bill Moyers. Today, he is a highly successful pickle entrepreneur.
Do not even think of those flabby, luminous yellow spears that delis sometimes wrap up with your sandwich, making the rye bread all soggy. As CEO of Rick’s Picks, Field creates and markets tastebud-bending products like “Smokra” – pickled okra with smoked Spanish paprika and chili peppers, and “Phat Beets”– aromatic beet slices with ginger, rosemary, and lemon. The company has grown from a single stand in a New York City greenmarket to a nationwide supplier to specialty markets like Whole Foods and Dean & Deluca (which still operates greenmarket stands).
http://rickspicksnyc.com/pickle-anything/Ricks-traditional-Justin-Bieber-Hair-pickle-recipe
Why Pickling is Like TV Producing
Rick Field: A good producer basically takes an idea, gathers a bunch of people around it and generates enthusiasm for it to create an excellent product. That sort of energy and organizing is also applicable to pickle making, except now the challenge is “let’s figure out how we can make 2,000 jars of pickled beets with 6 people in 8 hours for an affordable price.”
Making champagne on a beer budget: When I was in television I was always in environments where money was a challenge. It was always a question of “how do you make champagne on a beer budget?” For lack of a better term, I would say it’s a scrappy aesthetic that I had in television, which carried over to the work in pickles, trying to figure out how to maximize whatever we have and do it in a way that was very frugal.
About seven years before he left the TV business, Rick started pickling as a hobby – recreating family recipes from his childhood:
Rick: I realized that the basic equipment required to make pickles at home is very minimal. The barrier to entry is very low. You don’t need a $400 blender or a $9 million stove. A couple of pots and a couple of very inexpensive accessories and you’re good to go.
And so the first thing I did was to replicate these sort of locked-in-time-and-space, mid-twentieth-century family recipes that were fairly staid and highly traditional, but really fun and for me connected very actively and dynamically to a potent set of family memories and personal history.
A Sign from the Pickle Deities
Seven years later, Rick’s Picks have arrived, carving out a mini cultural niche of their own in the American culinary landscape. While they aren’t yet commercial on the scale of a Vlasic or a Heinz (and may never be, since most are made by hand with expensive ingredients), they’re convincing chefs and food lovers nationwide that pickled beets, beans, and okra have evolved beyond those dubious paperweights gathering dust on your Eastern European Grandma’s basement shelf.
Hey, Don’t Mess With My Grandma’s Pickles.
Rick: A lot of people, whether they are from Poland, from Louisiana, from Japan – in most corners of the world there is a very vibrant tradition of pickle making in some form or other and people really resonate back to that. I call it “the heritage piece” and whether it’s a cultural thing that they experienced in their homeland or a family thing, it’s powerful.
One of the interesting things about starting to sell pickles professionally was the fact that you have a lot of customers who try your stuff and say “Well these are very good, but they’re not as good as my grandmother’s, sorry.” And it’s hard to argue with Grandma.
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