Archive for the ‘recipe ideas’ Category
We’re Making Pickles with Jimmy Fallon’s Late Night Eats
We went up to the studio kitchen at Late Night with Jimmy Fallon recently and showed the Late Night folks a few of our tricks. Jimmy has a blog called Late Night Eats where the pieces are posted and other chefs on there include Mario Batali, David Chang and Ming Tsai, so we were psyched to do it. We thought the guys how to make our spicy Mean Beans and also how to use them mosst effectively in everybody’s favorite good time cocktail, the Bloody Mary. Jimmy’s crew thought Final Four Weekend would be a good time to put this up, and we could not agree more. Check them out!
Here’s a quick recipe for making spicy pickled beans:
And here are the finer points of Bloody Mary optimization:
Rick’s Rib Rub
We are across the walkway at Grand Army Plaza Greenmarket from our good friends Wilklow Orchards. They have a spectacular array of meats which we enjoy weekly. Recently, I’ve become infatuated with slow-cooked ribs. Miles, who works at Wilklow, gave me some ideas for braising the ribs, which takes place in a 300 degree oven for 3-4 hours. And so, voila… Rick’s Rib Rub is here. My secret ingredient is… (drumroll) Rick’s Picks pickles! Sorry I do not have a photo… I left my camera at home… but trust me, the ribs were awesome.
3 28-oz cans diced tomatoes
12 oz cider vinegar
8 oz Rick’s Picks Kool Gherks or The People’s Pickle, diced finely
4 slices Canadian bacon, grilled and diced
10 cloves garlic, diced finely
2 inches fresh horseradish, peeled and shaved with a Microplane
2 inches fresh ginger, peeled and shaved with a Microplane
1 stick butter
Juice of 2 lemons
Ground cumin to taste
Black pepper to taste
Melt butter in a large deep pot such as a Le Crusset. Add the garlic and sautee. Add the Canadian bacon, cumin and pepper. Stir for 2 minutes. Add the tomatoes, the vinegar, the pickles and the lemon juice, stirring constantly. Mix in the horseradish and ginger, and fold together thoroughly. Simmer for 15 minutes. Rick’s Rib Rub will be enough to braise 6 pounds of ribs.
New Amsterdam Market Benefit April 9th: Oyster Saloon (with a very special pickle)
Our good friend and market visionary Robert LaValva is hosting another smorgasbord/fundraiser on April 9 to benefit his New Amsterdam Market. We’ve been working with Robert since year one of the Market and his benefit parties are not only a worthy expenditure but a hoot. This time, he’s asked us to roll up our sleeves and make something special for the event. We concluded it would be fun to do a pickled carrot. We agreed it should be aromatic and spicy. And I have a secret agenda… I’ve been looking for a reason to fool around with Szechuan Peppercorns. I see great things in the future for this pickle.

These ingenues and their friends are about to meet some interesting peppercorns from Szechuan Province.
I’ll keep you posted when I do the recipe test next week. You can get tickets to the event here.
Hotties on Spring Break
The time-honored rituals of college students on Spring break are not lost on us here at Rick’s Picks. But since we’ve been quite busy planning the 2011 year in pickles at the home office, we haven’t been able to “take our talents to South Beach”, as LeBron James would say. But we still have been nicely represented. Here’s a few snapshots of our Hotties styling and profiling in sunny South Florida.

One great advantage to being a pickle jar-size Hottie and not an actual human hottie is there is more room to spread out on the cabana chair.
And Hotties lovers, don’t forget to enter our Hotties recipe contest! Deadline is March 31st!
spring feelings
Spring officially arrived yesterday, and we’ve had a run of nice weather here in NYC for the first time in a good while. While we’re not into full-on blooming flower mode yet, there is definitely a feeling of optimism in the air. Here’s a picture Jina took to whet your appetite for those picnics in the park which feel like they are just around the corner.
I love how the palette of spring’s soft colors is captured here… it whets my palete. And makes me want to each a pallet of Classic Sours. Palette, palete, pallet… I’m feeling the warmth of Spring. Bring it on!
Imbibe The Brown and Bloody Caesar at Jeffery’s
You don’t have to be a mixologist to have a strong opinion about how to make the perfect Bloody Mary. We’ve got our own ideas here at Rick’s Picks, but after checking out what our friends at Jeffery’s are up to over in the West Village, we think they may have topped ‘em all. The Brown and Bloody Caesar at Jeffery’s is a complex concoction.
Gabriel Stulman, John McNulty and their cohorts have brought together Dogfish Head Brown Ale, Clamato, sriracha, chipotle, Worcestershire sauce, and cocktail sauce, dressed it with an oyster and garnished it, we are pleased to note, with Smokra and a caper berry. It’s zesty, refreshing and begs for company. Such as the killer weekend brunch at Jeffery’s. After you finish imbibing, you can avail yourself of Jeffery’s selection of grocery items, which includes the aforementioned Smokra, plus Hotties, Mean Beans and Phat Beets. See you there!
night of 1,000 ramps, aka the rampage
The other night was the fourth or fifth annual Night of 1,000 Ramps, aka The Rampage. For those of you not familiar, ramps are a fern-like root that grows wild on the forest floor for a short period during Spring. Like a scallion in appearance but with an earthy depth of flavor, ramps were considered until recently to be only suitable for poor folk, who forgaged for them where they could. Well now here in NYC, chefs are tripping over each other to get enough supply and the ways they are using ramps are incredibly diverse. Ramp pesto, ramps in pasta dishes, cream of ramp soup, ramps this, ramps that. Me, I like to pickle ramps. This probably comes as no surprise. Nor are you likely to be surprised that I call our finished finished products On Ramps. Our Greenmarket buddy Rick Bishop always has the best ramps and he set aside two flats for us this year, then threw in an extra ten pounds of so for good measure.

Rick Bishop with a the well-earned results of lengthy foraging. The man has a cool first name and some top-quality ramps.
Making pickled ramps is a labor of love. Let me be very clear about that. Here is a little perspective: with 5 friends working for a total of 20 cumulative hours, we made 70 jars of ramps. In the same number of real time hours, we can make about 2,500 jars of Phat Beets. My secret to a productive evening of making On Ramps is to invite over eager friends and make sure they always have a cold Tecate in their hands. The photos of the evening have an amber wash to them which is due to a faulty white balance choice by yours truly, but there’s also an instant archival effect that you get also.
What really takes the time with ramps is the cleaning. First you trim the green leaves off of the tops (and save them to saute or make the aforementioned pesto) and the wispy roots off the bulbs.
The result should be a four-inch specimen, pearly white at the bulb end and richly purple at the top (four inches is the desired length because that is how much vertical space you have to pack vegetables in a standard pint Mason jar).

You know what they say about many hands and light work. In the background, Andy appears to be using his hands to google "efficiencies in ramp peeling"
One of the great things about pickling ramps is that they lend themselves to a diverse number of brines. In the past, I’ve used a white wine vinegar brine with muddled green peppercorns and coriander to bring our the sharp savory aspect of the plant. This time, I fashioned a brine that evokes the the other side, the lingering sweetness in ramps. I used white vinegar, dried hibiscus and muddled pink peppercorns.
An added benefit of going this route is the dried hibiscus transmits a beautiful rosy coloration to the brine. They would be an excellent Valentine’s Day gift, if they ever lasted that long.
Ramps are sufficiently time-consuming that it is impossible to imagine ever making them in a commercial scale. But I kind of like that aspect… they are almost like a secret handshake between a chosen few.
come and try a stickle
Welcome the Stickle! It’s a Rick’s Picks Kool Gherk pickle artfully mounted on a popsicle stick. It’s a happening, grab-and-go snack and you can be one of the first to have one tomorrow, when the Stickle makes its debut at the Brooklyn Flea in Fort Greene. I’ll be on hand making Stickles from scratch (I’ve been practicing). And the best news… the Stickle only costs a buck. Big flavor, low-sodium snacking. See you there!
pickled, potted and canned
My friend Larry gave me this interesting book as a present. It’s called Pickled, Potted and Canned, and unlike a lot of other books on pickling which focus just on recipes, this is a social history and more. As it says on the back cover, it is “a rich and lively narrative of the art and science that forever changed the face of civilization and world trade: food preservation”. Weighty words, but there’s a lot of truth idea of food preservation having such a central role in the evolution of society as we know it. I have yet to crack the book, but it looks great and I’ll write a review here when I am done.
our first cookbook is out

With dozens of beautiful photographs, the book spans the spectrum of preserving techniques and possibilities.
The first Rick’s Picks cookbook is out. Williams-Sonoma’s The Art of Preserving features 17 pickle recipes by yours truly (with great assistance from Kate Galassi). The idea with our contributions was to follow the cycle of the growing season… there are recipes for pickled rhubarb (early in the spring) to pickled brussels sprouts (later in the fall). It was really a cool thing to work on (and whetted my appetite to write more). Until June, the book is available exclusively at Williams-Sonoma stores, and then it will be in wide release and, of course, available on our website. I’ll probably do some book signings at Greenmarket and maybe even at a few stores. Check it out!
Leave a Comment










