1 / 23

PICKLES

PICKLES. 4 General Types…. Fresh Pack Fermented Fruit Pickles Relishes. Ingredients. produce • water • salt • vinegar • sugar • spices. pickling variety 1 -2 inch cucumbers for gherkins, 3 – 5 inch for dills unwaxed process within 24 hours of harvest sort and wash well

rozalia
Télécharger la présentation

PICKLES

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PICKLES

  2. 4 General Types… Fresh Pack Fermented Fruit Pickles Relishes

  3. Ingredients produce • water • salt • vinegar • sugar • spices

  4. pickling variety • 1 -2 inch cucumbers for gherkins, 3 – 5 inch for dills • unwaxed • process within 24 hours of harvest • sort and wash well • trim 1/16 inch slice from blossom end

  5. softened water is best

  6. pickling or canning salt • anti-caking materials can make brine cloudy • do not alter amounts for fermented products • concentrations can be altered for quick pack pickles

  7. 5% acidity • white or cider • no homemade • do not dilute or decrease amount

  8. white or brown • substitutes not recommended

  9. use fresh whole spices • powdered spices will cloud brine • tie loosely in clean cheesecloth bag • garlic and dill

  10. Firming Agents • Grape leaves • Alum • Lime (calcium hydroxide) • Pickle Crisp (calcium chloride)

  11. Equipment

  12. Hot Water Bath Canner processes foods at 212˚F used only for high acid foods fruits, pickles 2 Types of Canning Pressure Canner processes foods at 240˚F or 250˚F used for low acid foods meats, vegetables

  13. Lids • use 2-piece lid with a self-sealing lid and ring • use lids within 1 year of purchase • follow manufacturers directions in preparing lids for use • do not use old, dented, deformed lids

  14. Jars • use threaded home-canning jars with 2-piece lids • free of cracks and chips • wash empty jars in hot soapy water and rinse well before use • if your process time is under 10 minutes in a water bath canner, jars must be pre-sterilized – full rolling boil for 10 minutes

  15. Tips for Quality • soak cucumbers in ice water 4 – 5 hours before pickling • allow 3 – 5 weeks for flavor to develop • low temperature pasteurization

  16. Common Pickle Questions • Omitting salt • Using artificial sweeteners • Blue garlic • Signs of spoilage • Burpless cucumbers • Shriveled pickles

  17. Sauerkraut

  18. Ingredients

  19. stoneware crocks large glass jars food-grade plastic containers no metal line a questionable container with a heavy food-grade plastic bag Containers large enough to allow several inches of space between the top of the food and the top of the container

  20. How to… • Containers, plates and jars to be used for fermentation must be washed with soapy water and rinsed well with very hot water • Make brine with cold or room temperature soft water. Measure carefully! • Vegetables must be covered with 1 -2 inches brine • Plate & 2 or 3 quart jars filled with water • Brine filled bag (1 ½ T salt per quart water) • Cover container with a clean, heavy towel

  21. How to… • Keep at 65° – 80°F. • Remove scum every day or two for plate method. • Brine bag should not be disturbed until normal fermentation is complete (bubbling ceases) • During first week, kraut sometimes produces a “rotten” odor. Don’t throw it out! • Generally complete in 2 to 4 weeks. Taste to determine

  22. Common Kraut Questions • Omitting salt • Red cabbage • Pink color

  23. Approved Resources Wisconsin Safe Food Preservation Series www.wisc.edu/foodsafety/ Ball Blue Book (1997 edition or later) USDA Complete Guide to Home Canning & National Center for Home Food Preservation www.uga.edu/nchfp So Easy to Preserve www.uga.edu/nchfp

More Related