The best vinegar should always be
used for pickling; in all cases it should be boiled
and strained.
The articles to be pickled should
first be parboiled or soaked in brine, which should
have about six ounces of salt to one quart of water.
The spices used for pickling are whole
pepper, long peppers, allspice, mace, mustard-seed,
and ginger, the last being first bruised.
The following is a good proportion
of spice: to one quart of vinegar put half an
ounce of ginger, the same quantity of whole-pepper
and allspice, and one ounce of mustard-seed; four
shalots, and one clove of garlic.
Pickles should be kept secure from
the air, or they soon become soft; the least quantity
of water, or a wet spoon, put into a jar of pickles,
will spoil the contents.
TO PICKLE GHERKINS AND FRENCH BEANS.
These are, of all vegetables, the
most difficult to pickle, so that their green colour
and freshness may be preserved. Choose some fine
fresh gherkins, and set them to soak in brine for a
week; then drain them, and pour over boiling vinegar,
prepared with the usual spices, first having covered
them with fresh vine leaves. If they do not appear
to be of a fine green, pour off the vinegar, boil it
up again, cover the gherkins with fresh green vine
leaves, and pour over the vinegar again. French
beans are pickled exactly the same.
TO PICKLE CAULIFLOWERS.
Remove the stalks and leaves, break
the flower into pieces, parboil them in brine, then
drain them, and lay them in a jar, and pour over boiling
spiced vinegar.
TO PICKLE MELON MANGOES.
Cut the melons in half, remove the
pulpy part and the seeds, soak the halves for a week
in strong brine, then fill them with the usual spices,
mustard-seed and garlic, and tie them together with
packthread; put them in jars, and pour over boiling
spiced vinegar. Large cucumbers may be pickled
in the same way.
PICCALILI.
Pickle gherkins, French beans, and
cauliflower, separately, as already directed; the
other vegetables used are carrots, onions, capsicums,
white cabbage, celery, and, indeed almost any kind
may be put into this pickle, except walnuts and red
cabbage. They must be cut in small pieces, and
soaked in brine, the carrots only, requiring to be
boiled in it to make them tender; then prepare a liquor
as follows: into half a gallon of vinegar put
two ounces of ginger, one of whole black pepper, one
of whole allspice, and one of bruised chillies, three
ounces of shalots, and one ounce of garlic; boil together
nearly twenty minutes; mix a little of it in a basin,
with two ounces of flour of mustard and one ounce
of turmeric, and stir it in gradually with the rest;
then pour the liquor over the vegetables.
TO PICKLE MUSHROOMS.
Choose small button mushrooms, clean
and wipe them, and throw them into cold water, then
put into a stewpan with a little salt, and cover them
with distilled vinegar, and simmer a few minutes.
Put them in bottles with a couple of blades or so
of mace, and when cold, cork them closely.
TO PICKLE ONIONS.
Choose all of a size and soak in boiling
brine, when cold, drain them and put them in bottles,
and fill up with hot distilled vinegar; if they are
to be white, use white wine vinegar; if they
are to be brown, use the best distilled vinegar,
adding, in both cases, a little mace, ginger, and
whole pepper.
TO PICKLE WHITE AND RED CABBAGE.
Take off the outside leaves, cut out
the stalk, and shred the cabbage into a cullender,
sprinkle with salt, let it remain for twenty-four
hours, then drain it. Put it into jars, and fill
up with boiling vinegar, prepared with the usual spices;
if the cabbage is red, a little cochineal powdered,
or a slice or two of beet-root is necessary to make
the pickle a fine colour; if it is white cabbage, add
instead, a little turmeric powder.
TO PICKLE WALNUTS.
Soak in brine for a week, prick them,
and simmer in brine, then let them lay on a sieve
to drain, and to turn black, after which place them
in jars, and pour over boiling spiced vinegar.
AN OLD WAY OF PICKLING CUCUMBERS.
Cut the cucumbers in small pieces,
length ways, with the peel left on; lay them in salt
for twenty-four hours, then dry the pieces with a
cloth, lay them in a deep dish, and pour over the following
mixture: some vinegar boiled with cayenne pepper,
whole ginger, a little whole pepper, and mustard seed,
a few West India pickles are by some considered an
improvement. This mixture should stand till nearly
cold before covering the cucumbers, which should then
be bottled. This pickle is fit for eating a few
days after it is made, and will also keep good in
a dry place as long as may be required.