Receta Pickled turnips
Last Thanksgiving, I went up to Portland to enjoy the holiday with a group of old friends. By Saturday, we were all stuffed and vaguely tired of food – but our friend Eric managed to revive our appetites with a creative light meal consisting entirely of homemade pickles and two kinds of fried carbs (polenta and a salty fried batter called zeppole). Also on the pickle plates were preserved lemons and several sorts of brined peppers. It was a great combination: each bite of one thing made you hungry for a bite of something else.
Eric has been kind enough to share the turnip recipe with me; I’ve modified it very slightly based on my own tastes. Note that by “small” turnips I mean only those with a diameter of less than 1.5" (and ideally smaller, ~1"); above that size they just don’t taste right. Generally you can only get these at farmer’s markets, even during the winter season.
Equipment-wise, I just use old wide-necked spaghetti sauce jars (24 oz.) that have been through the dishwasher. Here I assume that you will use three such jars (which will be filled not all the way to the top, but that is OK – tight packing can bruise the turnips and make mushy pickles).
The final product is a beautiful deep red, has a strong but not overpowering radish-like heat, and (if you used good baby turnips) both sweet and mineral flavors. These definitely aren’t for everyone but they are a great way to get introduced to this underrated vegetable.
(P.S.: There are pickled turnips all over the Middle East; in Persia/Iran they are called "torshi left".)
Ingredientes
- sea salt â 1/3 c (I use La Baleine Salins du Midi)
- water â 3.5 c
- distilled white vinegar â 1.25 c
- turnips, small white â 2 lbs.
- garlic â 6 cloves
- beet, small red â 1
- celery leaves â 3
Direcciones
- In a clear glass bowl, dissolve the salt in the water and stir in the vinegar. I generally do this first and process the turnips while I wait for the salt to be completely dissolve.
- Wash the turnips and cut them away from the greens (donât discard the greens; they are delicious sautéed with oil and garlic). Cut them into halves or quarters to make comfortably bite-sized pieces.
- Cut the garlic cloves in half lengthwise. Put two garlic cloves and one celery leaf into each jar.
- Peel the beet and cut it up into three pieces. Put one in each jar.
- Pack the turnip pieces into the jars, filling each jar roughly equally.
- Cover the vegetables with the vinegar brine solution and seal the jar.
- Store at room temperature out of the light. The turnips should mellow and be ready to eat in about 10 days. After that, store them in the refrigerator.
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Nutrition Facts
Amount Per Serving | %DV |
---|---|
Serving Size 162g | |
Recipe makes 6 servings | |
Calories 8 | |
Calories from Fat 0 | 0% |
Total Fat 0.04g | 0% |
Saturated Fat 0.01g | 0% |
Trans Fat 0.0g | |
Cholesterol 0mg | 0% |
Sodium 23mg | 1% |
Potassium 63mg | 2% |
Total Carbs 1.72g | 0% |
Dietary Fiber 0.5g | 2% |
Sugars 1.04g | 1% |
Protein 0.29g | 0% |