Receta Roasted Pickled Peppers
Last year I think our first hard freeze didn’t occur until the first of November. This year it happened mid-October. Hubby covered the garden but to no avail. We had to go into salvage mode. I picked a few tiny eggplants, a few green tomatoes, and a bunch of peppers.
The very last from the garden.
Dilled Green Tomatoes
Adapted from Grandmother
- Green tomatoes (enough for one quart jar)
- 1 clove garlic
- 1 jalapeno
- 1/2 t. dill weed
- 1/4 t. celery seed
- 1/4 t. mustard seed
- 8 peppercorns
- 1 1/2 c. water
- 1/8 c. salt
- 1/2 c. cider vinegar
- Pack green tomatoes into one quart jar. Add garlic, pepper pod (in the past I have used dried chili peppers—today I used a red jalapeno), dill weed , celery seed, and mustard seed, and peppercorns to each jar. Heat water, salt, and cider vinegar to boiling. Pour over tomatoes in jar and seal. Refrigerate for one week before eating.
- Grandma's pickled green tomatoes.
- Colorful Roasted Pickled Peppers
- Adapted from The Gourmet Cookbook
- 4-4 1/2 lbs. mixed peppers
- I used some green, purple, and yellow bells as well as some pimentos and jalapenos.
- 1-3/4 c. cider vinegar
- 3/4 c. + 2 T. water
- 1/8 c. sugar
- 1 T. sea salt
- 6 cloves garlic
- 1/2 t. whole tri-color peppercorns
- 3 sprigs rosemary (about 3-4 inches long)
- 3 pint canning jars, rings and lids
Preheat broiler. Line baking sheets with foil and coat each foil-lined tray with about 1 T. olive oil. (This will keep the peppers from sticking.) Arrange peppers on tray.
The fist batch in.
You will have to do this in batches. Broil peppers skin sides up, about 4 inches from heat until skins are blistered and lightly charred, 4 to 6 minutes. Rotate tray about halfway through.
Roasted peppers
Transfer peppers to a large bowl and cover with plastic wrap. Let peppers steam until cool, then peel and separate by color. Sterilize jars and lids. Bring vinegar, water, sugar, salt, garlic, and peppercorns to a boil in a small saucepan. Reduce heat and simmer, uncovered, 10 minutes. Drain jars upside down on a clean kitchen towel one minute, then invert. Fill jars with pepper quarters, alternating colors. Tuck 2 garlic cloves (from pickling liquid) and one rosemary sprig into side of each jar. Fill jars with pickling liquid, leaving 1/4 inch of space at top, then run a thin knife between vegetables and jar to eliminate air bubbles. Place lids on jars and tighten rings. You may also invert the jars a couple of times to remove air bubbles. Process jars in a water bath for 20 minutes. Let peppers stand in jars at least 1 week for flavors to develop.
It takes a while to peel all the roasted peppers, but it is well worth it. Ruth Reichl writes in The Gourmet Cookbook:
Roasted bell peppers are terrific, but pickling them in vinegar adds piquancy and tartness, taking them to a whole new level. This is just the sort of thing you want to do with peppers in midsummer, when they are cheap and abundant at the farmers market. We love these on an antipasto platter or piled into a hero sandwich. Because they are so beautiful, they also make a stunning gift.
Or, it is just the sort of thing you want to do after the first freeze! I also may use one jar for a gift this Christmas.
Three pints of pickled roasted peppers and one quart of pickled green tomatoes.
I am aware that I should be thankful, thankful for the sweet potatoes, basil, green tomatoes, and peppers this year. I am also thankful for the upcoming cool weather and the time that the garden needs to revitalize itself in time for next spring’s plantings.
(Stay tuned for Sweet Potato-palooza as I experiment with new recipes to use my recent harvest!)