Cocktail Onions Recipe
- 1 1/2 cups Mortons Coarse Kosher Salt
- 3 quarts water
- Ice cubes
- 4 pounds pearl onions (each about 3/4 inch in diameter), ends trimmed and peeled
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 3 tablespoons yellow mustard seed
- 6 cups distilled white vinegar
- 1 1/2 teaspoons dried red pepper flakes
- 5 medium bay leaves
- Place salt in a large, nonreactive heat-resistant container and cover with water.
- Add enough ice to equal 1 gallon total brining liquid.
- Stir to dissolve salt; add onions.
- Keep onions submerged by covering with a resealable plastic bag filled with water.
- Refrigerate and let brine for 12 to 24 hours.
- Wash the jars, lids, and bands in hot, soapy water.
- Rinse well.
- Dry the lids and bands and set aside.
- Place the jars in a boiling water canner or a 15- to 20-quart pot fitted with a canning rack and a lid.
- Fill the pot with water and bring to a boil over medium-high heat.
- Boil for 10 minutes, then turn off heat.
- Keep the jars in the hot water until ready for use, removing one at a time as needed.
- Strain onions and rinse.
- In a large pot, bring sugar, mustard seed, vinegar, and red pepper flakes to a boil over medium heat and whisk to combine.
- Simmer until sugar has dissolved, about 10 minutes.
- Keep pickling liquid hot while packing the jars, but do not boil.
- Remove the jars from the hot water with a jar lifter, letting excess water drip off.
- Bring water in the canner back to a simmer (about 180 degrees F) for processing the packed jars.
- Distribute onions and bay leaves among the sterilized jars, leaving a 1-inch headspace.
- Cover onions with hot pickling liquid, leaving a 1/2-inch headspace.
- (If there is leftover pickling liquid, it can be used for a quick pickle.
- To do so, fill a clean jar with peeled onions, cover with pickling liquid, and refrigerate 12 to 24 hours before eating.
- Eat within 2 weeks.)
- To remove any air bubbles, slide a clean rubber spatula down the side of each jar and press inward on the onions while rotating the jar; repeat 5 to 6 times for each jar.
- Wipe the rim and threads of each jar with a clean, damp towel.
- Place the lids on the jars, checking that the sealing compound is centered.
- Fit the jars with bands and tighten just until resistance is met.
- Check that the water in the pot or boiling water canner is at a simmer (about 180 degrees F), and set the jars in the canning rack.
- (The jars must be covered by 1 to 2 inches of water.
- Add additional boiling water as necessary.)
- Cover the pot with a tightfitting lid and bring to a rolling boil over medium-high heat.
- Process the jars for 10 minutes at a gentle but steady rolling boil.
- (Begin calculating the processing time once the water is at a rolling boil.
- Check occasionally that the water remains at a steady boil.)
- Once processed, remove the jars with the jar lifter and set upright, 1 to 2 inches apart, on a dry towel.
- Do not retighten the bands; let cool at least 12 hours.
- After the jars have cooled, check for a seal by pressing the center of each lid.
- If the center is concave and does not flex, remove the band and try to lift off the lid with your fingertips (dont pull too hard).
- If you cannot lift the lid, there is a good vacuum seal.
- If the lid pops off, your jar did not properly seal; eat the onions within two months.
- To store properly processed jars, wipe each lid and jar with a clean, damp cloth (the bands dont need to stay on for storage), label the jars, and store them in a cool, dry, dark place.
- Unopened jars can be kept up to a year when stored properly.
- Once opened, keep in the refrigerator and use within two months.
kosher salt, water, cubes, pearl onions, sugar, distilled white vinegar, red pepper, bay leaves
Taken from www.chowhound.com/recipes/cocktail-onions-11049 (may not work)