Quick-Pickled Almost Anything (But Especially Chiles)
- 8 ounces (225 g) vegetables or chile peppers
- 1 cup (8 oz., 240 ml) nonchlorinated water
- 1 cup (8 oz., 240 ml) white or cider vinegar
- 2 garlic cloves, slivered
- 1 tablespoon (0.3 oz., 8 g) kosher salt
- 1 tablespoon granulated sugar
- 1 teaspoon pickling spice, homemade or store-bought (optional)
- Prep the vegetables or chiles.
- Peel and remove any mushy parts and cut into equal-sized chunks if necessary.
- If you want to leave jalapenos, serranos, and other hot peppers whole, pierce each one with the tip of a knife three or four times.
- Fill a quart jar with the vegetables or chiles.
- In a medium saucepan, combine the water, vinegar, garlic, salt, sugar, and pickling spice, if using, and bring to a simmer, stirring until the salt and sugar are dissolved.
- Pour the warm brine into the jar.
- Because you are not processing these pickles, the headspace is not critical, but do make sure all the vegetables are submerged.
- If they are floating above the brine, insert a smaller jar into the large jar to push the vegetables down into the brine.
- Let cool, then cap the jar.
- Some foods, like thin-sliced onions, will be ready in 20 minutes.
- Others, like chile peppers, may take 3 or 4 days.
- Taste to judge the progress; a good pickle will be salty, acidic, and crisp.
- Most vegetable quickles will get sharper, tangier, and more pickled (and less crisp) every day, but the texture will suffer after 2 weeks.
- They should be discarded after a month.
vegetables, water, vinegar, garlic, kosher salt, sugar, pickling spice
Taken from www.cookstr.com/recipes/quick-pickled-almost-anything-but-especially-chiles (may not work)