The World`s Best Pickles

Released on: March 19, 2008, 9:38 pm

Press Release Author: sunil sharma

Industry: Food & Beverage

Press Release Summary: I knew they were the world's best pickles the moment I tasted
one. That first taste took place around 1950, and I've tasted a lot of pickles
since, am a pickle hound in fact, but I've never come across anything else as good.




I knew they were the world's best pickles the moment I tasted one. That first taste
took place around 1950, and I've tasted a lot of pickles since, am a pickle hound in
fact, but I've never come across anything else as good.










Press Release Body: I knew they were the world's best pickles the moment I tasted
one. That first taste took place around 1950, and I've tasted a lot of pickles
since, am a pickle hound in fact, but I've never come across anything else as good.

They came to us by way of my Uncle Ronald Smith, who was an electrician in the
Bitterroot Valley of Montana where I grew up. One day he was doing electrical work
for a Bulgarian family, and they rewarded him with a sample pickle. He liked it so
much he got the recipe and gave it to his wife Gladys, who gave it to Grandma
Glidewell, who made it and gave some to me, and I thought I'd died and gone to
pickle heaven.

And thus, although they became an old Glidewell family recipe, they are really an
old Bulgarian family recipe. The Bulgarian family, whose name I do not know, told
Uncle Ronald that in Bulgaria, when the first heavy frost kills the tomato vines,
they put all their end-of-garden vegetables -- including those green tomatoes --
into a barrel, fill the barrel with pickling brine, and eat the best pickles in the
world all winter.
It turns out, though, that the pickles' travel from Bulgaria to the U.S. was only
one leg of a more ancient journey. Because I mentioned them to an Iranian woman, and
she said, "My family has always made pickles like that! Exactly like that, except we
add tarragon."

Iran being the new name for the ancient kingdom of Persia, who knows how many
centuries these pickles go back?

There's more: I later lost the recipe's brine proportions. Gave some thought to its
travels between Persia and Bulgaria, looked in an Armenian-American cookbook
(Treasured Armenian Recipes, published in 1949 by the Armenian General Benevolent
Union) and there they were, under "Mixed Pickles No. 2." Turns out the world's best
Armenian pickles are just like the world's best Bulgarian and Persian and American
pickles, except they include dill, and sometimes green beans and coriander seed.

So this is an old, old recipe belonging to the whole human family.

END-OF-GARDEN PICKLES

Vegetables:

Green tomatoes*, cut in half or quartered if large
Carrots, peeled and cut into strips
Cauliflower, separated into small florets
Baby onions, peeled, or larger onions halved or quartered
Green peppers, cut into broad lengthwise slices
Garlic, two peeled cloves per quart jar
Medium-hot peppers, two small whole peppers per quart

You can also add unpeeled and untaxed small cucumbers, zucchini, or lightly cooked
green beans, though we never did. The hot peppers add adventure and zest, but if you
prefer to save your tears for really sad occasions, why not?

Amounts and proportions depend on what vegetables you have and how many quarts you
plan to make. You don't have to have the green tomatoes, and the other things can be
bought in a grocery store. But you do need a variety of vegetables, and you have to
have the onions and garlic, or you won't have the world's best pickles. You will
have the world's so-so pickles, and that would be a shame.

Armenian-Persian-Bulgarian Brine

To one quart of water add 1/4 cup pickling salt (salt that isn't iodized), and one
cup of white distilled vinegar. Bring the mixture to a boil. This is enough brine to
cover two quarts of mixed pickles, with a little left over.

Processing

Follow the canning instructions in a good, standard cookbook. Or, if you plan to eat
them right away, pack the vegetables into clean quart jars, pour over them the hot
brine, and keep the pickles covered in the refrigerator. Some of the more
impressionable vegetables, like zucchini, will be ready to eat in only two or three
days.


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