Inside The New York Botanical Garden

pickles

Morning Eye Candy: Jarred Temptation

Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on July 16 2012, by Matt Newman

Why cover your work with a label when the food sells itself? Look for Millport Farms’ pickled everything when you stop by the Greenmarket this coming Wednesday (it’s every Wednesday, 9 to 3 p.m., every week through late November). For my two cents, the habanero pickles are life-changing–if you don’t mind your lips tingling.

Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen

Mario Batali’s Edible Garden Recipe of the Day: Pickled Shallots

Posted in Mario Batali's Edible Garden on September 23 2011, by Ann Rafalko

From August 27 – September 25, families can explore Mario Batali’s Edible Garden in the Ruth Rea Howell Family Garden and enjoy daily gardening activities and cooking demonstrations showcasing kid-friendly recipes with the chance to sample and search for ingredients in the garden. We are posting the recipes from Mario Batali’s Edible Garden here on the NYBG blog, Plant Talk, so check back often.

Pickled Shallots

Jason Neve, Executive Chef, OTTO Enoteca Pizzeria, Las Vegas

Allium HarvestPickled shallots make a great addition to leafy green and vegetable salads, adding a crunchy bite and tart counterpoint to the dish. They’re especially delicious with a roasted beet salad.

1 cup water
2 cups sherry vinegar
1 tablespoon sugar
2 tablespoons salt
½ cup shallots, peeled and sliced paper thin against the grain
1 tablespoon pepper

Place water, vinegar, sugar, salt, and pepper in a small sauce pan and bring to a boil. Remove the liquid mixture from the heat and set aside.

Peel the shallots and using a mandolin, slice them as thinly as possible to make rings. Place the sliced shallots in a non-reactive bowl and pour over the warm pickling liquid. Cool the mixture to room temperature, then place in storage vessel and refrigerate for up to one week.

Morning Eye Candy: Pickles!

Posted in Photography on August 12 2011, by Ann Rafalko

NYBG staffers and a group of visitors get into the spirit of this month’s Dig! Plant! Grow! theme in the Ruth Rea Howell Family Garden, Pickle Me! Want your own pickles? Come visit the Family Garden daily after 1:30 p.m. and get in on the briney action.

Pickle Party

Pickle Party (photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen)

Last month’s theme was Sweet and Stinky. Didn’t make it to the Garden to sample the recipes full of alliums? Never fear! Here are the delicious recipes. We’ll post the pickle-tastic recipes here soon!

 

Tip of the Week: The Versatile Cucumber

Posted in Gardening Tips on August 24 2009, by Sonia Uyterhoeven

Sonia Uyterhoeven is Gardener for Public Education. Join her each weekend for home gardening demonstrations on a variety of topics in the Home Gardening Center.

Pickling cucumbers at the Farmer's MarketLast week I told you of the nutritional merits of beets. Cucumbers can’t make the same clame to nutrition—there is a small amount of vitamin C in a cucumber, but aside from that it is mostly water.

But don’t despair. Cucumbers often show up in face creams, and you’ve no doubt seen the stereotypical facial with two slices refreshing and covering eyes. Cucumbers with their softening, beautifying, and anti-irritant properties have swept the cosmetic world by storm.

For me, cucumbers remind me of my youth. With my childhood culinary bible, The Joy of Cooking, in hand, I set about in late summer to make my annual batch of pickles, with varying rates of success. I took great pride in growing the pickling cucumbers from seed and then seeing them find their rightful place in the cupboard in a jar surrounded by cider vinegar, dill seed, and garlic.

My sister has one of the best smoothie blender, she would toss cucumbers into the blender to whip up her daily cup of gazpacho. The English serve them for high tea in all their simplicity, lightly salted on open-faced sandwiches with mayonnaise or butter. They are an indispensable part of any good crudités.

There are many types of cucumbers for the home gardener to try. There are fancy heirloom cucumbers such as ‘Lemon’, which looks like a strange hybrid between a lemon and a cuke; pickling cucumbers that range from the size of a cornichon to a 6-inch long spear; Burpless varieties with thin skins and mild flavor that are easier to digest; and Asian varieties that are sweet and long with tiny seeds.

If you are trying to decide between growing a slicing (salad) cucumber and a pickling cucumber but only have space in the garden for one variety, know that pickling cucumbers make excellent slicers and slicing cucumbers can be made into pickles. However, you will need to decide how much space you will dedicate to them. Many of the vining cucumbers easily spread 6–8 feet while the more compact bush varieties cover a 2- to 3-foot area. Bush cucumbers, such as ‘Spacemaster’, ‘Salad Bush’, ‘Bush Champion’, and ‘Parks Bush Whopper’ are ideal for containers. Containers should be at least 12 inches deep and will need to be fertilized every 2 weeks with a fish emulsion.

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