Every way of making pink pickled onions, the greatest condiment

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  • Опубликовано: 7 авг 2022
  • Thanks to HelloFresh for sponsoring this video! For 16 free meals with HelloFresh across 7 boxes AND 3 free gifts, use code ADAMRAGUSEA16: bit.ly/3H8Rbgh
    My old video about anthocyanins (which make onions pink): • Why food is blue (or u...
    My two favorite methods for pink pickled onions, based on the experiments in this video:
    FAST: Slice a red onion into thin wedges from tip to root. Dump them in boiling water for 10 seconds, drain the hot water, then cover them all the way up with room temperature vinegar plus a little lime juice (and maybe some water if you like them less tart), a pinch of salt, a handful of sugar, and maybe a few spices. Let cool and then keep in the fridge for a week or two. They're pickles as soon as they cool down.
    SLOW: Slice a red onion into thin wedges from tip to root. Cover them about 2/3rds of the way up with room temperature vinegar plus a little lime juice (and maybe some water if you like them less tart), a pinch of salt, a handful of sugar, and maybe a few spices. Throw them in the fridge and stir once or twice over the next few hours. They'll be pickles in about a day. Keep in the fridge for a week or two.
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Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @JustBilly123
    @JustBilly123 Год назад +2368

    picked onions

  • @shawaam
    @shawaam Год назад +662

    It's amazing how Adam seem to answer every question possible without having to be asked. All I was thinking after all that boiling of vinegar was if that didn't smell awful and lo and behold, he answered that too.

    • @TheModdedwarfare3
      @TheModdedwarfare3 Год назад +46

      Adam is very good at creating content for a real audience. He doesnt just put something out there.

    • @ultru3525
      @ultru3525 Год назад +15

      It's probably a familiar smell for anyone who's ever had to descale a water kettle. It reeks, but it's one of the fastest, cheapest and safest way to remove limescale buildup.

    • @themastermason1
      @themastermason1 Год назад +6

      I did the boiling vinegar version once long before I saw this video. My parents were wondering what the hell was going on when they smelled the vinegar fumes permeating the house.

    • @Strasedon
      @Strasedon Год назад +5

      @@ultru3525 I prefer citric acid for descaling. No vinegar smell and for coffee makers it seems like it doesn't need as much flushing to remove the excess.
      It's also recommended by the manufacturer of my dishwasher for cleaning the tub and is a lot less expensive than the prepackaged cleaners.

    • @ultru3525
      @ultru3525 Год назад +2

      @@Strasedon Never tried it, but no doubt it can work just as well, though I imagine it’s not quite as cheap as vinegar.

  • @casey6556
    @casey6556 Год назад +393

    “White distilled vinegar, more often used as a cleaning product than as a food”
    That’s definitely something I notice as a Canadian when in the States. Here white vinegar is quite common as a condiment, especially for things like fries. The first time my mother tried getting fries with non-malt vinegar in the US, she was deeply confused by the fact that when she asked for “not malt, just clear white vinegar” the server responded “… the stuff we clean the floors with? You want to *eat* that?”

    • @ultru3525
      @ultru3525 Год назад +65

      I get a similar feeling whenever a recipe calls for baking soda. It makes sense though, both cooking and cleaning can be seen as applied chemistry, so of course acids and bases are essential to both, and vinegar and baking soda are cheap, easy ways to decrease or increase pH levels respectively.

    • @candice_green
      @candice_green Год назад +48

      Yeah... a lot of restaurants in the US, even of the sit-down variety, simply don't have any white vinegar at all. Since moving here, I actually considered buying a box of vinegar packets at one point so that I could stash some in my purse. It makes no sense to me that Americans have salt and vinegar chips, but use ketchup on their fries, yet think ketchup chips and vinegar on fries seem bizarre.

    • @SimuLord
      @SimuLord Год назад +8

      I had that same thought; I have a bottle of white vinegar at home, but it's purely used as a degreaser for my glass cooktop, not as any kind of food.

    • @blackenedfeatherz9503
      @blackenedfeatherz9503 Год назад +12

      That last statement is weird to me even as someone from the us 😭

    • @cleanerben9636
      @cleanerben9636 Год назад

      Why the hell would you clean floors with vinegar? America is such a backwards place.

  • @caelandemaziere7939
    @caelandemaziere7939 Год назад +959

    Hey Adam, a video i'd be interested in seeing is one similar to your dough one, but with mashed potatoes. Just looking at how much, if any, milk, cream, eggs, butter... to add and what it does to the mashed potatoes. Cheers

    • @krankarvolund7771
      @krankarvolund7771 Год назад +64

      That could be a great idea ^^
      One of the recipes I would like him to try is Joel Robuchon's mashed potatoes, he's a great french chef, famous for a recipe of mashed where he use a lot of butter, like almost a quarter of the potatoes XD

    • @aragusea
      @aragusea  Год назад +639

      On the list!

    • @jacobgentile3351
      @jacobgentile3351 Год назад +18

      My mother swears by cream cheese in hers

    • @mooltz
      @mooltz Год назад +12

      Eggs? Is that really something people do?

    • @sTarT4231
      @sTarT4231 Год назад +4

      my mom always puts mayo in hers but i don't think i'm a fan

  • @magmanaught4532
    @magmanaught4532 Год назад +2511

    Adam Ragusea and Ethan Chlebowski can at least agree that pickling onions is always a good idea

    • @MrTheSmoon
      @MrTheSmoon Год назад +152

      i feel like ethan and adam would agree on more than just that

    • @LelouDX
      @LelouDX Год назад +93

      @@MrTheSmoon They'll most likely vibe over Mexican food. Both of them seem to like Mexican food

    • @patrick4662
      @patrick4662 Год назад +217

      they'll find a way to get into the details and disagree lol. When an academic meets a consulting bro god kills a kitten.

    • @magmanaught4532
      @magmanaught4532 Год назад +101

      @@MrTheSmoon oh yah obviously I’m just referencing the small thing where Ethan made a video responding to Adam’s deep frying video, and the two fanbases kinda blew up at each other

    • @flashfive23
      @flashfive23 Год назад +8

      @@MrTheSmoon they would literally disagree on every single other topic

  • @washinthewind
    @washinthewind Год назад +429

    FWIW, as someone who made a living making pickles for almost 5 years, the amount of spices in that container is probably enough for 1-2 onions worth of pickles. If Adam used 1/2 an onion, I can see why it would be so "spiced."

    • @bertaboy9078
      @bertaboy9078 Год назад +62

      Folga wooga imoga womp

    • @IronManhood
      @IronManhood Год назад +9

      @@bertaboy9078 ok

    • @dankerbooper741
      @dankerbooper741 Год назад

      @@bertaboy9078 laga ooger loap

    • @socksbysil
      @socksbysil Год назад +25

      pickle salesman

    • @Theo-oh3jk
      @Theo-oh3jk Год назад +1

      Do you know where I can find pickled vegetables in US markets? I discovered them and really like them, but I can never seem to find anything besides pickled cucumber.

  • @nadiavandyne694
    @nadiavandyne694 Год назад +119

    Gotta say, my favorite way to pickle onions is also probably the easiest:
    1. Buy a jar of bread and butter pickles
    2. Eat the pickles
    3. Slice a bunch of red onions and add them to the brine you didn't have to make
    4. Wait a day or two
    5. Enjoy delicious pink b&b onions
    This works especially well if you haven't quite finished the purchased pickles because then you don't have a couple days without pickles.
    You can do this with just about any veggie and type of pickle brine, just be sure to slice whatever raw veg pretty thinly.

    • @whybrch
      @whybrch 8 месяцев назад +4

      that's a great idea!

    • @sixstringedthing
      @sixstringedthing 8 месяцев назад

      If you're a a fan of dill pickles/Polski ogorki, that leftover brine also works great for onion, carrots, lebanese cucumber, etc.
      Only if you like the strong flavour of dill weed though.

    • @stevethea5250
      @stevethea5250 5 месяцев назад +1

      whats bread and butter pickles ?

    • @StormTrackerWV
      @StormTrackerWV 4 месяца назад

      THAT is absolutely brilliant!!! 😊😊😊

    • @mirnasimmi4901
      @mirnasimmi4901 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@stevethea5250 pickles that have a bread and butter flavor. Sweet pickles basically.

  • @Viigan
    @Viigan Год назад +273

    I'll eat anything pickled. Whenever I can see that I won't be able to eat a vegetable before it goes bad, I pickle it. This led, among other things, to the discovery that celery slices make surprisingly good pickles. Many years ago I pickled a giant jar of green tomatoes with vanilla, put them on a shelf in the shed so they could mature, and forgot about them. I found them seven years later, and it was one of the best (pickled) things I ever tasted. I ate the full jar in less than a week - and only later found out that green tomatoes contain solanine and you should be careful how many you eat of them a day. Luckily I survived without so much as a stomach ache.

    • @soylentgreenb
      @soylentgreenb Год назад +11

      Standard recipe here for anything pickled is 1:2:3 ratio of 12% vinegar, sugar and water. This is *way* too sweet; but it's an old recipe from back before refrigeration that just kind of stuck. Adding a crap-ton of sugar reduces water activity and inhibits the growth of mold and bacteria quite effectively; but it just makes pickled onion taste like "onion marmalade" and that's awful.

    • @rayf6126
      @rayf6126 Год назад +15

      The solanide compound might have been destroyed by the pickling process. Why vanilla with the tomatoes?

    • @JBergmansson
      @JBergmansson Год назад +8

      @@soylentgreenb You probably meant 1:2:3 for sugar:vinegar:water, right?

    • @Viigan
      @Viigan Год назад +22

      You may be right about the solanine; a quick googling shows that (some claim that) fermentation breaks down solanine and that solanine in potatoes can be neutralised with vinegar, so the same should apply for green tomatoes. The vanilla was only for taste, as I remembered that my mother had once served green tomatoes pickled with vinegar, sugar and vanilla. I was slightly disappointed in the taste of mine a couple of days after I had made them (which is probably why I forgot about them for so long), but when I "found" them again... wow.

    • @brucetidwell7715
      @brucetidwell7715 Год назад +11

      7 years??! In a Shed??! OMG! Here in Atlanta where it gets up to 95-100f *outside* of the shed in the summer, even one year would turn them to green slime.

  • @MarkoTroter
    @MarkoTroter Год назад +41

    Advice for all non-Americans here, check how acidic your vinegar is. I made this mistake when trying Ethan Chlebowski's version (heinz vinegar - ~5% acid); didn't check that i have been using vinegar twice as strong.

    • @Biithill
      @Biithill Год назад +8

      This is actually very good point. Here where I live our "cheap vinegar" is 10% so its way too strong for these pickled onions at undiluted. I know because I made that same mistake.

  • @jmcmonster
    @jmcmonster Год назад +273

    I have been making these for about the last decade. I have also experimented with many of the techniques, but personally landed on the 50/50 water to vinegar ratio. I heat it up with some salt, whole peppercorns, and mustard seeds. I do let it cool a bit before pouring over the onions to at least preserve some of the texture. I also like to add a tiny bit of beet juice after things have cooled or even brine from some pickled beets. Really amps up the color and adds a touch of earthiness. It’s hard to go wrong, though. Just give them a shot!

    • @stam7250
      @stam7250 Год назад +6

      Seems like the best idea is to do a lil bit of every technique.

    • @walnutsandbeastiality866
      @walnutsandbeastiality866 Год назад +1

      Pepper?
      _,,Porsche Cayenne. _*_Like the peppa."_*
      (Carmela Soprano showing off her Porsche Cayenne to Ginny Sac, The Sopranos, 1999)

    • @user-rn3rn6nl3h
      @user-rn3rn6nl3h Год назад +2

      Red peppercorns are another option to enhance the color, I'm going to try your idea with beets. Thanks.

    • @amastercuber3738
      @amastercuber3738 Год назад +1

      this one sounds SO GOOD thank you for sharing I'm definitely gonna try this :)

    • @tomimantyla8236
      @tomimantyla8236 Год назад +2

      I also made these, and boy they were acidic! But I used 10% white vinegar, and now noticed that Adam had 5% vinegar. I guess I have to dilute it next time.

  • @ArashiinStormdragon
    @ArashiinStormdragon Год назад +396

    Adam, be careful about reusing pickling solutions that you made pickles in before. The osmotic action of salt and sugar will gradually raise the pH as water comes out of new vegetables or fruit, and increase the likelihood of creating an environment that’s hospitable to mold and yeasts. I made a batch of umeboshi with a standard salt and citric acid quantity, and used some of the rendered juices to start a new batch, bottling some of the leftover juice. After bottling the juice from the second batch, I left both bottles in my cupboard for a few weeks before checking on them. The first bottle was still clean and clear, but the second bottle had blue mold and cloudy strings of bacteria growing in it. Consider pointing this out in your podcast this weekend, please.

    • @nerdcave0
      @nerdcave0 Год назад +27

      Thanks, I always wondered about this. The pickling solution gets weaker and more diluted with each use too.

    • @xarcaz
      @xarcaz Год назад +17

      You can always use a pH meter to check the acidity and add distilled vinegar to compensate for the dilution. As for the salt and sugar, you can always give it a taste and add more according to taste.

    • @MegaRobboz
      @MegaRobboz Год назад +59

      that's a good tip for anyone thinking about doing so but he specifically points out at the start of the video to not put these anywhere else than the fridge. Seems redundant to point it out again.

    • @evertime123
      @evertime123 Год назад +24

      Again store in fridge, not in the ideal environments for mold growth

    • @senormoll
      @senormoll Год назад +13

      Anyone doing things at room temperature like this should be weighing their ingredients too so that they know their exact salinity. If you do 2% salt by weight for example then all you have to do is add 2% salt for the new fresh ingredients as well. Osmosis isn't a factor in that case since everything is uniform, and any pH below 4.5 is food safe (which, if your pickles are >4.5...you'd know, but a pH meter is always nice)

  • @johanflorin4430
    @johanflorin4430 Год назад +21

    When it comes to pickles, my Indian wife's family has introduced me to what might now be my favourite condiment - achar! They describe homemade achar as being "pickled" in oil and a binch of indian spices, and left out in the sun. I suspect there's some fermentation going on because of this, and it's frickin delicious. I would love to see a video on achar from you at somem point; you always have interesting stuff to add on these topics :)
    Love from Sweden!

  • @acommenter4252
    @acommenter4252 Год назад +292

    My dad used to do this in little bowls, he would stick a beet, some vinegar, and slices. Sit for like a few hours. They would be cool and pink and go with anything. Pickled onions are awesome, so versatile and tasty.

    • @im_a-walking_shitpost_machine
      @im_a-walking_shitpost_machine Год назад +16

      i wish i had a dad

    • @csgas0
      @csgas0 Год назад +10

      @@im_a-walking_shitpost_machine i wish u had a dad

    • @SimuLord
      @SimuLord Год назад +7

      @@im_a-walking_shitpost_machine A punk kid got pulled over and said to the cop "Do you know who my father is?"
      The cop shot back, "Does your mom?"

    • @84Tacos
      @84Tacos Год назад +1

      I love pickled beets as well

    • @fameless0
      @fameless0 Год назад +2

      @@im_a-walking_shitpost_machine i wish I had pickled onions

  • @FlorianLautenschlagerdocop
    @FlorianLautenschlagerdocop Год назад +61

    What are the odds of this being uploaded literally while I'm typing "Adam Ragusea pickled onions" into the search bar? Great timing, Adam!

    • @umbertlambert2113
      @umbertlambert2113 Год назад

      YOU LIE!!

    • @treyhudson73
      @treyhudson73 Год назад +1

      Are you a wizard!?

    • @user-ze7sj4qy6q
      @user-ze7sj4qy6q Год назад +1

      depends if you heard on the podcast that mondays video would b this and knew his upload time lol, if that then yeah p high otherwise 🤯

    • @LARKXHIN
      @LARKXHIN Год назад +2

      Type Adam Ragusea tofu next please

    • @unteren_text5425
      @unteren_text5425 Год назад

      The odds are zero because that didn't happen

  • @Nitsirtriscuit
    @Nitsirtriscuit Год назад +383

    “Don’t cut the onion straight! It’ll get pungent!”
    Me, an onion lover: “yes that is the purpose of the onion”

    • @corwinchapman4565
      @corwinchapman4565 Год назад +35

      I had the same thought, I want to be hit in the head with a brick by my pickles and onions and pickled onions.

    • @Memu_
      @Memu_ Год назад +1

      @@dark_wyvern8880 Shut up

    • @africanwarlord4283
      @africanwarlord4283 Год назад +6

      yes officer, this post right here

    • @eXJonSnow
      @eXJonSnow Год назад +6

      Exactly! When I put onions on a burger, I want to taste and smell some damn onions

    • @turquoise7817
      @turquoise7817 Год назад +4

      @@eXJonSnow for a burger that's what you'd want, yes, but if you cut them straight for pickling (or any use where they'll be sitting for a while), they'll actually lose more pungency compared to cutting them the other way. obviously as adam's shown, for pickling it doesn't matter much in the end, but if you don't cut them straight, you instead will get that pungency when you bite into the onions, instead of it being lost into the air. probably.

  • @sabatino1977
    @sabatino1977 Год назад +14

    His tip at the end is really good. This year I had a bunch of cukes all at once in the garden and I took a jar of pickles that was empty of pickles but full of liquid, and just cut up the fresh cukes into the liquid. In a day or two you’ve got this kind of hybrid between a pickled cucumber (a “pickle”) and a fresh one. Still retains a bunch of crunch but also starts to take in the flavors of the pickle juice.

  • @TheSlavChef
    @TheSlavChef Год назад +156

    I love pickled onions! Maybe the best condiment to ever exist. Also onions are unable to store water inside them because there is always a leek.

    • @williamvouk2911
      @williamvouk2911 Год назад +2

      *picked onions

    • @blablup1214
      @blablup1214 Год назад +1

      How do you eat them ? Never heared of pickled onions. I know pickled cucumbers , but pickled onions ? Do you eat them as they are as a snack ? Or are you just putting them on stuff ?

    • @TheSlavChef
      @TheSlavChef Год назад

      @@blablup1214 My bad, I eat only picked ones.

    • @TheSlavChef
      @TheSlavChef Год назад

      @@williamvouk2911 my bad comrade, my bad.

    • @hinotefanatic
      @hinotefanatic Год назад +9

      Bah dum tiss! 😂

  • @LARKXHIN
    @LARKXHIN Год назад +170

    Love the idea that Lauren learned cooking from Hello Fresh and not her husband's youtube channel.

    • @atuskaMleinaD
      @atuskaMleinaD Год назад +18

      THIS.
      My wife is the *exact* same. Initially, I was the home chef. Then, after she got seriously into Hello Fresh, she started experimenting and now she switches to a new ethnic cuisine every few months. Now she can re-make just about anything she's done from memory. She surpassed my meager culinary skill a few years back; I couldn't be a happier loser. 😋🤤😁

  • @JoshStLouis314
    @JoshStLouis314 Год назад +43

    White onions and half beet juice/vinegar is my go-to, the beets add a hint of earthy flavor that pairs with the bite of the onion, plus they turn a deeper shade of pink to eventually almost purple.

    • @JackBlackNinja
      @JackBlackNinja Год назад +3

      thanks for this tip!

    • @wamlartmuse
      @wamlartmuse Год назад

      Lol I was thinking about that the whole time. Gotta be the spiced beets right?

    • @aiaioioi
      @aiaioioi Год назад +1

      EARTHY?...do you peel your beets?

    • @squiddies6896
      @squiddies6896 Год назад

      @@aiaioioi they taste earthy tho

  • @tinkersdinkers
    @tinkersdinkers Год назад +19

    god i love how straight to the point you are, never fails to make me happy even after years

  • @seanirby8838
    @seanirby8838 Год назад +9

    Mr. Ragusea's recipes for refrigerator pickles convinced me to make my own. I used to home-can pickles when I lived out in the sticks, but now I have the luxury of refrigeration and love all the different kinds of pickled vegetables that are possible with just a few basic ingredients and a day or two of patience.

  • @joylox
    @joylox Год назад +34

    I made pink pickled carrots... But that was because I bought a packet of rainbow carrots and one variety has a pink skin that leeches colour onto the white ones. I did them the traditional canning method as I wanted to preserve them for using in sushi and tacos year round (I did a few flavours). These ones are really good on falafels, and now I want to make some. All my onions I grew were super tiny, so it would work fine for a couple servings.

    • @RunninUpThatHillh
      @RunninUpThatHillh Год назад

      You could also do fermented carrots (healthier). I did my pathetic tiny carrots we grew last year😂😂 they taste so good and last up to a year afaik.

  • @jafizzle95
    @jafizzle95 Год назад +11

    Homemade pickles (from the garden preferably) are one of those grab-a-fork-and-stand-in-the-fridge type snacks. We made a lot of pickles growing up. Cucumbers and onions go well together in the same pickle.

  • @ThisThingGoesFaster
    @ThisThingGoesFaster Год назад +12

    Tremendous video about a tremendous food. My sister in law was the first person I saw quick-pickle onions a few years ago, for tacos, and I was in love with the pickled onion forever more. I've made it cold and hot, and I always have a jar in the fridge ready for any meal (a tremendous addition to a breakfast sandwich), but I never had the patience to figure out which was better or why, because any pink pickled onion was better than no pickled onion.
    In small but very tangible ways, this channel makes life a little better, and a little more tasty. Great stuff.

  • @Natu-hari
    @Natu-hari Год назад +6

    Worth pointing out that the vinegar you're using is at a 5% concentration. Here in Northern Europe vinegar is often sold at 9-10% strength, in which case using half water is probably recommended.

    • @Skeptic2006
      @Skeptic2006 5 месяцев назад

      The reason I came here. Used 10% vinegar with the 50/50 vinegar/water ratio and after rinsing them a bit added them to noodles. Way too strong and started to experience digestive discomfort immediately. Should be kinda obvious to check the concentration first but hey now I know. I will be using 1/5 ratio for now on or even less so I can skip the rinsing part.

    • @a-bird-lover
      @a-bird-lover 5 месяцев назад

      from what I remember too, be careful of 4% vinegar because it's not as certain to kill off any microorganisms, and it's flat out unsafe for canning or fermentation

    • @Skeptic2006
      @Skeptic2006 5 месяцев назад

      @@a-bird-lover Yeah this recipe is just for taste and not preservation.

    • @a-bird-lover
      @a-bird-lover 5 месяцев назад

      @@Skeptic2006 I know, just adding the warning.

    • @a-bird-lover
      @a-bird-lover 5 месяцев назад

      he did also add that the acidity should kill off any ick (though fermentation wasn't recommended like this) and you could keep it for a couple weeks pretty safely, where in 4% that might not be the case and it's worth watching out for

  • @Elazul2k
    @Elazul2k Год назад +40

    I've never actually done this with vinegar before. I've always used lime juice, but I mainly use them for tacos or nachos. I also don't just do onions but serrano chilis with salt. They're really good.

  • @rileywebb4178
    @rileywebb4178 Год назад +9

    Next do a caramelized onion shootout! I'm fondest of the method using high heat and frequent stirring, and deglazing when the frond is close to burning. It's the fastest method without adjusting pH (which may lead to mushiness) but it is definitely hands-on and most home cooks don't seem to use high heat like cooks do.

  • @hrydgard
    @hrydgard Год назад +32

    Great experiment! Just missing a little note about the acetic acid concentration in the white vinegar you are using, I'm guessing 4-5% - from an international perspective, the "default" white vinegar you can buy here in Sweden (called ättika) has a 24% acetic acid concentration, which requires some care with the measurements!

    • @ChopSuck
      @ChopSuck Год назад +6

      This is a very good point and he doesn't mention it at all. At 3:45 it looks like he is using 5% as you suggested. My local has about 5 different types with varying levels.

    • @FaerieDust
      @FaerieDust Год назад +7

      Yes, this! Confusing vinegar and ättika is a mistake you only make once, that's for sure 😅

    •  Год назад +4

      Great point. In Hungary we have mostly 10% and 20% concentrations, I use the former in food, and the latter to clean my coffee pot, it removes limescale like a charm :D

    • @helkalantto7534
      @helkalantto7534 Год назад +5

      This is what I was thinking as well. The stuff that I'd think of as my local version of distilled white vinegar (väkiviinaetikka or spritättika) has 10% acetic acid concentration. It's interesting what sort of things we take as given so that it doesn't really even occur to us that things could be different -- such as the acid concentration in distilled vinegar.

    • @rayf6126
      @rayf6126 Год назад +3

      In the US almost all vinegar sold as food grade is 5%. There really is no variety except for cleaning vinegar which is usually 15% to 20%.

  • @viever9158
    @viever9158 Год назад +11

    Thanks so much Adam! I literally just bought the ingredients to make pickled onions and planned to make them tonight! I’ll definitely be using this video.

  • @Blue3lephant
    @Blue3lephant Год назад +18

    Something I didn't see you mention (and I actually learned from a hello fresh recipe), but for a quick pickling solution you can submerge the onions in the acid and microwave it for 30 seconds. Did this with radishes and it worked surprisingly well.

    • @georgeprout42
      @georgeprout42 Год назад +3

      Yeah, definitely not "every way" of making them. I was hoping for the chamber vacuum machine method, but I guess not many people have one. My OH watched as the bowl of onions/vinegar/salt boiled. When the lid popped open she passed me an oven glove. Grinning, I put my finger in to the cold bowl. Physics. Now I'm going to have to compare how boiling with heat and boiling by vacuum affects the texture...

    • @greenylee1
      @greenylee1 Год назад +7

      @@georgeprout42 what does "OH" stand for?

    • @thunderbob20
      @thunderbob20 Год назад

      @@greenylee1 other half?

    • @petemitchell5428
      @petemitchell5428 Год назад +5

      @@greenylee1 OppenHeimer

    • @greenylee1
      @greenylee1 Год назад

      @@thunderbob20 I figured, but I don't remember anyone asking for my input on "OH" being short for "Other Half"...I don't approve. (I'm joking in case it's not clear, lol)

  • @nunya___
    @nunya___ Год назад +2

    You are the perfect food educator. You always answer all the questions, explain the chemistry/science and test the logical things. THANK YOU.

  • @mattwilson8298
    @mattwilson8298 Год назад +67

    Adam: Literally teaches people how to cook.
    Lauren: Learned to cook from a box

    • @aniyn
      @aniyn Год назад +3

      Tell me you fight with your wife in the kitchen, without saying you fight with your wife in the kitchen.

  • @zarblitz
    @zarblitz Год назад +8

    I appreciate the no BS videos. Summarizing the findings right at the start is very welcome. I'm still going to watch the rest because I love pickled onions and I'm interested, but glad to know there's no better way than I already do it.
    "We don't eat these pickles on their own" - speak for yourself!

    • @holmd90
      @holmd90 Год назад

      I wouldn't say I eat them on their own, but I add enough to any dish that you might as well consider them to be the main ingredient

    • @zarblitz
      @zarblitz Год назад +1

      @@holmd90 Yeah you can't really make a meal of them on their own, but that doesn't mean I won't snack on them by themselves.

  • @FineAndAndy
    @FineAndAndy Год назад +114

    It would be an interesting follow-up experiment to keep making pickled onions with the leftover brine from the previous batch over and over, measuring the ph each time (and tasting each time) to see the difference over time. How many times can the liquid be reused safely?

    • @jameshaulenbeek5931
      @jameshaulenbeek5931 Год назад +11

      Yeah, if you're not doing a lactic fermented pickle, you really shouldn't reuse it for very long.
      But that's the beauty of lactic fermentation - you can keep it going almost indefinitely.
      For that you need a specific % of salt by weight, but it's different depending on what veggie you're using.

    • @__lasevix_
      @__lasevix_ Год назад +1

      Until bacteria start producing unwanted chemicals, so between once and a few weeks' worth

    • @Arikayx13
      @Arikayx13 Год назад +5

      I use left over pickle juice for this, I’ve tried doing multiple runs but it’s too watery/thin by run 3 to work well without adding more vinegar.

    • @garethbaus5471
      @garethbaus5471 Год назад +4

      @@Dessun if a hot brine process is used you should be able to effectively restart that clock every time you make the pickles since you have an almost sterile brine at the start of every batch, which makes the number of times you can do this effectively limited by the rising pH of the vinegar with every batch.

    • @williamboshi1855
      @williamboshi1855 Год назад +3

      @@garethbaus5471 you can kill bacteria but some bacteria emits toxic waste(toxins ? idk) that can't be killed with heat and idk if those can accumulate with each batches

  • @Diie89
    @Diie89 Год назад

    I am SO HAPPY you at least mentioned re-using the pickle juice in the video. At home my dad asked me the very same thing!
    I of course gave it a try but instead of throwing cucumbers after a batch of red onions, I used even more red onions (since the first batch got eaten rather quickly) and noted a distinct increase in pungency and lack of sweetness in the second batch of pickled red onions!

  • @McFlingleson
    @McFlingleson Год назад +8

    "Imagine the onion as a globe, with the blossom and root end representing the North and South Poles."
    Adam has an interesting way of looking at things sometimes.

    • @0ThrowawayAccount0
      @0ThrowawayAccount0 Год назад +2

      It is literally called a "globular cut" in cooking books.

  • @gutmicrobiomequeen
    @gutmicrobiomequeen Год назад +14

    💙 Added bonus, both the onions AND the vinegar are fantastic for your gut microbiome 🥰

  • @edt1201
    @edt1201 Год назад +9

    They are fantastic on almost everything, the thumbnail does NOT lie.

  • @godofannoyance
    @godofannoyance Год назад +1

    Fantastic video, thanks for making it, honestly. I really enjoyed the flow of the experiment to the associated facts and back and forth during the steps of it all. Your takes on crunchy-ness and flavor were good too, will keep in mind when I try some variations myself!

  • @partlycurrent
    @partlycurrent Год назад +2

    I feel like the pickling craze has really gotten a new drive within the last year. Friends of mine that I never talked to about it have started, I've been making onions and other pickles for about a year and a half now, youtubers are making more and more pickling videos and so on.
    I'm all for it!

  • @emartinez5350
    @emartinez5350 Год назад +5

    The way we usually do it around the household is lime juice, oregano and habanero. It works great ! It’s herbaceous, spicy and lemony ! You should try it Adam it’s delicious !

  • @ujai5271
    @ujai5271 Год назад +4

    Thank you for doing these. I love seeing "field tests" like this.
    But also: this shirt is practically radiating blue.

  • @strongjohn10956
    @strongjohn10956 Год назад +1

    Your note about the Bayless method is spot on. I use the juice of two limes added to a 50% white vinegar/water solution that I do heat, but just enough to dissolve the salt and sugar. I do run the cut onions under hot tap water, but just for a moment.

  • @priayief
    @priayief 11 месяцев назад

    Incredibly helpful and informative. Thanks for posting.

  • @anna-ti2bo
    @anna-ti2bo Год назад +17

    This is perfect because for the past month I've been eating these every day, i'm obsessed they make everything taste even better. i've made them with rice vinegar 1:1 with water and a few tbsp sugar, i've also put thinly sliced cucumber and radish in which works great as well. i'm for sure trying only filling them halfway. Pickled onion worship!!

  • @fragmanize
    @fragmanize Год назад +58

    Hey Adam. These are my favorite topping on the vegetarian nachos my girlfriend orders at a bar we go to, and I’ve been trying to find them in the store FOREVER. You have officially made my day and possibly ruined hers (she hates my onion breath) 😆

  • @justintuesday8483
    @justintuesday8483 Год назад

    Perfect timing. I was just trying to decide which way I should try to do these on my own. Couldn’t be more grateful for this video

  • @alexanderdeburdegala4609
    @alexanderdeburdegala4609 4 месяца назад +1

    Thanks for being so comprehensive, I need to try some of these.

  • @auxchar
    @auxchar Год назад +7

    "It's not like the olden days, where you had to pickle everything that you grew right before the winter, these you can make in small batches, it's fine."
    That's still a very useful way of doing things for rural homesteaders. Believe it or not, there are still places in the US where there isn't just a grocery store a couple miles away.

    • @SunnyMorningPancakes
      @SunnyMorningPancakes Год назад +6

      I think maybe he was leaning more towards the fact that people have home refrigeration now, whereas historically (dependent on area) that refrigeration was only seasonally available, and fresh produce would probably have been spoiled before the weather became cold enough for longer storage?

    • @auxchar
      @auxchar Год назад +4

      @@SunnyMorningPancakes Yeah, that's true for most people, however, when you have a large enough garden, you still have to do something with it before it goes bad, and it's not all gonna fit in the fridge/freezer. Pickling or canning, and then throwing it up on the shelf or down in a basement, out in the garage, etc., still makes a lot of sense in that case.
      It's true that commercial produce is available all year, but everything you grow is something you don't have to buy, something that doesn't have to be shipped halfway around the world to get to you, and home grown produce is still just as seasonal as it has historically ever been.

    • @icedcat4021
      @icedcat4021 Год назад

      I mean if you are that far away from a grocery store what are the chances you have an internet connection and are watching this video

    • @auxchar
      @auxchar Год назад

      @@icedcat4021 Well, I'm not one of them, but I know they're out there.

  • @mordekaihorowitz
    @mordekaihorowitz Год назад +7

    This is vain, but I feel so validated every time Adam considers something I happen to enjoy making to be great. Pickled pink onions are so so good

  • @monocore
    @monocore Год назад +1

    Came back to your channel after a hiatus. Your content really got that much entertaining, awesome job Adam.

  • @Magmafrost13
    @Magmafrost13 Год назад +2

    I've been doing my picked onions alongside pickled red cabbage recently. I use them both for the same thing, I like them both, so I figured I might as well just mix them together. Gives an even more vibrant colour, too.

  • @LiaBee1993
    @LiaBee1993 Год назад +4

    if you want bright pink ones, add some shreds of red cabbage! that's what I do and it's very pretty, plus the pickled cabbage is actually really good too (although I'm sure you could just use cabbage/beet puree or something too)

  • @maxrobomutt
    @maxrobomutt Год назад +12

    I love making these, pretty much always have a jar of them in my fridge lol

  • @Tohei08
    @Tohei08 Год назад

    thank you for this experiment. I just starting making picked onions this past year, and I appreciate the work and science you put into this.

  • @mpaszti
    @mpaszti Год назад

    Such a to-the-point and efficiently structured video. Bravo. Also, your fact-based approach to cooking is, as always, refreshing.

  • @jakmanxyom
    @jakmanxyom Год назад +3

    1:45 I cut my onions like that while making onion fritters - didn't know the direction would affect how pungent the slices would be. Coincidentally, that pungency is kind of the 'essence' that I want to flavour my fritters - I immediately soak the slices in slightly salted cold water to extract it more into the liquid that I'd add to the batter later...

  • @sarahkramer8954
    @sarahkramer8954 Год назад +4

    I accidentally discovered cold-pickled onions when experimenting with making home vinegars. I was wanting to save off all the vinegar, but didn't want to ditch all the onions. Yes, the texture was a bit slimy compared to the fresher version, but the complexity of the flavors was amazing. They also lasted for over a year, FWIW.

  • @lyagushkha8490
    @lyagushkha8490 Год назад +1

    Wow, this video is just what I needed, I wanted to make some pickled onions but didn't know what method to use. Thanks Adam

  • @Ucceah
    @Ucceah Год назад +1

    dont forget about the OG pickling method, lactic acid fermentation! it gives the onions a destinct and very savoury taste, with a lot of umami, and a strong but appetizing sulfurous lovestank.
    it's not a quick method, but a lovely little project with addictive results! and supposedly incredibly healthy too.

  • @randomutubr222
    @randomutubr222 Год назад +3

    Hey Adam, I’ve got an experiment you might find interesting to try. I haven’t seen anyone else so this:
    When it comes to cooking with wine, it’d be interesting to just cook wine down alone, by itself. Boil off the alcohol and let it reduce just by itself. Do this for a number of different wines (of varying price points and perceived quality etc) and see how you discern the taste, how strong the flavor is (I.e., how much flavor would it actually impart in recipes?) etc.
    You could try this with both white and red wine.
    I’m sure you could fit in some sciencey stuff to talk about in there as well which is always a hit on your channel.
    just a thought!

  • @corwinchapman4565
    @corwinchapman4565 Год назад +18

    so in terms of the samples 3 and 4, the difference between full-vinegar and half-vinegar would be that the full vinegar ones ostensibly taste better as a food compliment, such as on the nachos you used as a test bed, but the half-vinegar ones might be a better choice for eating by themselves, perhaps as part of a crudite platter? Crackers and sliced meats and such? Just trying to get a sense of the taste.

    • @joylox
      @joylox Год назад +3

      I've done half vinegar traditional dill pickles, and I'd agree with that. They're good on their own or in more mild sandwiches, but not quite enough flavour to have in a burger. Still good, and I'm glad I made them (I grew too many cucumbers this year).

  • @DarrenStephens1
    @DarrenStephens1 Год назад

    This was just terrific… Thank you for all your detailed, hard work on our behalf!

  • @klaaswonders2802
    @klaaswonders2802 Год назад

    Adam, I just really love how you casually add a bit of chemistry and biology. Like it is fun to watch because of the food but it is very satisfying when recogning or relearning theory. You're definetly one of my favorite youtubers

  • @Eric1SanDiego1
    @Eric1SanDiego1 Год назад +8

    "First bisect the onion longitudinally, pole to pole..."
    "...and everything equilibrates across the entire mass."
    I absolutely _love_ Adam's sesquipedalian vocabulary.

  • @jonjohns8145
    @jonjohns8145 Год назад +4

    I the Levant (and other areas surrounding) the second most popular pickles is Pink colored Turnips. The pink is achieved by adding a few slices of red beets or some red beet juice in with the pickle. The most popular pickle is cucumber or snake gourd, You get that EVERYWHERE.

    • @aragusea
      @aragusea  Год назад +1

      Those are also very good

    • @smokeymirror6550
      @smokeymirror6550 Год назад

      That sounds delicious

    • @Dagothig
      @Dagothig Год назад +1

      I'm far too lazy to actually get red onions to pickle them, so I stole the beet trick from the pickled turnip recipes and throw in a beet! I find the color you get nicer, and the beet tastes quite nice

    • @jonjohns8145
      @jonjohns8145 Год назад

      @@aragusea I would love to make some snake gourd pickles but it's almost impossible to find in the US, and I have black thumbs (everything I plant dies) so I can't even grow it myself 😞

  • @MannyJazzcats
    @MannyJazzcats Год назад

    I cannot put across exactly how pleasing the detail in this video is,I love pickled vegetables more than life itself.

  • @wizpig64
    @wizpig64 Год назад

    YES thank you for sciencing out this staple!

  • @Krvsrnko
    @Krvsrnko Год назад +8

    If you have the time, Id highly recommend making lacto-fermented onions. Slice the onions, put them into a sealable jar, pour some salt water on them, and let them rest in a warm place for a week or so. When they start to bubble, they're done! The most complex and delicious way to make onions, and it holds for forever in the fridge.

  • @LuomuKekkonen
    @LuomuKekkonen Год назад +5

    About the quality of the vinegar, while I haven't been able to really tell the difference between the cheap and expensive vinegars either, one thing to note is that at least here in my country the cheap ones (labeled only as "vinegar") are a byproduct in oil refinement, while the bit more expensive ones (labeled "spirit vinegar", not sure about the english term) are made with grain. While it's hard to tell the difference in taste, I still kind of feel more relaxed eating the one distilled from grain 😁

    • @NegativeC84
      @NegativeC84 Год назад +2

      Finnish vinegar is generally 10% and his vinegar seems to be 5%. so add water if you want to replicate this recipe

  • @ohiasdxfcghbljokasdjhnfvaw4ehr
    @ohiasdxfcghbljokasdjhnfvaw4ehr Год назад +1

    yessss, i love food tests. thanks for doing this! hope to see more!

  • @General12th
    @General12th Год назад

    Hi Adam! I love these comparison videos!

  • @miabussell0229
    @miabussell0229 Год назад +6

    Pink Picked Onions! Oops! I hope you mean pickled, haha!

  • @sandakureva
    @sandakureva Год назад +6

    I've actually never made pickled onions. I'm gonna try that though.
    Adendum: I am going to the store to get some stuff to make pickled onions.

  • @deeanthony7713
    @deeanthony7713 Год назад

    Thank you for ALL your videos, but I just LOVE this onion one!!!!!!!

  • @ATaylor369
    @ATaylor369 Год назад

    I like the shirt Adam! I just drove cross country which took me from Memphis TN to Bristol VA and back again.

  • @juts89
    @juts89 Год назад +3

    Ive definitely eaten these months out and not even thought twice about it. Not sure how stable they are or how safe that was, but never seen them go off. I was using boiled vinegar though

    • @tz8785
      @tz8785 Год назад

      Probably influenced in no small part by heat or how much acetic acid was in the eventual pickling liquid.
      ruclips.net/video/oVO_e5AFLws/видео.html

    • @mikaelgillberg7555
      @mikaelgillberg7555 Год назад

      I've been eating them all my life and never had any issues with them going bad. If the last a long time in the fridge (not common) they just turn dull.

  • @Alice.59
    @Alice.59 Год назад +3

    The best method I ever tested was to cook the onions in a bit of olive oil with lot of the spice you want and a little bit of sugar, until they are really soft and transparent but with still a little crunch
    Boil water+vinegar 55/45 , onion in a clean jar, hot vinegar on top, wait till it's at room temp and then in the fridge for 12h et voila, best picked onion you will ever taste

  • @dawnhabeck6364
    @dawnhabeck6364 8 месяцев назад

    Interesting advice from all the comments....
    I really appreciate your thorough experiment!!!

  • @Spafinky
    @Spafinky Год назад +1

    I love the nod (may be unintentional) to Alton Brown's show Good Eats, with that Kosher salt container. My dad is a huge Alton fan, and I grew up watching that show. Great episode, by the way! As usual!

  • @41A2E
    @41A2E Год назад +7

    I really wish I liked pickled onions! On paper they sound like a highly versatile culinary commodity. Also, as you mentioned they seem to be the hottest thing right now with cooking youtubers.
    My sister makes them all the time, but I've tried a couple different recipes she made and really did not care for them... Perhaps some modification to the recipe could make them more palatable to me? I don't know. It's kind of a bummer that so many recipes online use them now, but I really just don't like the taste.

    • @justforplaylists
      @justforplaylists Год назад +2

      Do you know what it is that bothers you? The texture, smell, spiciness, sourness, sweetness, the combination, etc?

    • @jhumberstone6452
      @jhumberstone6452 Год назад +1

      You can probably train yourself to like them if you try them with a few different other foods over a period of time. I have heard 8-12 times trying something you don't currently like will change your mind, you just have to decide whether it's worth it! (my partner did this with olives and will now happily buy and eat them. Took several years to get there though, trying different kinds every 6 months or so.)

    • @Daniel-ph6cs
      @Daniel-ph6cs Год назад +2

      Don't worry, you don't have to like every food. I myself don't care that much for pickled onions either. To me they taste like mild onions that are sour, which is not that special. But I can understand that some people like them.

    • @41A2E
      @41A2E Год назад

      @@justforplaylists To me it's just a general funk. I don't care much for pickled cucumbers either, with the exception of kosher dill, which I love. It's the smell and the "sourness" that are the primary offenders of the onions(I love sour, but again it just tastes funky when it comes to the pickled onions)
      I know kosher dill pickles are sweeter than regular, but i also hate sweet pickles. Not sure why it's just kosher dill that like. If pickled onions tasted more like kosher dill maybe I'd like them more, but I wouldn't know how that's accomplished. :P

    • @justforplaylists
      @justforplaylists Год назад

      @@41A2E I think Kosher pickles usually have more salt and garlic and are fermented.

  • @squidjam
    @squidjam Год назад +14

    Hi. So, maybe a thing to test, but my Grandma always advised against using metal utensils with stuff that was pickled.
    It may have to do with flavor or an adverse bacterial reaction (though, as you said, this are not the 'store for years' kind of pickles, so maybe that's why there's no problem?).

    • @aragusea
      @aragusea  Год назад +36

      With reactive metal like aluminum or cast iron, yeah, it would matter if you left the acid in contact with the metal for a long time. But the whole point of stainless steel is that's nonreactive. Nonetheless, glass is probably the safest material for the long soak in the fridge.

  • @JMK15
    @JMK15 2 месяца назад

    This was such a great video. Learned a ton. Thanks 🙏🏻

  • @yellowflowerorangeflower5706
    @yellowflowerorangeflower5706 Год назад

    I appreciate the summary at the beginning of the vid.

  • @saraharas7890
    @saraharas7890 Год назад +3

    So Adam, my mother-in-law just showed me some pickled veg she made ( cauliflower, Aubergine, cucumber, carrots) and she just put them in a jar with vinegar, salt and sugar and left them for two weeks. But from what you said I gathered that there should be more precaution involved when it comes to pickling hygiene. Could you make a separate video about that please?

    • @lisahinton9682
      @lisahinton9682 Год назад +6

      @sarah aras
      Your mother-in-law has no-doubt been making pickled veg for many decades and knows what she's doing. Adam didn't say "At the 2-week mark, it all becomes unsafe, and toss it out." He said, paraphrasing, "To be the safest and surest, make only enough to last a couple of weeks, then make more, since the process is so simple." He even said to not toss the liquid when the pickles are gone and to re-use it for more pickles.
      Go on and tell your mother-in-law she doesn't know what she's doing and see how fun your marriage becomes.

    • @OsirusHandle
      @OsirusHandle Год назад +1

      Theyre probably fine, you should just sterilise everything and pull the air out if you want them to really last a long time. A good way if you have glass jars is to boil the jars without their lids (just above water line, make sure the heat isnt too high to avoid cracking the glass) with the lids submerged, then if theyre at 65 C for a minute you can seal them while hot and they should be fine out the fridge for a few years if not longer. The heat should force a vacuum if they are sealed with silicon or sterile cloth or something.

  • @MasterGeekMX
    @MasterGeekMX Год назад +6

    Mexican here. In the mayan peninsula what they do is pickle red onions in sour orange with salt, oregano and habanero pepper. That is called xnipec sauce (pronounced "sh-nee-peck"). The lime juice thing is basically a substitute of the sour orange. Vinager also works. The key is the oregano and the habanero.

    • @Hans-iq3fn
      @Hans-iq3fn Год назад

      That sounds like what I ate in Belize. Lots of food stalls have a jar of mysterious pickle topping and I wasn’t sure what was in it, but it definitely had oregano. Some were a cabbage and red onion blend.

  • @aguijohn1321
    @aguijohn1321 Год назад

    I can't like this video enough... MORE COOL CONDIMENT VIDEOS! This was awesome. I was able to make a big batch while my computer was spinning to print a large document ... at work (remote).

  • @wendyhannan2454
    @wendyhannan2454 Год назад

    Thank you Adam 😊 I like the first sample. I wouldn’t blanch them, it would soften them up. I like the crunch.

  • @FlowerBoyWorld
    @FlowerBoyWorld Год назад +3

    hey adam, something that comes to my scientifically drilled mind when i see this video and the kenji story as well is that none of these tests are double blind and i think that could be a fun thing for you to do in in some future videos. just have someone relabel you samples and write down which is which, you'll try them without knowing what it is, write down (or record) what you think and afterwards match them to the sample. i'm very sure that there are many taste tests where confirmation bias is a huge factor.

  • @colemanpinkerton2736
    @colemanpinkerton2736 Год назад +8

    Wow this video is incredible timing! I’ve been thinking a lot about pickled vegetables lately, actually more about fermented ones like the “old school” pickled ones.
    I think you may want to look more into the process of fermenting vegetables. I recommend “The Art of Fermentation” by Sandor Katz, who actually contradicts some of what you said about the difficulty of fermentation. The reality is, people have been using fermentation as a very robust form of preservation for maybe 10,000 years… it does not require complex tools and measurements to be safe, nor does it require anything close to sterility. Cleanliness is fine. I think if your willing to smoke your own meat in the back yard you should definitely try some veggie fermentation! Kimchi maybe? I’d love to see it.
    I think a lot of why many people are a little intimidated by fermentation is fear of botulism, but what’s funny is botulism is actually not really a threat given the correct pH levels, which can easily be measured by taste, tho pH strips are cheap as well. The community of lactic acid bacteria and yeasts that does the actual fermentation inhibit the growth of mold and other contaminants. In fact, IIRC botulism was not really a recorded food contaminate until the development of canning processes, which produces a sterile environment that will enable the rapid growth of botulism if the spores are not killed during the canning process (by reaching 121 C for a while).
    Love the video, pickled onions are the best!!!

  • @darksideofdonny
    @darksideofdonny Год назад +1

    Man you’re the coolest Adam! I just recently started pickling lots of stuff this year!!! Thanks for all your work! You are truly appreciated! My favorite thing to pickle is cabbage right now. Perfect for hot dogs.

  • @LE0NSKA
    @LE0NSKA Год назад

    I JUST tried this and was planning on a new try. this timing is incredible

  • @german_saucedo
    @german_saucedo Год назад +3

    Hi Adam! I suggest trying the lime ones again but with a lot less lime (maybe a couple of limes). You can also try to dice them. That's the way it is generally done in Yucatan with cochinita pibil. What we do is to dice the onion, put it in a bowl with the juice of a couple of limes, some mexican oregano (1 tsp apron.) and a habanero (or half) leave it out of the fridge. We generally do this one to two hours before eating. I think you'll like those.

  • @Chowdahhh
    @Chowdahhh Год назад +3

    I've been doing method number 4 for a while now, though sometimes they'll definitely be sitting in my fridge longer than a couple weeks (esp if I make multiple jars from a big onion), but I think I'll experiment a little the next few times I make them. I think half water/half vinegar without boiling and just half vinegar will be the ones I try

  • @AnnabelSmyth
    @AnnabelSmyth 10 месяцев назад

    I found a wonderful recipe for pickled onions which included sliced radishes! They were delicious... need to make some more.

  • @SuperJaXXas
    @SuperJaXXas Год назад +1

    Great episode, very informative! Maybe a future episode on salt fermented pickles?

  • @josephschmitt733
    @josephschmitt733 Год назад +4

    I always felt that French cut had a better mouth feel and texture than slicing on the latitude. Seemed more “tender and crunchy” when sliced French. Maybe from the preservation of more cell walls? Who knows. Maybe that’s just me.

    • @rawkhawk414
      @rawkhawk414 Год назад

      I kinda felt the same for a similar reason. If the onion's vascular system runs top to bottom then it also likely has more tensile strength. Like although it'd hard to imagine I bet it's harder to pull an onion apart with your hands than it would be to split it in half with your hands. I think it's why onion rings are floppy. French cut onions tend to have spines whereas ring cut onions have like a ring of vertebrae not supporting anything lol.

  • @bib144
    @bib144 Год назад +7

    I made them once with another basic recipe. They were extremely oniony, pungent and hot, almost like eating just a vinegary onion. I couldn't figure it out if it was supposed to taste like that or i did something wrong.

    • @MrRilarios
      @MrRilarios Год назад +1

      I would suggest to go in the route of blanching them first, and try to combine lime and vinegar, or just limes.. I always tought that they we're too pungent for me, but once I blanched and pickled them in lime they tested way better for me. I think it is just a case for experimenting and trying to nail the Best flavour for You .

    • @bib144
      @bib144 Год назад +3

      @@MrRilarios thanks ill try that when i have the chance. I kind of feel left out since so many people love and put in on everything whereas it was like biting an onion to me lol.

    • @loicquivron3872
      @loicquivron3872 Год назад +1

      Had thé same expérience, i then made 1:3 vinegar:water ratio, using rice vinegar+ boiling and it was much better

  • @StormTrackerWV
    @StormTrackerWV 4 месяца назад

    I came across this looking for a "copy cat" of First Watch's pickled onion recipe! Loved this video and your scientific explanations! I especially loved that you included the baking soda "base" version to show the reaction vs. the acid--I have never actually done that & found it fascinating! 😊😊😊

  • @DonnieX6
    @DonnieX6 Год назад

    Perfect timing! I was just about to make some pickled onions, as I just bought some red ones! :) Will go the route "fill up halfways with vinegar"