Pickling Onions Made Easy! - Historical Food Preservation

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  • Опубликовано: 30 июл 2024
  • Today we show you an excellent historical recipe for traditional pickled onions! This method is from The Housekeepers Pocketbook from 1739. You have to try this out! It's delicious!
    #townsendspickledonions
    Our Website - www.townsends.us/
    Instagram - / townsends_official

Комментарии • 317

  • @binx2smooth
    @binx2smooth 7 лет назад +254

    The wife of an English friend of mine makes pickled onions in malt vinegar. Once the onions are eaten up, he keeps the flavored vinegar in little bottles for fish and chips. He brought some to the USA on a visit. AMAZING!

    • @aliceinmadseason2319
      @aliceinmadseason2319 6 лет назад +17

      Alan Oak that sounds soo good! Gotta love our brethren from over the Atlantic

    • @SvenTviking
      @SvenTviking 4 года назад +5

      Oh yes! On your fish.

    • @nemoanon5615
      @nemoanon5615 3 года назад +2

      So true.

    • @littlehorhey5285
      @littlehorhey5285 3 года назад +6

      Trust me, nothing beats a portion of perfectly cut, chunky chips fried in goose fat, a beer-battered cod served with mushy garden peas and tartar sauce, topped with sea salt and pepper for the chips and a squirt of lemon juice over the fish, completed with a traditionally made pickled onion, the vinegar from which goes great on top of the chips. Everyone ought to sit on a bench in a British coastal town and eat that, for it is a blissful experience. Going home to a nice cup of tea only completes it. You guys don't know what you gave up 200 years ago...

    • @madada727
      @madada727 3 года назад +2

      @@littlehorhey5285 bring it back 😏 because this sounds so amazing! I could only imagine:)

  • @dawnmorris3718
    @dawnmorris3718 6 лет назад +107

    Sliced pickled onions on a roast beef and horseradish sandwich! Yum yum.

    • @rmfoodreviews2201
      @rmfoodreviews2201 3 года назад

      That sounds horrific

    • @jeffallan3140
      @jeffallan3140 3 года назад +6

      Sounds delicious.
      I used to slice them thin and put some inside grilled cheese sandwiches.

    • @MrRufusjax
      @MrRufusjax Год назад

      Yup. Exactly!

  • @keithdawes2685
    @keithdawes2685 7 лет назад +111

    In England EVERYONE eats pickled onions. A lot of us pickle our own To peel onions quickly, top and tail them, then put in a bowl, cover over with hot water, wait for 15 minutes, and you will find that the skins can be lifted off easily with your fingers. And to get a superb flavour, only use English malt vinegar. Thank you for a really good video.

    • @guidoahsam8043
      @guidoahsam8043 7 лет назад +5

      ok thanks/ I hav to try again. I just boil my onion and now thy are to sooft. I wil go buy mor onoin in morning and cover with hots water

    • @lxn_ni1814
      @lxn_ni1814 6 лет назад +3

      and you end up with half cooked onions good job

    • @The_Joker_
      @The_Joker_ 6 лет назад +4

      Keith Dawes ‘EVERYONE’

    • @garethfairclough8715
      @garethfairclough8715 5 лет назад +4

      Good lord no. Not everyone.
      I can tolerate a tiny bit of a single pickled onion, but that's it. They're just too much, too tangy, too tart.

    • @elizabethprior4968
      @elizabethprior4968 4 года назад +4

      Gareth Fairclough have you tried the sweet pickled onions? They’re a lot more palatable

  • @mikepellerin4611
    @mikepellerin4611 5 лет назад +12

    Thanks for the upload. I was a weird kid growing up. I liked pickles, liver and onions, cabbage and broccoli. I once found an old Colonial Cook Book in my public Library in Massachusetts. I hand copied (this pre-dates Xerox machines) many of the recipes. I still have a few of them, many got lost or fell apart. That was in the 1960s. Since then I scour old book stores and now the internet for vintage recipes to add to my collection. I also collected many of my Family Recipes. I'm the sole keeper of many of my Grandparents and Parents recipes. Family recipes should be shared with everyone. Maybe Townsends should make a Vintage Recipe Repository, where folks could put their favorite recipes up by Decade?

  • @Crimsonedge1
    @Crimsonedge1 5 лет назад +31

    Yeah, once you've pickled them, so long as you store them in the vinegar in some kind of screw-top jar, they don't need refrigeration at all. Just store in a cool dark place away from extreme temperature variations.
    They're edible even after a couple of years. 5 year old pickled silverskins that have just been stored in a kitchen cupboard are the oldest I've eaten and they were still in good condition. Definitely edible. Assuming they carried on in the same manner, I dare say they'd have still been good after a decade. The high acidic content of the vinegar removes worries of things like botulism rearing its ugly head.
    Then again, between all the natural chemicals in onions and the ones in the vinegar, you're unlikely to ever get spoilage from rot or mould either. I'm not willing to say its impossible as absence of proof is not proof of absence but I know for sure I've never seen mould develop in a jar below the level of any vinegar.
    Its why we humans learned to pickle in the first place. It works.

  • @toddcanterino3376
    @toddcanterino3376 7 лет назад +44

    That skinning technique is a life changer in the kitchen. LOL. Thanks.

    • @intuit5767
      @intuit5767 7 лет назад +3

      ABSOLUTELY!Many times I've subbed chopped onions for pearl onions just because they were such a pain to peel.

    • @cherriemckinstry131
      @cherriemckinstry131 4 года назад

      @@intuit5767 yes the pickled onions with herring are great.

    • @terryplew3333
      @terryplew3333 4 года назад

      Exactly. I hate peeling off onions.

  • @Jayman2800
    @Jayman2800 7 лет назад +38

    He seems like extraordinarily happy about this video.

  • @debbieboring3422
    @debbieboring3422 5 лет назад +14

    I have never had pickled onions. But I love the crisp crunch when you ate one, that sounded so good.

  • @peterdurnien9084
    @peterdurnien9084 8 лет назад +157

    you seemed to have missed the most important thing in pickling onions. Get the hardest ones you can, soft onions will only become mush. Properly pickled onions that I made lasted 14 months in jars in a cupboard, they were still crunchy.

    • @townsends
      @townsends  8 лет назад +65

      +Peter Durnien Thanks for your suggestion!

    • @notmyuseristolethis
      @notmyuseristolethis 8 лет назад +13

      You guys are great! So glad I found your videos.

    • @Gunsmith420
      @Gunsmith420 8 лет назад +14

      good tip thanks

    • @scottsonewyork
      @scottsonewyork 4 года назад +3

      Good info. I thought pickled onions only last 2 weeks in the fridge. I canned some red onions recently and the recipe I used said they should be consumed within a 2 week period. Is the recipe incorrect?

    • @personplaceson4488
      @personplaceson4488 3 года назад +4

      @@scottsonewyork There are "fridge" pickles recipes that don't last that long as your "storage" pickles

  • @terry902
    @terry902 2 года назад +4

    Pickled sliced red onions is a great favorite here with tacos or sandwiches. Love your videos, thanks for what you do to present and encourage historic interpretations. Nothing like period cooking inspiration. Also the preparation and historic layout is a visual delight.

  • @saungbriesen
    @saungbriesen 7 лет назад +8

    We tried this recipe and it turned out fantastic. Your suggestion on how to peel the onions saved us a lo of time, thank you.

  • @candiwalkowski7480
    @candiwalkowski7480 7 лет назад +29

    My great-grandmother would pickle garlic with her dill pickles - they were so delicious, we would have fork fights over the cloves!

    • @FrikInCasualMode
      @FrikInCasualMode 7 лет назад +6

      We still have them :D My brother is a pickled garlic fiend LOL

    • @candiwalkowski7480
      @candiwalkowski7480 7 лет назад +6

      I'd still have them, but she passed away years ago, and we live in a tiny apartment in a city, with no yard to garden in and no space to store much in the way of canned goods.
      Someday we'll have our own house and grow and can most of our own food, like I did with her and my uncles and grandma, and give my son the experience I had, but not any time soon.

    • @FrikInCasualMode
      @FrikInCasualMode 7 лет назад +4

      Aww, sorry to hear that :(

    • @nellz72
      @nellz72 7 лет назад +5

      +Candi Walkowski My father used to put garlic in with his German dill pickles. Cauliflower and carrots too. I used to try to get to the garlic before anyone else because it was sooo good. So I understand what you are saying. Hopefully you can get a place where you are able to do that again.

    • @laurametheny1008
      @laurametheny1008 6 лет назад +2

      Candi Walkowski In the meantime don't they have something in stores? I know they have olives with garlic cloves and other things. My bro loves the olives with garlic inside instead of pimento.😍🍀

  • @rachelhudson8362
    @rachelhudson8362 6 лет назад +6

    Pickled onions are still popular in the uk. We use a special spice mix readily available and we use malt vinegar,

  • @braunsteinfreres8930
    @braunsteinfreres8930 3 года назад +1

    Pickled onioins with some dry sausage and cheese and french bread is the best meal of all time. This recipe is very helpful.

    • @TmGRAV3Z
      @TmGRAV3Z Год назад

      That sounds very good!

  • @debbienarkansas1926
    @debbienarkansas1926 3 года назад +1

    You read my mind of what I am doing today.! Going through all the food storage ideas I can. I was looking for onion storage ideas and this is one.! I am thankful you have this video.!

  • @TomsBackwoods
    @TomsBackwoods 9 лет назад +3

    Thanks so much John! We are about to harvest our onions and this will be something new to try! Fantastic!

  • @MT0707
    @MT0707 6 лет назад +2

    Best part as always is Jon tasting the food. I love your channel.

  • @miketype1each
    @miketype1each 4 года назад +3

    Those onions appear to be monster good! Yes, I have a "Townsends" folder in my favorites list. This recipe is now in it.

  • @waynepreston5637
    @waynepreston5637 4 года назад +3

    I love pickled onions and always have, thank you for your video.

  • @PeninsulaPaintingProjects
    @PeninsulaPaintingProjects 4 года назад +2

    I really love this video. The passion & presentation makes me want to make my own. Also thank you for being so respectful to British traditions

  • @sk3ch1
    @sk3ch1 7 лет назад +23

    They are still eaten mainly in pubs or family parties, we have them on wooden tooth picks with a small piece of pineapple and cheddar cheese.

    • @addanametocontinue
      @addanametocontinue 7 лет назад +5

      Yep, very popular in Asian culture, too.

    • @Wotdermatter
      @Wotdermatter 7 лет назад +8

      What you say is slightly askew. The onions put onto toothpicks, along with other foods, are small silver onions and are pickled slightly differently. In England, we do not use the same onions as presented in the above recipe but a slightly larger brown onion. Put the onions into boiling water for 45-60 seconds then put them into ice cold water before peeling. Do not put into cold water and then bring to the boil as that often makes the onions go soft as they become cooked onions. Then put the onions into a plastic bag along with sea or kosher (both without iodine) and seal the bag. Put the bag to one side and leave it overnight. Turn the bag and its content several times to ensure the onions get salted properly. Next morning, wash the onions a few times to remove the outer layer of salt, before continuing the pickling process. Incidentally, malt vinegar is easy to obtain. In Toronto, I buy 4 litres (yes, I spell the UK way as I am English and prefer that system) for about CAD10.00 at wholesale suppliers. Don't buy many small bottles from the supermarket as that is expensive. When the pickles are put into containers, usually glass jars, leave for 6-8 weeks before eating. When in storage, turn the jars upside down a few times to spread the spices around more evenly. I have just dug through my vast collection of recipes (being an erstwhile chef, I have thousands of recipes), and include it here for you.
      Pickling Spice Mix #1
      Ingredients
      1 tbsp mustard seed, 1 tbsp. whole allspice, 2 tsp black peppercorns, 2 tsp whole cloves, 1 tsp ground ginger, 1 tsp hot pepper flakes, 2 small bay leaves, broken, 5 cm/2" cinnamon stick broken into small pieces, 1 tsp cardamom
      Method
      Mix everything together and keep in an airtight container in a cool place.

    • @zackmash851
      @zackmash851 6 лет назад

      pineapple? gross

    • @elizabethprior4968
      @elizabethprior4968 4 года назад +1

      Zack Mash - cheese, pineapple and silver skin pickled onion is actually a fantastic taste combo for a bite sized munch. Sweet/sour/salty/soft/crunchy/tangy =yum. Don’t knock it until you try it

    • @zackmash851
      @zackmash851 4 года назад

      @Women & Women First there is no pineapple in teriyaki, thank god because sweet and sour sauce is gross AF due to its inclusion

  • @philgawthrop2518
    @philgawthrop2518 6 лет назад +3

    Jon, our fathers worked together for years. I’ve been to your store several times! Love it! I’ll be in next visit to Columbia City. Great job, keep up the good work!

  • @ophieb2320
    @ophieb2320 6 лет назад +3

    Really enjoying your preserving series, I can't wait to see how my sauerkraut turns out! The onions are next on my list. Thanks so much!

  • @erikroggeman7620
    @erikroggeman7620 7 лет назад +5

    just harvested 500kg of small onions last week, so I will definitely give this recipes a try.

  • @aidanngreenwolfe200
    @aidanngreenwolfe200 9 лет назад +3

    I love pickled onions. This recipe sounds tasty! I'm going to make them today. Your Channel is so interesting.. I love it.

  • @f.livingston6705
    @f.livingston6705 7 лет назад +2

    Thank you for the recipes! I love your show and the history :-)

  • @TessCooks4u
    @TessCooks4u 9 лет назад +13

    Oh yes, they look yummy. Definitely will be pickling some onions. TFS :)

  • @Healingpoppy
    @Healingpoppy 2 года назад +2

    That's the exact recipe my grandmother used when I was little (Birmingham, England), she used brown malt vinegar. I'll do mine this way. Thank you for the lovely memory you gave me :)

  • @Danfromoverthere
    @Danfromoverthere Год назад

    I love your channel so much! Thanks for all the videos you put up! This one was great!

  • @PIGGBUKKITT
    @PIGGBUKKITT 8 лет назад +6

    piccalilli is also something to try. it's pickled vegtables in mustard pickle. some recipies are far better than others.

  • @brianoconnell6459
    @brianoconnell6459 9 лет назад +2

    Okay, liking the otherwise intrusive Google notifications, I was just telling mom your show was excellent for food preserving, she'll love this!

  • @SanaSamaha
    @SanaSamaha 8 лет назад +2

    I really love pickled onions, and these ones look soooo good.

  • @oscarlancaster7196
    @oscarlancaster7196 7 лет назад +10

    wow... Im from mexico (right south the border with az) and i learned how to pickle onions and vegies with my grandma, so many of the techniques of preservation you have shown are familiar for me and I still do them

  • @troynov1965
    @troynov1965 6 лет назад +2

    MY neighbor has a few peach trees and every year we pickle some , talk about GOOD!

  • @kittzy3598
    @kittzy3598 9 лет назад +12

    Now I'm wanting some picked onions

  • @shadeie6395
    @shadeie6395 2 года назад +2

    I first heard of pickled onions in one of my all time favorite book series and have always wanted to try them. I didn't think they where real at first until I saw them at in the British isle at the grocery store today. I was going to pick them up but was a little iffy on em' but after this video I'm buying them!

  • @allanyeats118
    @allanyeats118 5 лет назад +2

    Tried a batch...seasoned with mustard powder. Totally excellent!
    Greetings from the 21st century!

  • @gwiser
    @gwiser 8 лет назад +18

    3:46 that is a really juicy crunch

  • @gladebreeze252
    @gladebreeze252 7 лет назад +8

    so glad i found this channel

  • @howey935
    @howey935 5 лет назад +2

    Love your videos James I’m going to pickle myself some onions this weekend.

  • @TruthAndLight4995
    @TruthAndLight4995 6 лет назад +1

    Corner stores in cities used to sell pickled onions when I was a kid in the 1970's. Great treat!

  • @mrmark4360
    @mrmark4360 3 года назад

    Fascinating post. Keeping history alive and interesting. Thumbs up.

  • @wrexshunt
    @wrexshunt 2 года назад

    I love these videos so keep them coming

  • @rachelhudson4662
    @rachelhudson4662 7 лет назад +6

    In the UK we have prepackaged pickling spices . I have been know to use whole masala spices on occasion,with very good results.

    • @wuggieofthehood3711
      @wuggieofthehood3711 6 лет назад +1

      Rachel Hudson We have prepackaged pickling spice in the US too

  • @bluebluedogbooks
    @bluebluedogbooks 8 лет назад +1

    That is such a simple recipe, I think I'll give it a try!

  • @luckydavis9246
    @luckydavis9246 5 лет назад +1

    Your shows always make me hungry

  • @Marcel_Audubon
    @Marcel_Audubon 7 лет назад

    Those look delicious! and looks like an easy way to peal the pearls. I'm gonna try it.

  • @jijipoid
    @jijipoid 7 лет назад +3

    I love pickled onions.. especially spicy pickled onions.. XD..My grandma would get jars of picked vegetables and as a child I always picked out and eat most of the onions and carrots..and now i know how to go about making them.. awesome..

    • @julierauthshaw8556
      @julierauthshaw8556 5 лет назад

      I actually liked the pickled turnips, but you really had to dig, as there weren't many of them.

  • @natertater4024
    @natertater4024 5 лет назад +1

    John. I think it's time to see a complete Feist with your pals. All the good stuff at the table

  • @MickScarborough
    @MickScarborough 9 лет назад +2

    These are on my list now.

  • @feralharry7215
    @feralharry7215 4 года назад

    Im definitely making this today. Thanks!

  • @naimairfan5738
    @naimairfan5738 5 лет назад

    His personality is amazing .One of the best hosts ever.can i use white synthetic vinegar.can i use any spices

  • @susannetroost5634
    @susannetroost5634 3 года назад

    It is funny how it seems if you taste everything for the first time! Thumbs up

  • @caringancoystopitum4224
    @caringancoystopitum4224 3 года назад +2

    Pickled onions are extremely good! In Switzerland they are traditionally served to melted cheese (Raclette), usually together with pickled cucumber and boiled potatoes or bread. Though, in all honesty, people usually don't make them themselfs but buy them in the store ;)

  • @detroitos
    @detroitos 4 года назад

    I can't wait to try this.

  • @TracyLoop
    @TracyLoop 9 лет назад +4

    Looks great.

  • @TallCommander
    @TallCommander 8 лет назад +3

    I like this recipe because it doesn't call for sugar. will give it a try

  • @marksmer1
    @marksmer1 6 лет назад

    So cool! Thanks for sharing man.

  • @TheEarGuy
    @TheEarGuy 4 года назад

    I'm in the UK. Yorkshire to be exact. My mum still pickles all the vegetables. Pickled cauliflower is my personal favourite.

  • @Hannah-jk3dk
    @Hannah-jk3dk 3 года назад

    Passion oh I loved this and I am listening again cause I have to write. Hehehe thanks

  • @albertbell7120
    @albertbell7120 Месяц назад

    I top/tail put in water this helps remove outer skin … once this is done and fresh water in a bowl with salt leave for a few days stir them every now and then … and onions to jars fill with vinegar … seal lids and leave them to mature … I love pickles 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

  • @mrgrnjns1111
    @mrgrnjns1111 9 лет назад

    Very nice John.. I definitely am going to try this.. It brings a question to mind.. We used to get this onion relish from this little shop. They used to get it from the Amish in Tuscola, Arcola area and it was wonderful. I was wondering if relishes like this were made in the 18th century.. If so I think an onion relish or a relish episode would be great..

  • @mysteriousyoungman
    @mysteriousyoungman 9 лет назад +1

    You have opened a huge can of worms for me. I love pickled vegetables and grew up with my grandmother pickling corn, beans, and making kraut. We would even have suppers where we would have pickled beans&corn together along with a big bowl of kraut, we called them "rotten suppers". I have a couple of questions. First, was sauerkraut something Americans in the 18th century enjoyed or was this mainly something you would find in German settlements? Second, have you ever run across a pickled green bean? My grandma pickled them and corn, put them together in a pan and they were delicious together. However, too much of a good thing could have some aftermath. I love your videos by the way, they open this young historians eyes to 18th century food. I believe studying food history is something that is neglected, even though we have now have "food historians" and you can study for a degree in this in some universities. There are so many questions I want to ask you but I will try to break them up so you do not receive a novel from this guy in NC. Keep doing what you do because this is great. One small question, you have the memento mori ring which I am thinking of buying. Was it usual for a man to wear more than just a wedding ring in the 18th century or was this something you would only see with the gentry?

  • @dittejensen2909
    @dittejensen2909 4 года назад +5

    2019 anyone?
    Pickled onions are my favourite! Well anything pickled really...except herring. I can't do pickled herring.

    • @bogiewheelman71
      @bogiewheelman71 4 года назад

      pickled herring ,,,, umm good , and so are the onions .

  • @MsDawnnee
    @MsDawnnee 4 года назад

    Oh dear, glad my Gran isn't around to watch that! She made the best pickled onions this side of London! She boiled the vinegar with onions in it, then into steralised jars, with the pickling spice. Left for a couple of months before Christmas....oh I would kill for a jar of them right now! 🤣p.s. and ALWAYS Sarsons Malt Vinegar!!

  • @gonzanan347
    @gonzanan347 9 лет назад +2

    Another great video---thank you. Pickled and fermented foods are very, very good for the digestion. If anyone has problems with indigestion or acid reflux, this is a great natural remedy.

    • @jimnunya2362
      @jimnunya2362 5 лет назад +1

      This is true of naturally fermented vegetables, not ones merely soaked in vinegar.. lacto-fermentation like kimchi, real sauerkraut etc. aid digestion as prognostic foods, this will not

  • @fockjesus
    @fockjesus 4 года назад

    i watch an episode (at least) of your channel a day, thank you

  • @AroundTheCabin
    @AroundTheCabin 9 лет назад +1

    FABULOUS!

  • @paulwild4524
    @paulwild4524 7 лет назад +1

    Sliced pickled onion is the perfect accompaniment to your pork pie!

  • @Crashphoenix666
    @Crashphoenix666 6 лет назад +1

    Recently came across your channel and am loving it!
    Hopefully you can settle a disagreement regarding the leftover pickle/vinegar.
    When all of the pickles were eaten, was the vinegar solution discarded or re-used to make more pickle?
    Thanks for all the wonderful vids and recipes!

  • @dannym631
    @dannym631 Год назад

    Very cool.

  • @johnabritton3307
    @johnabritton3307 6 лет назад +1

    I made this a few times there great

  • @sassydispatch8934
    @sassydispatch8934 3 года назад

    you can buy these at the local British chip shops in 2021
    they're awesome with a battered cod and chips.
    additional vinegar always a plus.

  • @ekurunet
    @ekurunet 11 месяцев назад +1

    OMG! I can't believe! I know this channel maybe for more than 3 years and this is the first video I found that is not ruined horribly by adding music. (There is still music but you can't hear if you don't listen carefully.) He probably forgot adding music; hope he does not add after this comment.

  • @daviddansereau1793
    @daviddansereau1793 7 лет назад

    Fun!! Thanks.

  • @jeepman1961
    @jeepman1961 4 года назад

    Definitely trying this! And I will be buying 2 of your 1 quart jars!

  • @kathleenbuxton6944
    @kathleenbuxton6944 5 лет назад +1

    Great with fish and chips ....thanks for the recipe ...

  • @carrieamoreno
    @carrieamoreno 6 лет назад

    those are some classy jars!

  • @Christophersanchez1326
    @Christophersanchez1326 3 года назад

    10 days and they're done! But I want to eat them now.. Can't wait.😋

  • @AB5FD
    @AB5FD 6 лет назад

    There is a variety of onions, we call them winter onions, that are delicious when harvested in the winter. Tough and woody in the warm months. Tasty winter veggy!

  • @KountryCuz1
    @KountryCuz1 2 года назад

    I love these Pickle Onions

  • @melinaz3385
    @melinaz3385 7 лет назад +2

    Hello, I was wondering if Gary ever thought of making a weight for the crock when pickling onions and such, perhaps like the lid with a nib grip.

  • @radow869
    @radow869 3 года назад

    love your video's.

  • @alexiscolby9415
    @alexiscolby9415 8 лет назад +1

    I would rather watch you than Rachel Ray or Mario Bertolli, you have a lot more charisma the way you share knowledge is like a teacher I had where I remembered everything. I subbed to you just from watching this vid. going off to watch more of your vids!

  • @diegomer
    @diegomer 9 лет назад

    You have great videos!

  • @seamus6387
    @seamus6387 9 лет назад +1

    Man that looks good, love pickled onions! I do make them myself the only difference is I soak them over night in salted water instead of adding salt to the vinegar. And the only way to make them is malt vinegar in my opinion.

  • @michaelschmitz4919
    @michaelschmitz4919 2 года назад

    Baltimore loves these

  • @ssj2matt
    @ssj2matt 5 лет назад

    They're still a staple over here for Christmas.

  • @rossallan3585
    @rossallan3585 4 года назад

    Very late to the party....but Ploughman’s Lunch. Pretty much a 20th century invention, but still.
    Bit of salad (iceberg lettuce, bit of celery, nothing too fancy) Branston Pickle, Pickled Onions, slab of cheddar, slices of ham and some apple. Lovely.

  • @franceslynch3285
    @franceslynch3285 8 лет назад +5

    we peel salt ,wait for soma of the juice to run out then wash ,then put pickling liquid with out salt they last for a year like that .

  • @swallin19
    @swallin19 7 лет назад +8

    For the very best, use shallots, not onions, and add sugar to the vinegar, which should be white, the amount of sugar should be to taste, sip the vinegar and try the flavour. Never pour hot water or vinegar over the onions or shallots, they will be softened. Also a week or two is far to short, more like two months or more, stored in the cool and dark.

    • @shrinewitch
      @shrinewitch 6 лет назад +2

      stephen wallin agreed Stephen. Shallots are top draw.
      I use honey instead of sugar and it really makes a different.
      One month minimum too. Great advice here Mr Wallin.

  • @kevroykevin9101
    @kevroykevin9101 7 лет назад +8

    I make my own malt vinegar. It's fermented beer aged in an oak cask.

    • @kents.2866
      @kents.2866 5 лет назад +1

      This is awesome. I'm a home Brewer and never thought about this. Those little bottles of malt vinegar aren't cheap.

    • @chunkylass8671
      @chunkylass8671 5 лет назад +3

      Until a trip to turkey I didn't realise every country didn't have malt vinegar. It's a staple in the UK lol

    • @kents.2866
      @kents.2866 5 лет назад +1

      @@chunkylass8671 Making beer battered Cod with chips tonight so I'll bring out my bottle. I love the stuff. Is there any other food items people in the UK put it on?

    • @chunkylass8671
      @chunkylass8671 5 лет назад +1

      @@kents.2866 sounds great. Sauce wise hp brown sauce or ketchup used to be the faves. Mayo has got more popular in recent times. Mushy peas are good too. If you having it at home some people might have baked beans with it. (Heinz is the only brand for me lol).

    • @elizabethprior4968
      @elizabethprior4968 4 года назад

      Kent S. I use malt vinegar on all sorts. It’s nice to put black pepper and malt vinegar on fried tomatoes especially if you’re eating it with bacon. I use it on mushy peas for a bit of tang. I use it for some vinaigrettes. I also use malt to pickle all sorts of veg etc e.g. red cabbage, cauliflower, onions, cucumbers, mixed veg. I use it making chutneys etc. It adds a very distinctive flavour which is stronger than other vinegars.
      It makes fantastic batter for fish, onion rings, pineapple rings, fritters etc. And of course on chips(French fries) etc.
      In the U.K. we can also get distilled malt vinegar which is a bit milder - I use that for pickling eggs and other pickles that I want to keep pale in colour.

  • @57WillysCJ
    @57WillysCJ 9 лет назад +5

    Pickled onions were served in many bars and taverns into the 1970s. I doubt there are many traditional places serve what was considered cheap or inexpensive foods for free or at low prices these days.

    • @Okie8T9
      @Okie8T9 4 года назад

      My Grandfather remembers pickled eggs served as a bar food.

  • @dansnow52
    @dansnow52 7 лет назад +5

    John, I made the pearl onions according to your video, and they turned out great. However, it is sometimes hard for me to find them in the store, so I found something you may want to share with your viewers. I went to the feed and grain store and bought onion sets for planting. There is a variety in chose, and they are a lot cheaper. Here in the South, a white, sweet onion set sells for about $1.80 per quart, and the size of the onion is about the same, if not a hair larger. Hope you can use this information. Keep up the good work.

    • @eileenfb1948
      @eileenfb1948 7 лет назад +4

      Be sure that they haven't been treated to help them grow better like they do with seeds.

  • @Jesusandbible
    @Jesusandbible Год назад

    Thanks for being the only person so far I saw that ate them

  • @rodneygoodling5269
    @rodneygoodling5269 7 лет назад

    Super!

  • @ashrak12
    @ashrak12 9 лет назад +1

    My mother's BF, who passed away a few years ago, showed me how to make these. He was from Whales and, they are amazingly good. They are a good bar snack in England. I had no idea we ate them here in the 18th Century in the US. Thank you for being so informative. I love watching your videos and really appreciate you using some of my questions in your videos. I really love learning about our past.

  • @lilykatmoon4508
    @lilykatmoon4508 Год назад

    Omg! Now I’ll use pearl onions more often since now I know an easy way to peel them.

  • @eileenfb1948
    @eileenfb1948 7 лет назад +18

    I would pour the vinegar over the onions while still quite hot, screw on the lid, and as it cooled it formed a seal. No fridge needed, just a cool dark place - cool is easy to find in the UK.

    • @prionoo
      @prionoo 6 лет назад

      eileenfb1948 not really. They will start to ferment and that creates pressure because of the co2

    • @aaronfaucett6442
      @aaronfaucett6442 6 лет назад +1

      The temp must be over 160° in order to pasteurize the onions. Also wash your hands before starting and then you wouldn't have rotten onions

    • @FranklinLaserBlog
      @FranklinLaserBlog 6 лет назад +2

      EIGHTEENTH century cooking.

    • @ceejayedmonds
      @ceejayedmonds 6 лет назад

      eileenfb1948 ydcgfcitobbm

    • @julierauthshaw8556
      @julierauthshaw8556 5 лет назад

      @@FranklinLaserBlog Hahaha, good one! But seriously, when we consider how absolutely blessed most of us are, firstly to be able to see these great videos ON OUR PHONES, no less, but also, I was looking in my small pantry, and counted 6 different kinds of vinegars that I have on hand. Very humbling. I have no business complaining about anything.

  • @howey935
    @howey935 5 лет назад +1

    I like to mix about 50ml of Sherry vinegar to my other pickling vinegar makes a nice background flavour.