Home
   All Items
   View Cart
   Monthly Specials
 
Condiments
   Dressings
   Mustards & Sauces
   Heat & Serve
   Relishes
   Salsas
 
Jarred Fruits
   Preserves
   Fresh Packed Fruits
   Fruit Butters
 
Pickled Foods
   Cabbage & Krauts
   Mushrooms
   Peppers
   Pickled Eggs
   Pickled Garlic
   Pickled Vegetables
   Pickles
   Salads & Slaws


   
 

Pickled Vegetables


Pickling can be tracked back to as early as 2030 BC when cucumbers brought from their native India begin a tradition of pickling in the Tigris Valley.

Any food can be pickled, but a "PICKLE" used as a NOUN refers to a pickled CUCUMBER. There are pickled vegetables of all types, which you will find in the Jake and Amos Line.

Pickling is one of the oldest methods of preserving foods. Pickling is the preserving of food in an acid (usually vinegar), and it is this acid environment that prevents undesirable bacteria growth. However, how and what kind of acid gets into the liquid is what can cause some confusion about the use of salt.

Most pickled foods are salted or soaked in brine first to draw out moisture that would dilute the acid that is added to 'pickle' the food.
  • Vinegar can be added directly to the liquid that the food is placed in.
  • The food can be place in brine (salt and water) - this is what causes confusion. Even though it may seem that pickling can be done with either an acid (vinegar, etc) or salt, which is not strictly true. That is because the amount of salt in the solution is carefully measured to allow natural fermentation which produces lactic acid. So pickled foods that are made with brine (salt and water) are really made with an acid- - but instead of directly adding acid, conditions are created so that the fermentation creates its own acid! This is a tricky process because just enough salt needs to be added to prevent the growth of undesirable bacteria, and the correct temperature maintained, to still allow the growth of several specific bacteria that produce lactic acid.
  • Some cucumber pickles are made with a combination of both methods. They are soaked in strong brine with vinegar added in specific proportions so that they still ferment and produce additional acid (lactic acid).

Source: >> http://www.foodreference.com/html/artpickles.html


Thank you for your interest in our Jake & Amos products.

To purchase Jake & Amos products please click on any of our
categories to the left. You can rest assured with our secure checkout.

Order from Jake & Amos today!

 
© 2012 Jake & Amos - Fruits & Vegetables from Pennsylvania Dutch Country