Giardiniera (Pretty Pickle)
Submitted by nighthawk7178863
Giardiniera, the classic Italian pickled vegetable jar packed with carrots, celery, bell peppers, cauliflower, and pearl onions in a sweet-spiced vinegar brine. Sandwich topper, antipasto staple, condiment for everything.
YIELD
1 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
10 minREADY
13 hrsGiardiniera is the Italian pickle that earns its keep on a charcuterie board, inside a muffuletta, or chopped over grilled sausages. This is the classic sweet-and-tangy style, vegetables get an overnight salt brine first to draw out water and keep the final pickle crisp.
The vegetable mix matters: carrots, celery, red bell peppers, cauliflower florets, and small pearl onions all cut to roughly matching size so they pickle evenly and look sharp in the jar. Mustard seeds and celery seeds give the brine its backbone, with dried chilies adding a slow heat that builds over the storage weeks.
The brine is straight white vinegar and sugar, no water dilution, which preserves the vegetables for months without canning if jars are sealed hot. Toss the cooked carrots and onions into the boiling brine briefly to take the raw edge off, then pack everything hot into warmed jars.
Let the jars sit at least a week before opening. The flavor sharpens and the vegetables turn translucent at the edges.
Kitchen Tips
- Cut everything to similar size pieces so the pickle looks uniform and bites consistently.
- Use jars with glass or enameled lids. Plain metal lids will corrode in vinegar.
- The overnight salt brine is a must. Skip it and you’ll get limp pickles within a week.
- Sterilize jars in a 100°C (212°F) oven until bone dry. Wet jars introduce bacteria.
Variations
- Add green olives and chopped Calabrian chilies for Chicago-style hot giardiniera.
- Throw in a few cloves of garlic per jar for deeper savory notes.
- Swap half the sugar for honey for a more rounded sweetness.
Ingredients
Directions
Peel carrots, cut in half lengthwise then into 4cm (1½ inch) long pieces.
Cut celery into similar sized pieces.
Remove seeds from capsicums and cut into 2cm (¾ inch) strips, 4cm long.
Break the cauliflower into 4cm flowerets.
Dissolve the salt in cold water.
Cover the vegetables with this brine and leave overnight.
A clean (new) plastic bucket is a suitable container.
After 12 to 18 hours drain the vegetables, rinse in cold water, and allow to drain again.
Select jars with glass or enamelled lids.
Wash and rinse well, then dry in a warm oven, 100 deg C.
In a large enamel or stainless steel pan combine vinegar, Boil for 3 minutes and then add the carrots and onions and boil for 5 minutes. Fill the warmed jars with hot vegetables and top up with vinegar to within 1cm (half inch) of rim. Close lids firmly.
Comments
To be safe, USDA recommends 50/50 vinegar/water ratios and a 10 minute hot water process.
Margaret S.
Salem, OR