Lime Pickle 2

From Cookipedia
Revision as of 10:59, 28 December 2021 by Chef (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search



This recipe needs advance preparation! A very delicious, spicy lime pickle to accompany rice dishes

Lime Pickle 2
Electus

Best recipe review

Sharp and tangy

4.6/5

This pickle was really good with fatty meats.

Paul R Smith
Servings:Servings: 33 - Makes just over 1 litre
Calories per serving:62
Ready in:1 hour, 30 minutes plus 3-4 days salting time
Prep. time:30 minutes
Cook time:1 hour plus 3-4 days salting time
Difficulty:Average difficulty
Recipe author:JuliaBalbilla
First published:17th October 2015

Ingredients

Printable 🖨 shopping 🛒 list & 👩‍🍳 method for this recipe


Method

  1. Place the limes in a steamer containing water and bring to the boil.
  2. Steam for 45 minutes.
  3. Allow the limes to cool then cut each one into 8 pieces.
  4. Place in a bowl and mix with the salt.
  5. Cover and leave for 3 days, stirring them twice daily. No need to refrigerate.
  6. After this resting time, rinse the limes with water and leave to drain.
  7. Meanwhile, heat the oil in a pan and fry 50g of the garlic and 20g of the ginger until soft, then set aside. Don’t let the garlic brown.
  8. Using a blender, mix the chilli powder, turmeric, fenugreek, cumin and the remaining 20g each of the garlic and ginger with 200g of the water. It should end up as a paste.
  9. Tip the fried garlic and ginger into a bowl, leaving some oil in the pan.
  10. Re-heat the pan and when hot, add the mustard seeds.
  11. As soon as the mustard starts to pop, add the spice paste.
  12. Cook until the oil starts to separate.
  13. Transfer to a saucepan with the remaining 300g water and simmer, covered, for 40 minutes, stirring frequently.
  14. Add the sugar and vinegar and continue simmering, covered, for 10 minutes.
  15. Add the previously cooked garlic and ginger, together with the oil and the limes.
  16. Mix together (off the heat) until the limes are coated in the spices.
  17. Put into sterilised jars with vinegar-proof lids and keep for at least one month before eating.
  18. It is at its best after 6 months to 1 year though.

Recipe source

  • Adapted for conventional cookery from a recipe in Fast and Easy Indian cooking (Thermomix TM31 Cookery Book)

Peeling ginger

There is no need to peel ginger. As a result of attending a Thai cookery demo, we have learnt that peeling ginger is unnecessary unless for aesthetic purposes as the skin is high in fibre and full of flavour. However, do remove any bits that have become tough or woody.

Randomly pick another recipe 🍴

Discover Cookipedia's Culinary Creations on Pinterest

Explore the vibrant world of Cookipedia through our Pinterest page! We've curated a stunning collection of recipes that highlight the beauty of home-cooked dishes. It's the perfect way to visually navigate our extensive recipe library and get inspired by the flavours we’ve shared over the years. Dive in and discover your next favorite meal—one picture at a time!

#limes #ginger #garlic #turmeric #vinegar #limepickle2 #fenugreek #ground #cumin #hotchillipowder #boiledorsimmered