Spring Sweet Pea/Asparagus Pickles
I’m obsessed with this peas asparagus pickles recipe. Mark my words, I am a pickle addict. But my love of pickles wasn’t a loving culinary journey in the beginning.
Peas, Asparagus Pickles Recipe
Vietnamese cuisine is a collage of fresh vegetables, layered flavors and diversity of textures. So pickles in all forms were always a key staple at our meals. As long as I could remember Mom and Dad would grow small white eggplants, mustard greens and other vegetables and pickle them till we ran out of glass jars. Pickling was an integral part of Mom’s kitchen life and if she did it, then so did we.
As kids, we felt horribly abused and forced to the task of tending the garden and pickle duty. I hated pickle duty boot camp.
Weeding the garden wasn’t nearly as torturous as washing the vegetables and preparing the brine for Mom’s pickles. For every hour we spent in the garden, we had one less hour playing Atari Pac-Man and Frogger. Back then, Atari was the blood that ran in our childhood circles, an addiction that had to be sufficed with at least 2 hours of Frogger or Pit-fall or else we’d suffer from non-video game syndrome.
But when late Spring and Summer arrived, we were handed big colanders, a pair of clippers and our Atari was taken away. All six of us kids screamed abuse! Mutiny! Child slave labor! Then Dad would come out of his office with a loud growl. No words, just a growl. And then we’d all retreat to the garden with our tails between our legs.
If we wanted to be fed, we had to help participate in the cooking process.
We helped Mom pick eggplant and mustard greens. And lots of it. The kitchen sink was station #1 to wash. The dinner table was spread with newspaper and cutting boards. That was station #2. The counter-top of the final station #3 for the pickling and jarring.
As the eldest child, I was the team leader and I told all my younger siblings that if we did this fast enough, there would be more Atari time for us all. That incentive was enough to get us all whistling to the seven dwarfs’ song.
Quick Fridge Pickles
Within a few hours, we all bustled from the garden to the kitchen like well trained, industrious little dwarfs. At the end of the day, the counter top was lined with jars of beautiful pickles of all shapes and colors. Mom was proud and relieved to have pickles for the next 2 months and the six of us kids were racing to see which two would get the 2 Atari joy-sticks first.
My Atari playing days are over, but ironically, my pickling days have just begun. For the last 2 years, I’ve been a manic pickler of all things crunchy. From homemade kim-chi to dill pickles to okra, I’m affectionately in love with the craft of pickling. If I have big batches of garden veggies that can’t be eaten quick enough, then guaranteed they’ll all be in a brine within a matter of hours.
All those pickling days as a kid paid off considerably. Indeed they have. Just look in our garage and you’ll see what that pickling boot camp taught me.
Southern Kitchen Cookbook
I’m thrilled with this particular pickling recipe from Sara Foster’s new book, Sara Foster’s Southern Kitchen. Sara has wonderful recipes and I’ve been pleased with all her recipes from her Market cookbook. Her newest book has a terrific quick pickle recipe that is so bright, fresh and balanced, it’s so probably my favorite pickling recipe so far.
Her recipe uses the juice of a whole lemon and I think that is what I’m so in love with. The bright citrus flavors really highlight my spring pickles from the garden. When Spring arrives, I love nothing more than to be able to pickle sugar snap peas from my garden and some fresh asparagus I find at the market.
The combination of Sara’s versatile pickling brine, along with Spring’s love of peas and asparagus help me celebrate the arrival of this magnificent Spring season even more.
I’m beyond excited for Spring and pickles.
Love,
-Diane
Spring Pickles: Quick Pickling Recipe
Ingredients
Pickle Brine
- 1/3 cup Distillled White Vinegar
- 1/2 cup Water
- Zest & Juice of 1 Lemon
- 4 sprigs fresh Tarragon or Dill
- 2 Tablespoons Sugar
- 1 inch piece of Ginger , julienned
- 1 teaspoon Fennel Seeds
- 1 teaspoon Dill Seeds
- 1 teaspoon Sea Salt , or Kosher Salt
- 1/2 teaspoon fresh cracked Black Pepper
- pinch crushed Red Pepper Flakes
Suggestions for Pickling
- 1/2 lb Sweet Peas , Asparagus, Cucumbers or other Vegetables, well cleaned
- 1/2 medium Red Onion , thinly sliced
Instructions
- Combine pickle brine ingredients together in a medium bowl and mix well. In whatever containers you are going to pickle into, scoop out the solids from the pickle brine (ginger, seeds) and divide between your containers.
- Arrange your pickling vegetables into your pickling containers. Then pour remainder of pickling brine over the vegetables to cover. Refrigerate for at least on hour, or can your pickles for later use.
More time for Atari, love that! Oh those were the days. I can only imagine you as team leader girl. Sounds like that extra time spent in the kitchen was well worth it ๐
Mahalo for posting this!! This brine recipe you posted made awesomely delecious pickles!! I really enjoy reading your blog!!
flavourful pickle looks delicious
I stumbled upon your site, while searching snowpea recipes. OMG I love your blog! Such beautiful photographs and everything looks so delicious!
Diane, what a lovely story, thanks for sharing it. Glad you are enjoying the book and cooking form it. Try Granny Foster’s Bread and Butter Pickles, they are to die for. And Jimmy’s Dills for the not so sweet taste. thanks, Sara
Thanks for the excellent read this morning and the transporting photos. If only this Canadian snow would melt and spring pickles could also be on my to-do list. Ah, one can always dream.
The first time I tried pickled asparagus I absolutely hated it…but this makes me want to try them again. And sweet peas?! Never even thought about pickling those but it seems like it’d be a perfect balance between sweet and sour.
It must be spring! Green and pickles are a sure sign. Love your blog as always!
Laura
I love this story, so heartwarming. It’s it funny that the very things we hated when we were young that our parent forced us to do are the very things we love to do as adults? Your pickles are absolutely beautiful and so fresh.
What a great childhood story! Makes me want to have kids so I can have some kitchen helpers around! ๐
Have you made Dilly Beans yet? I just discovered them last summer and am obsessed with them. I love anything pickled though. I’m planning on trying pickled asparagus this weekend – can’t wait to give this recipe a go!
Hi, just found your site and was fascinated by your photography alongside with your recipe. Pickling is one favorite of mine. I do them too from time to time as i don’t find eating my meal complete without pickled goodies. I’ll try your recipe one of these days and for sure my visits here will be frequent. Great blog!
I love the sound of this aromatic brine! I fell in love with making refrigerator pickles last summer and I would love to try this recipe. The squeeze of lemon sounds so nice. Funny story, too. It’s hilarious what we called injustice when we were kids ๐
Great story! And love, love, love pickles! Pickled anything! The brine sounds great! My favorite is to pickle walla walla onions when they are ready for picking, since they don’t store and I plant way too many! =)
You can never have too many Walla Walla Sweets!
I love pickles, I love pickles, I LOVE PICKLES! Pickled anything. As a kid, we would get to spend two glorious weeks at my grandparents home in North Carolina. As girls, my grandmother would put us to work with some of the gardening, but mostly, cleaning and prepping the veggies. I watched her pickle and can everything. I can imagine if it was something I had to do all the time, I might complain, but I loved it and I know, as you know, how lucky we were to have such caring parents and grandparents to share their bounty with us, and good clean food with us. It made me who I am today and I still can and pickle every fresh veggie I’m lucky enough to get from my gardening friends. I can’t wait to try this recipe! And thanks for inspiring URB w/green mango pickles…. oh yeah, I’m headed to the Asian market this weekend and they’ll be some mango pickling going on too!
inspiring post and photos! THANK YOU FOR YOUR PICKLING SUGGESTIONS!
I also love your ‘childhood memoirs’: it’ is wonderful how our cooking is interconnected with family, culture, roots and identity…
Wonderful childhood story! I’m a big fan of pickles too. My grandmother picked cucumbers out of her garden then soaked them in a bowl of apple cider vinegar and salt and we ate them with meals. A sort of faux pickle I guess. Thanks for the recipe.