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  2. Pickle Lovers: You Have to Try These 6 Homemade Pickle Recipes

    www.aol.com/pickle-lovers-try-6-homemade...

    If you're after a classic dill pickle recipe, this refrigerator pickle recipe taps all the staple ingredients: pickling spice, vinegar, salt, garlic, sugar, and — of course — dill.

  3. Cinnamomum cassia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinnamomum_cassia

    Cassia buds, although rare, are also occasionally used as a spice. They resemble cloves in appearance and have a mild, flowery cinnamon flavor. Cassia buds are primarily used in old-fashioned pickling recipes, marinades, and teas. [7]

  4. Pickling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pickling

    Pickling solutions are typically highly acidic, with a pH of 4.6 or lower, [1] and high in salt, preventing enzymes from working and micro-organisms from multiplying. [2] Pickling can preserve perishable foods for months, or in some cases years. [3] Antimicrobial herbs and spices, such as mustard seed, garlic, cinnamon or cloves, are often ...

  5. Pickled fruit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pickled_fruit

    Pickling is the process of food preservation by either anaerobic fermentation in brine or immersion in vinegar. Many types of fruit are pickled. [1] Some examples include peaches, apples, crabapples, pears, plums, grapes, currants, tomatoes and olives. [1] [2] Vinegar may also be prepared from fruit, [2] such as apple cider vinegar.

  6. Brining - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brining

    Pickling can preserve perishable foods for months. Antimicrobial herbs and spices, such as mustard seed, garlic, cinnamon or cloves, are often added. [8] Unlike the canning process, pickling (which includes fermentation) does not require that the food be completely sterile before it is sealed. The acidity or salinity of the solution, the ...

  7. Kasundi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kasundi

    Kasundi was originally used as a type of achar (literally "ritual", meaning chutney/pickle), though it was not necessarily the same sauce known today.Kasundi was the queen of pickles in Bengal, because it remained edible for up to 20 years if stored in right conditions. [1]