List of pickled foods

This is a list of pickled foods. Many various types of foods are pickled to preserve them and add flavor. Some of these foods also qualify as fermented foods.

A variety of pickled foods

Pickled foods

A

Celery asazuke
  • Aavakaaya  Mango pickle from Andhra Pradesh, India
  • Acar  Vegetable pickle made in Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei.
  • Achaar
  • Allium chinense  Edible species of plant native to China and Korea
  • Amba  Mango pickle condiment
  • Apple  Edible fruit of domesticated deciduous tree [1]
  • Artichoke  Vegetable; a species of thistle cultivated as a food [2]
  • Asazuke  Japanese pickling method
  • Asinan  A pickled vegetable or fruit dish from Indonesia
  • Atchara  A pickle made from grated unripe papaya popular in the Philippines

B

C

Chanh muối aging in glass containers
Curtido (at left)
  • Cabbage  Leafy vegetable in the flowering plant family Brassicaceae
  • Caper  Species of plant with edible flower buds and fruits
  • Pickled carrot  Carrot pickled in brine, vinegar, or other solution
  • Chhundo  Kind of Indian pickle from Gujarat
  • Chanh muối  A salt-pickled lime in Vietnamese cuisine
  • Chinese pickles  Various vegetables or fruits that have been fermented by pickling with salt and brine
  • Chow-chow  Relish
  • Cockles  Family of edible marine bivalve molluscs
  • Coleslaw  Salad consisting primarily of finely-shredded raw cabbage [3]
  • Corned beef  Salt-cured beef product
  • Crab meat  The meat found within a crab
  • Pickled cucumber  Cucumber pickled in brine, vinegar, or other solution
  • Cucumber soup  A traditional Polish and Lithuanian soup made from sour, salted cucumbers and potato
  • Cueritos  Pig skin, usually pickled in vinegar, and can be made with a spicy sauce
  • Curtido  A type of lightly fermented cabbage relish from Central America

D

  • Daikon  A pickled preparation of daikon radish
  • Dilly beans  Pickled green beans, often flavoured with dill.
  • Fermented bean curd, also known as Doufulu  A Chinese condiment consisting of a form of processed, preserved tofu used in East Asian cuisine

E

Pickled eisbein, with sauerkraut
  • Eggs  Hard boiled eggs cured in vinegar or brine
  • Eisbein  Pickled ham hock

F

  • Fried pickle  A snack food made by deep-frying sliced battered dill pickles.
  • Fruit  Fruit that has been preserved by anaerobic fermentation in brine or immersion in vinegar
  • Fukujinzuke  Vegetables including daikon, eggplant, lotus root and cucumber finely chopped and pickled in a base flavored with soy sauce

G

  • Gari  Thinly sliced young ginger marinated in a solution of sugar and vinegar served usually served with sushi
  • Garlic  A vinegar-preserved garlic of Chinese tradition.
  • Gherkin  Cucumber pickled in brine, vinegar, or other solution
  • Giardiniera  An Italian relish of pickled vegetables in vinegar or oil
  • Ginger pickle  A popular pickle in Andhra Pradesh, India
  • Green beans  Pickled green beans, often flavoured with dill. – sometimes referred to as dilly beans

H

  • Ham hock  Joint on the hog's leg between the ham and trotter
  • Herring  A traditional way of preserving herring

J

  • Jujube  A species of plant with edible fruit

K

Knieperkohl (center), with kassler (cured pork) and potato
  • Karashizuke  A type of Japanese pickled vegetable
  • Kasuzuke  Japanese pickles using the lees from sake
  • Kimchi  Traditional Korean side dish of salted and fermented vegetables
  • Baek-kimchi  Kimchi made without the chili pepper powder
  • Dongchimi  Short-maturing Korean vegetable pickle
  • Kkakdugi  A variation of kimchi made from diced radish
  • Nabak-kimchi  A watery kimchi made of thinly sliced Korean radish and napa cabbage
  • Yeolmu-kimchi  Korean pickle of summer radish leaves
  • Knieperkohl  A pickled cabbage dish similar to sauerkraut

L

  • Lahpet  Burmese pickled tea
  • Limes  Method of preserving the fruit of limes

M

  • Mango pickle  A variety of pickles prepared using mango
  • Matsumaezuke  A pickled dish from Matsumae, Hokkaidō , Japan
  • Meigan cai  A type of dry pickled Chinese mustard
  • Mixed pickle  Pickles made from a variety of vegetables mixed in the same pickling process
  • Mohnyin tjin  Burmese fermented vegetables in rice wine
  • Morkovcha  A spicy marinated carrot salad
  • Murabba  Savoury or sweet jam pickle or achar from Pakistan, Iran, North India, Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia
  • Murături  The pickled vegetables of the Romanian and Moldovan cuisine
  • Mussels  Common name for members of several families of bivalve molluscs
  • Mustard  A popular salt-fermented dish in Hmong cuisine

N

  • Nem chua  Vietnamese food that is rolled up
  • Nozawana  Japanese leaf vegetable, often pickled
  • Nukazuke  Japanese pickle made by fermenting vegetables in rice bran

O

A dish of silverskin pickled onions
  • Oorgai
  • Onions

P

  • Pachranga
  • Pao cai  A type of pickle in Chinese, and particularly Sichuan cuisin
  • Pastrami  Meat preserved by partial drying, seasoning, smoking and steaming
  • Peppadew  Brand name of a sweet and spicy pickled pepper grown in South Africa
  • Piccalilli  A relish of chopped pickled vegetables and spices
  • Pickle meat – also referred to as pickled pork
  • Pickled carrot – a carrot that has been pickled in a brine, vinegar, or other solution and left to ferment for a period of time
  • Pickled cucumber  Cucumber pickled in brine, vinegar, or other solution
  • Pickled onion  Onions pickled in a solution of vinegar or salt
  • Pickled pepper  A Capsicum pepper preserved by pickling
  • Pickled radish  A radish dish served with Korean fried chicken
  • Pickling salt  Fine-grained salt used for manufacturing pickles
  • Pig's trotters, also known as Pigs' feet
  • Prawn  Common name applied to large swimming crustaceans [5]
  • Preserved lemon  condiment in South Asian and North African cuisine
  • Prune  A dried plum of any cultivar

R

Three relishes here accompany Nshima (top right), a cornmeal product in African cuisine
  • Relish  A cooked, pickled, or chopped vegetable or fruit food item typically used as a condiment
  • Radish  An edible root vegetable of the family Brassicaceae
  • Rollmops  Pickled herring fillets

S

  • Salmon  Family of fish related to trout [6]
  • Salt-cured meat  Meat or fish preserved or cured with salt
  • Salt pork  Salt-cured pork, usually prepared from pork belly, or, more rarely, fatback.
  • Sauerkraut  Finely sliced and fermented cabbage
  • Seaweed  Algae that can be eaten and used in the preparation of food
  • Shrimp  Decapod crustaceans
  • Sour cabbage  A fermented vegetable preserve, popular in Romanian, Bosnian, Croatian, Macedonian, Serbian and Bulgarian cuisines
  • Spreewald gherkins  A specialty gherkin from Brandenburg
  • Suan cai  Traditional Chinese pickled vegetables
  • Spanish pickle [7][8][9]

T

  • Takuan  A pickled preparation of daikon radish
  • Three bean salad  A common cold salad composed of various cooked or pickled beans [10]
  • Tianjin preserved vegetable  A type of pickled Chinese cabbage originating in Tianjin, China
  • Tsukemono  Japanese preserved vegetables
  • Torshi, also known as Tursu  The pickled vegetables of the cuisines of many Balkan and Middle East countries

U

  • Umeboshi  A sour, pickled Japanese fruit

W

  • Walnuts  A traditional English pickle, made from walnuts
  • Watermelon rind  A large fruit with a smooth hard rind, of the gourd family [11]
  • Whelks  A common name that is applied to various kinds of sea snail
Zha cai is pickled mustard plant stem that originated from Sichuan, China.

Z

  • Zha cai  Pickled mustard plant stem from Chongqing, China

See also

References

  1. Coffee and Tea Industries and the Flavor Field. Spice Mill Publishing Company. 1913. p. 1082. Retrieved May 27, 2017.
  2. "Pickled artichokes". Gourmet Traveller. September 9, 2016. Retrieved May 27, 2017.
  3. Severson, Kim (May 9, 2014). "Lowcountry Pickled Coleslaw Recipe". New York Times Cooking. Retrieved May 27, 2017.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  4. Miller, Robin (November 2007). Quick Fix Meals: 200 Simple, Delicious Recipes to Make Mealtime Easy. Newtown, CT: Taunton Press. p. 231. ISBN 978-1-56158-947-0.
  5. Society, American Oriental (1897). Journal of the American Oriental Society. American oriental series. American Oriental Society. p. 109. Retrieved May 27, 2017.
  6. Cobb, J.N. (1921). Pacific Salmon Fisheries. Dep. of Commerce. Bureau of Fisheries Document. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 133. Retrieved May 27, 2017.
  7. Housekeeping in the Blue Grass: A New and Practical Cook Book : Containing Nearly a Thousand Recipes. Geo. E. Stevens. 1875. p. 36. Retrieved May 27, 2017.
  8. Housekeeper's Manual: Being a Compilation of Receipts of Tested Value. J.J. Little & Company, printers. 1882. p. 60. Retrieved May 27, 2017.
  9. Frazer, M.H. (1903). Kentucky Receipt Book (in Czech). Press of the Bradley & Gilbert Company. p. 332. Retrieved May 27, 2017.
  10. Better Homes and Gardens Can It!. Better Homes and Gardens Cooking. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. 2012. p. 163. ISBN 978-0-544-17842-7. Retrieved May 27, 2017.
  11. Hansen, A. (2011). The Modern Pantry. Ebury Publishing. p. pt43. ISBN 978-1-4090-3360-8. Retrieved May 27, 2017.
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