Showing posts with label cucumber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cucumber. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 18, 2021

Cucumber pickle

The cucumber, Cucumis sativus is a subtropical annual originating in India. Domesticated by the seventh century BC the cucumber soon spread to China and the ancient Mediterranean world.

In very general sense, pickles refer to any vegetables or fruit that is preserved by salt or acid. Certainly, the vegetable most often associated with pickles is the cucumber. The cucumber pickle has been a popular item in the American diet.

Less than half of the pickles consumed in the United States undergo lactic acid fermentation. Rather acetic acid can be added directly as the pickling acid, omitting the fermentation step.

The pickle slice on top of a fast food hamburger is probably not a fermented type. Billions of hamburgers are sold every year by fast food franchises and they contain a slice of a pickle inside.

Canned pickles are subsequently pasteurized which eliminates oxygen by creating a vacuum inside the jar. This prevents molds and yeasts from growing. It also destroys tissue softening enzymes which create soft pickles.

For the best result, pickle cucumbers within 24 hours after harvesting.
Cucumber pickle

Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Cucumber salad

The cucumber, Cucumis sativas, is a subtropical annual originating in India. Domesticated by the seventh century BC, the cucumber soon spread to China and the ancient Mediterranean world.

Often referred to as a vegetable, the fruit of cucumbers is 96% water and its flavor comes from the edible seeds. Pickler cucumbers are paler green than slicer variety and sometimes have light stripes.

Cucumbers are frequently soaked in vinegar or brine to create pickles. It is thought that this practice gained popularity to overcome the bitterness of the rind of earlier varieties.

It is to find a home for cucumbers in salads and sandwiches. Traditional sandwich normally composed of paper-thin slices of cucumber place between two thin slices of crustless, buttered bread. The challenges occur how to get more cucumbers to fit into the sandwich.

Portable, quick, satisfying, cheap and requiring neither plate nor cutlery, the sandwich is the most universal of all fast food, the archetypal hand-held snack. The sandwich is simply the quickest way of making a meal.
Cucumber salad

Monday, June 5, 2017

Cucumber and sandwich

The cucumber, Cucumis sativas, is a subtropical annual originating in India. Domesticated by the seventh century BC, the cucumber soon spread to China and the ancient Mediterranean world.

Often referred to as a vegetable, the fruit of cucumbers is 96% water and its flavor comes from the edible seeds. Pickler cucumbers are paler green than slicer variety and sometimes have light stripes.
Cucumbers are frequently soaked in vinegar or brine to create pickles. It is thought that this practice gained popularity to overcome the bitterness of the rind of earlier varieties.

It is to find a home for cucumbers in salads and sandwiches. Traditional sandwich normally composed of paper-thin slices of cucumber place between two thin slices of crustless, buttered bread. The challenges occur how to get more cucumbers to fit into the sandwich.

Portable, quick, satisfying, cheap and requiring neither plate nor cutlery, the sandwich is the most universal of all fast food, the archetypal hand-held snack. The sandwich is simply the quickest way of making a meal.
Cucumber and sandwich

The Most Popular Posts all the time