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I Made 5 Pickled Foods From 5 Countries 

Beryl Shereshewsky
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Thank you so much to Cristal, Anajulia, Tammi, Thalissa, and Ari for sharing your stories with us!
Artist today is Kevin Lustik
Instagram: / lustikart
Facebook: / lustikart
Links to all of Tammi’s socials:
Instagram: / thehalfrican.foodie
Community Page: / tastemakers_africa
TikTok: / thehalfricanfoodie
RU-vid: / @thehalfricanfoodie
RECIPES
Batatinha em Conserva: www.chefjanapinheiro.com/reci...
Koreyskaya Morkovka
Ingredients:
1 kg carrots
80 ml neutral flavor oil
3 cloves garlic
1 onion
1-2 tsp ground coriander seeds
1 tbsp sugar (optional if carrots are sweet enough)
2 tbsp apple cider vinegar
3 teaspoons salt
1 red chili (or 1 tsp chili flakes)
Directions:
Slice carrots to thin noodles, combine and massage it with salt. Let it sit. Finely chop onion and chili. Saute onions till golden brown, then add chili and coriander seeds. Let it cool a bit. Drain carrot from released juices, add minced garlic, vinegar, and sauteed onion with spices. Let it rest for a couple hours. Enjoy!
Artcha
Ingredients:
8 semi-ripe mangoes (still firm & mostly green), sliced
2 tsp salt
4 tsp crushed garlic
½ tsp chili powder
1-2 crushed Kambuzi chilis (habaneros are similar so they’ll work)
1 tbsp paprika
2 tbsp turmeric
⅛ cup lemon juice
1 large carrot, grated
1 cup vegetable oil
Directions:
Slice up the mango (peels and everything), rinse them then pat dry. Sprinkle the salt over the mango then place in a ziplock or airtight container (or a plastic bag tied tight). In a pot, pour in the oil, garlic, chili powder, kambuzi, paprika and turmeric. Place in low heat, stirring so nothing burns and cook all the ingredients together until fragrant (5 minutes). Add in the carrots and lemon juice then allow to sit over 2 nights in a container. After the two nights have passed, transfer the mangoes to a jar or a bottle, pour the oil over the mangoes and allow to sit again for at least one night. Serve as a side with nsima/sadza, chicken and veggies, or with rice.
Pickled Red Beet Eggs
Ingredients:
12 hard boiled eggs
2 (15 oz) cans sliced beets
1 cup apple cider vinegar
¾ cup sugar
1 cup water
Directions:
Place peeled hard boiled eggs in a large jar. Add water, vinegar, sugar to beets and juice in a saucepan and boil for 15 mins, stirring several times. (If the taste is too strong, add more water). Add beet juice mixture to eggs & beets. Let cool before putting in the refrigerator. Gently stir or shake jar daily. They need at least 3 days to get to the best flavor. The pickled beets are great alone or also awesome on salads.
Chilero Nicaraguense
Ingredients:
1 big white onion
1 big carrot
2-3 chili peppers of your preference (depending on how spicy you want)
½ tsp salt
½ tsp sugar
1 cup white vinegar
½ cup water
Directions:
Dice the onion and chili(s) into small pieces. Peel and grate the carrot. Using your hands, combine the three ingredients and massage them so the flavors can fuse. Add remaining ingredients and stir to combine. Pour into a mason jar. Let it sit under the sun or outside of the fridge for 2-3 days and then it’s ready to eat!
CHAPTERS
00:00 Intro
00:16 Uzbek Koreyskaya Morkovka (Korean Carrot Salad)
02:25 Trying Koreyskaya Morkovka
03:59 Today’s artist, Kevin Lustik!
04:33 Malawian Artcha (Pickled Mango)
06:46 Trying Artcha
09:10 USA Pickled Red Beet Eggs
11:00 Trying Pickled Red Beet Eggs
13:04 Nicaraguan Chilero Nicaraguense (Pickled Onion & Carrot Slaw)
14:47 Trying Chilero Nicaraguense
17:00 Brazilian Batatinha em Conserva (Pickled Potato)
18:52 Trying Batatinha em Conserva
_____________________
Where I get my earrings with a little discount code! shrsl.com/32k14
Pops of Color aka the Microgreen kit I swear by: shrsl.com/32k93
Here are Some Links for things you see often in my videos!
A VERY similar Glass Pot to the one I have: geni.us/Z9V1jo
My little red blender: geni.us/DPIkH
Bamboo Cutting Board: geni.us/F0T2ZC
Colorful Ceramic Bowls: geni.us/EuAsnn
Mini Whisk That Is the Best Whisk: geni.us/sNA9H7c
Silicone Brush: geni.us/P9TDJ
Small Silicone Spatulas that I Love: geni.us/qBgs
Wooden Spoons: geni.us/0N17A
My Favorite Board Games Right Now
Dominion: geni.us/4HlP
Ticket to Ride: geni.us/fAcAcJ
Carcassonne: geni.us/p4Ldfr
7 Wonders: geni.us/TgSw
Wanna mail something?
Beryl Shereshewsky
115 East 34th Street FRNT 1
PO Box 1742
New York, NY 10156
Follow me on Instagram: / shereshe
Support me on Patreon: / beryl
#pickle #pickled #aroundtheworld #passtheplate #pickles #pickledvegetables

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16 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 694   
@thehalfricanfoodie
@thehalfricanfoodie Год назад
Hiya Beryl!! You did amazing!! I knew you could do it❤️ Thank you so much again so glad I could be part of this you are the best!!!
@BerylShereshewsky
@BerylShereshewsky Год назад
Thank you!!!!!! You were amazing, I would have never made this on my own so I'm so glad for your recipe and video!
@notactuallymyrealname
@notactuallymyrealname Год назад
Thanks for shouting out your socials, I followed you on Instagram! The Tastemakers A-Z is off to a great start and I look forward to seeing more.
@thehalfricanfoodie
@thehalfricanfoodie Год назад
@@notactuallymyrealname thank you Lauren, you are so so kind I really appreciate it ❤️ I followed you too!!
@ANONYMOUS-bo2zn
@ANONYMOUS-bo2zn Год назад
Seeing this as a Malawian made me crazy happy!!! ]
@thehalfricanfoodie
@thehalfricanfoodie Год назад
@@ANONYMOUS-bo2zn thank you so much!! It was so much fun working with Beryl and getting to be part of this❤️
@challalla
@challalla Год назад
As a Korean from Korea, I first tried the Korean carrot at the home of ethnic Koreans in Ukraine. Although it's not a dish we have in Korea, it is easily recognizable as a variation on the julienned white radish kimchi/salad, only with carrot instead of white radish (a dish consisting of such long, thin strips is called 'chae' in Korean and maybe the 'cha' in 'morkovcha' is a dialectal variant). It definitely tastes Korean. The dish was developed by ethnic Koreans who were deported by Stalin thousands of miles away from home to Central Asia. They tried to recreate the tastes of home using the ingredients that were locally available. I'm now motivated to try making these myself.
@prachik5910
@prachik5910 Год назад
I am an Indian, and although we have tons and tons of variety or pickles. But this video still introduced me to new ones. Thanks a lot Beryl.
@saharshkhanna249
@saharshkhanna249 Год назад
However many varieties we may have, it goes without saying that the world will have tons more than we are familiar with. Pickling as a method to preserve food is present in almost every culture
@ericme5715
@ericme5715 Год назад
@@saharshkhanna249 ours is completely different because we use tons of spices but rest of the world doesn’t
@saharshkhanna249
@saharshkhanna249 Год назад
@@ericme5715 That's true! Most cultures use vinegar/ citrus based brine, while we use spices, salt and oil to draw out moisture from fruits and vegetables we pickle
@sanjudas5861
@sanjudas5861 Год назад
Vinegar is generally not used to pickle in India. Lemon juice is used instead in pickles which donot use oil as the pickling medium.. Whole lemons & chillies pickled in salt & lemon juice is very common in my state West Bengal.
@user-op5wh3hv8o
@user-op5wh3hv8o 8 месяцев назад
​@@saharshkhanna249vinegar usually used for marinade not brine, and salt is for brine :)
@taraoakes6674
@taraoakes6674 Год назад
I hope Talisa is okay. When she said that she in now living in Florida I definitely took note. I hope everyone in Florida is okay, and that Hurricane Ian is over soon.
@priscillad8
@priscillad8 Год назад
It wasn't just a pickle episode, it was a carrot episode too, the video star 🤣🤣
@brittni5187
@brittni5187 Год назад
The red beet eggs are super good if you add jalapeño juice in there too
@elanaviner404
@elanaviner404 Год назад
I always eat my meal and put on a Beryl video to dine with! It makes me even more appreciative of other foods and cultures
@malenafarber6281
@malenafarber6281 Год назад
Me too!
@lilbluemandowatchesstuff9612
Me too!
@stephgilliam
@stephgilliam Год назад
Same, it feels like I'm having dinner with a friend.
@alistaircooke7000
@alistaircooke7000 Год назад
Me too
@100sandraann
@100sandraann Год назад
I'm so happy I'm not the only one😍
@returntohades
@returntohades Год назад
This video was such a big history and culture lesson for me. I had no idea about Korean immigration to Central Asia. I feel like Central Asian Korean is like a cousin to Indo-Chinese - a surprising and unique cuisine emerging from migration and fusion.
@Rose-jz6sx
@Rose-jz6sx Год назад
Yeah for sure. I'd love to learn more about both cuisines
@challalla
@challalla Год назад
Unfortunately, the Korean presence in Central Asia is not the result of voluntary immigration but of forced deportation by Stalin in 1937, the first of a series of deportations of ethnic minorities in the Soviet Union. This is why so many ethnic Germans ended up in Kazakhstan as well.
@vijek6435
@vijek6435 Год назад
@@challalla I have a German bud who got his German citizenship because his of Volga German grandfather, who was deported in Kazakhstan and married a Kazakh woman. And then their son married a half-Russian, half-Korean/Koryo-saram woman whose mother had been deported from the Far East.
@user-op5wh3hv8o
@user-op5wh3hv8o 8 месяцев назад
As Russian, I'm very familiar to "Korean carrot" or "Carrot in Korean style" (though I've never tried surprisingly), it's like carrot kimchi invented by ethnic Koreans. Here in Russia it's well known side dish that can be found in almost every supermarket. We also have "grater for Korean carrot" that help to get very thin and long slices :)
@NorahAlice
@NorahAlice Год назад
I was confused by Beryl's confusion about cold hard boiled eggs 😅 For me they are such a typical food to have on a journey along with your home made sandwiches. I feel like every family in Germany brings them on longer train rides or picknicks. I even have a tiny salt shaker for these occasions 😂 They're also an essential part of the dishes consumed around easter here.
@akankshapatwari4167
@akankshapatwari4167 Год назад
I think it is just a matter of familiarity. My husband couldn't fathom why boiled eggs were cold, actually placed on ice in US. He finds it extremely unpalatable. For him boiled eggs means warm eggs.
@Ebichuchu
@Ebichuchu Год назад
@@akankshapatwari4167 Okay interesting because I’m from the US and her confusion also confused me 😂 I’ve never had a warm hard boiled egg, only cold
@ellaalykat
@ellaalykat Год назад
Yep being from America I am very surprised at her reaction to a cold hard boiled egg. I have never had a hard boiled egg any other way. I have lived all over the South and Chicago and a warm hard boiled seems odd to me.
@akankshapatwari4167
@akankshapatwari4167 Год назад
@@Ebichuchu My hubby was on his office tour to US and the waiters would stare at him when he asked for warm eggs. He also liked his omelette very thin and not folded at all. He in fact taught the chef flipping omlettes his kind of eggs. He wanted sliced onions, jalapeno and tomatoes in his thin roundish omlette.
@akankshapatwari4167
@akankshapatwari4167 Год назад
@@ellaalykat No one would eat cold eggs in my family. According to my hubby cold yolks are an abomination. I am an anomaly in that I hate eggs. The smell of hard boiled eggs I can just about tolerate, soft boiled eggs make me gag. I never ate eggs in my strictly vegetarian childhood. So not used to it .
@nerd26373
@nerd26373 Год назад
It's always a good day whenever Beryl posts new content. She's actively encouraging her viewers to appreciate different cultures through food consumption. All the best to her. She deserves recognition all the way.
@dagmarbeeke6163
@dagmarbeeke6163 Год назад
This is so true 👍🏻
@jjellybelmo4
@jjellybelmo4 Год назад
It's a HUNGRY day you mean? It's 8am and I'm laying in bed trying to mentally figure out if I can make pickled potatoes today
@dagmarbeeke6163
@dagmarbeeke6163 Год назад
@@jjellybelmo4 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@jjellybelmo4
@jjellybelmo4 Год назад
I might be going to the store before noon 🤔
@pavithras3818
@pavithras3818 Год назад
Every part of India makes different pickles,I mean completely different and unique pickles. They taste amazing in their own ways. Spiciness, tartness,types of oil used,masalas etc make a huge difference within India. Most spicier comes from down south of India (Andhra,Tamilnadu etc)
@annearchy98
@annearchy98 Год назад
In Korea there's a really unknown pickle made with wild garlic leaves. Usually they are foraged and then put in a pickle brine made out of soy sauce, rice vinegar and sugar. It's very delicate and I love it ❤
@AmayChan14
@AmayChan14 Год назад
Sounds delicious! What is it called?
@nadiahid5042
@nadiahid5042 Год назад
I'm Indonesian. Years ago my Kuwaitian step-father brought some jars of Mango achaar from India. I fell in love with it. I ate it the whole time by myself. Just thinking about it makes me drooling. Maybe tomorrow I will try to make it. Yumm..
@akankshapatwari4167
@akankshapatwari4167 Год назад
Summer holidays were exciting for two reasons mangoes and the pickle making day. My mother would wake up early in the morning (5 am ) and go to the market by 6 am. She would buy raw, really sour mangoes. She carried soft wiping clothes and drinking water from home. After selecting the mangoes the shopkeeper would wash the green fruit and huge blade he had with the water that my mother provided. He would wipe everything dry with the soft cloth(my mum gave it) and lay a a soft clean cloth( again provided by mum) on the ground and use the blade to chop the mangoes. Mother would come home at 7.30 or 8 and cook a one dish meal have a bath and clean the kitchen thoroughly. She would then add salt, red chilli powder oil etc to the mango pieces and the pickling process had started. Mum's hands would be stained red and sometimes burn cos of the spices. After mixing everything she would transfer them to these big sterilized ceramic jars. By then It would be afternoon and after cleaning the kitchen again we all would eat our lunch. The major work was done but the pickle had to be nurtured over the next few days. On specific days the pickle would be stirred, mixed and placed in the sun etc. After a month the pickle would be ready. She would make mango pickle which would last for a year.
@robyn2791
@robyn2791 Год назад
I love this story. Why would your mum have the mangoes cut at the market rather than cut at home?
@akankshapatwari4167
@akankshapatwari4167 Год назад
@@robyn2791 They raw mangoes are very hard and we need even, precise pieces. Each piece has to have a bit of the seed or the guthli etc. The vendors are experienced in this.
@robyn2791
@robyn2791 Год назад
@@akankshapatwari4167 interesting. So you even use the stone in the pickle? Does it soften during the pickling?
@akankshapatwari4167
@akankshapatwari4167 Год назад
@@robyn2791 In raw mangoes the stone is very small so it does soften in the pickling process but you don't eat it. You discard it. They are kept cos it gives integrity to the pieces. Otherwise the mangoes would become too soft. When we were kids we would wash the pickled mango piece of it spicy red juice and suck for ages on it. It would be sour and salty.
@jstratus4
@jstratus4 Год назад
The first guy with the carrots has me thinking what does the rest of the world do with carrots I would love to know. That would be a fun episode to watch.
@jeffreyrigged
@jeffreyrigged Год назад
pickled eggs are everywhere in appalachia areas. you can find them in almost any store or even gas stations. the beet ones are better to me than the regular pickled ones. best with a cold adult beverage made in milwaukee. another good thing you can try is not a pickled egg but a regular boiled egg and chop it up in breakfast gravy. we have alot of pickled things. corn potates peppers etc.... people would pickle everything here when i was a kid to store it. i think it comes from the poverty and making things last.
@laraerae4321
@laraerae4321 Год назад
All over the Midwest in bars too! I've never been brave enough to try one tho
@l.g.2888
@l.g.2888 Год назад
Yep! My grandpa loved pickled eggs and pickled beets and pickled pigs' feet. Lots of preserved meats too, like pickled sausage. LOVE a good pickled sausage!
@KatyaOrlova-jp1gy
@KatyaOrlova-jp1gy Год назад
Korean carrots are so popular in post-soviet countries, you can buy prepacked spices for it in every store. It is as common as salt and pepper.
@LiliyaPanina
@LiliyaPanina Год назад
We live in South Africa now so whenever someone goes back to visit, they always bring back a bunch of packets of Korean carrot spice 😂
@karenbenavente1124
@karenbenavente1124 Год назад
That's so interesting! I had no idea until I saw this video, that's really wonderful 😊
@amyv.2130
@amyv.2130 Год назад
Beryl, the first thing out of my mouth when you made pickled potatoes was, "That has to be like a vinegary potato salad." I will give this recipe a try!
@RaM1MaR
@RaM1MaR Год назад
That looks so good.. i bet it'd be great with a meatloaf or roast.
@jessicastevens5782
@jessicastevens5782 Год назад
I've never had a pickled egg either, but for that matter, never eaten a hard boiled egg that wasn't cold. I'm very confused by Beryl's confusion in that part 😀
@lovelivi1591
@lovelivi1591 Год назад
I just commented the same haha I've never had a warm hard boiled egg lol
@petunks
@petunks Год назад
Lol, I never had a cold boiled egg hahaha, until I recently tried a quail pickled egg, it was pretty yum
@emije6449
@emije6449 Год назад
I always have warm hard boiled eggs, because I prefer a slightly runny yoke. It’s yummy!
@petunks
@petunks Год назад
@@emije6449 this is why I love ajitama (ramen eggs) !
@jessicastevens5782
@jessicastevens5782 Год назад
guess I always considered the eggs in ramen to be soft boiled b/c the yolks are still jammy, but I suppose they are boiled "harder" than a typical soft boiled egg that has a completely runny yolk
@FleaChristenson
@FleaChristenson Год назад
South Louisiana we always had both hard boiled eggs and pickled eggs in convenience stores. Usually on the counter near the register. They really do make great high protein snacks.
@goodnessgriefness
@goodnessgriefness Год назад
Beryl, top tip from a Brit for when you’re next in a pub in England. Get a pickled egg and a packet of salt and vinegar crisps (not chips, crisps!), pop your egg into said packet of crisps and then just eat them together. My partner swears by it as one of the best pub snacks ever…especially with a decent pint of something cold.
@EdwardNoguera
@EdwardNoguera Год назад
The feeling of seeing your culture represented is incredible! Chilero is ALWAYS available with Nicaraguan food, and it adds the right amount of spice like you say, Beryl. Excited for more Central American dishes 🇳🇮
@Erin49694
@Erin49694 Год назад
my local russian store makes korean carrots in house and i typically buy them that way but it’s great to now have a recipe. they’re just so tasty!! also, to get the carrot noodles you just need to buy a julienne peeler. peel the carrots with a normal peeler first and then take the julienne peeler and run it down the length of the carrot until you’ve used up the whole carrot. it’ll give you perfect long threads of carrot
@priscillad8
@priscillad8 Год назад
I'm from Brazil and I sent heart of palm because I thought it was ready-made pickles, I even sent several recipes with the pickle. But this potato is really amazing, I ate it this week, when I was not vegetarian I I liked to eat with chicken from the bakery that exists here in Brazil, something very specific on sundays
@rubytook8067
@rubytook8067 Год назад
I was SO EXCITED when you included Beet Pickled Eggs! My Granny made them a lot and now that it's difficult for me to travel to Pennsylvania to see her I can bring a taste of her table to mine! Thank you! Also, I will definitely be making the carrot salad. That looks delicious!
@rebekahyoder9335
@rebekahyoder9335 Год назад
Such a Pennsylvania thing ! In my area of PA we also ate tons of that quick creamy cucumber salad as well during summer.
@Maguire708Julie
@Maguire708Julie Год назад
My great-grandfather was German (first generation American) who grew up to become a grocer/butcher in the 1920s. There was a big jar of beet pickled eggs on his counter at home all the way into the eighties. The recipe was similar but contained some spices (cloves and maybe others) that you’ll find in a pickled beet recipe though I’ve never quite found a match for the flavor. Thanks for the memories!
@hootiewhooo1434
@hootiewhooo1434 Год назад
@@Maguire708Julie yeah, my family is from Pennsylvania and we make our pickled eggs and beets with clove and I think bay leaf. So good! Since I grew up eating them, I don’t think eating cold hard-boiled eggs is weird at all. It has to be tangy and sweet and is especially good with a dash of Everything But The Bagel seasoning.
@elivalmon
@elivalmon Год назад
I am half Nicaraguan and seing the Chilero Nicaraguense made me so happy!! When the episode started the first thing I thought was ohh I wish Beryl would try el chilero !!! Awesome, my mouth is watering , so many different food can be enhanced by this yummynessss
@charliebrown1184
@charliebrown1184 Год назад
This could definitely become a series! I imagine that nearly every country in the world will have so many unique pickling/preserving techniques that you could make videos on this forever! I love sour flavours and I realise the pickles I eat regularly are from all over the world. Would anyone else be in for a whole series on pickled foods?
@PackOfWolves
@PackOfWolves Год назад
Some of my favourite pickles are: gongura pickle from India, radish-and-carrot from Vietnam, and cabbage kimchi from Korea. Yum!
@tazzyhyena6369
@tazzyhyena6369 Год назад
Tammi's story about trying the mango pickle reminds me of my first time trying mustard pickles for the first time. My mother had put them onto my plate during a Christmas dinner when I was a kid and I remember being so confused because it was a bright yellow colour! That is not a colour found in food here. Luckily I enjoyed it.
@thehalfricanfoodie
@thehalfricanfoodie Год назад
I’m so glad I’m not the only one who had food given to her randomly with the expectation that we’d just eat it up😂😂
@anniebell6846
@anniebell6846 Год назад
Beryl thank you for sharing the beautiful folk of Southern Africa🇿🇼🇿🇼🇿🇼There is a big Indian community in Zimbabwe and they contribute greatly to the colour filled beauty of the country😊
@missbeclane
@missbeclane Год назад
I am 100% with Beryl's attitude to the one clove of garlic in any recipe.
@mynameishaia8452
@mynameishaia8452 Год назад
In the Philippines we have Atchara, pickled green papaya or turnips... They are so good to partner with grilled or fried viands with rice of course.
@jamesbraveheart6477
@jamesbraveheart6477 Год назад
pickled radish and papaya and green mango
@vikramaditya6812
@vikramaditya6812 Год назад
Woow! Achar is Hindi for pickles
@LucemFerre01
@LucemFerre01 Год назад
you’re the first person i saw to use viand lmao, great!!😂🎉
@claire2278
@claire2278 Год назад
@@LucemFerre01 what does viand mean? Meet? I think that’s not correct
@RaM1MaR
@RaM1MaR Год назад
Atchara is awesome on a grilled hot dog - better if the sausage is coarse ground & juicy (higher fat content😋)
@jenniferboyett1546
@jenniferboyett1546 День назад
Hello Beryl, I love your videos. Just so you know there are two types of pickles. Fermented with salt and done with vinegar. The fermented style is much older and the original pickle. Vinegar pickles are much newer and what we are more used to. Both are preservation methods.
@eduardodu86
@eduardodu86 Год назад
I can't wait for a "Beryl in Brazil" episode
@woolfel
@woolfel Год назад
I love how korean dishes morphed and became popular in other countries! you could do an 8min egg instead of hardboiled, then you get the pickling with soft yoke.
@toBe8ere
@toBe8ere Год назад
8 minutes for a room temperature egg, right? or is that for a refrigerated egg?
@woolfel
@woolfel Год назад
@@toBe8ere I usually refrigerate. it seasons well for ramen eggs or pickling. l also don't like hard boiled yokes :)
@AlissaSss23
@AlissaSss23 Год назад
Me, with a big supply of kimchi and korean style pickled radish in the fridge, mixed pickles and pickled tomatoes in the pantry, enjoying my Russian style pickled beets, middle Eastern pickled turnips and Italian style pickled Red Pepper while watching this: "oh, maybe she'll mention one of these" Beryl: "5 other pickles totally unrelated" Did I mention I love pickles yet???
@ES-qc3pm
@ES-qc3pm Год назад
From another PA resident, beet eggs are a bit of an acquired taste but honestly your eggs are very very pale. You need to let them sit for a lot longer than 3 days and the brine will soak every inch of your eggs. Your brine should be a deep blood red and you know ur eggs are done when they too are red and You don’t have any white spots and your yolk will be a nice melon color. The flavor really changes over time and I recommend you let them sit a lot longer.
@Loveismyteacher
@Loveismyteacher Год назад
Yay!!!!! I’ve been waiting so long for this! 🙌🏾
@malenafarber6281
@malenafarber6281 Год назад
If you ever do a fear based episode, you should challenge yourself to make breads from around the world. Take a Lisa Nyugen approach and don't be afraid to show us you messing up and learning! We're all home cooks anyway and it's nice to know other people are intimated too. I just made homemade tortillas for the first time and it was so satisfying even though they weren't perfect.
@BerylShereshewsky
@BerylShereshewsky Год назад
haha ive already done that with almost every bread dish Ive had to make on this channel lol
@giuseppelogiurato5718
@giuseppelogiurato5718 Год назад
Corn or flour tortillas? (Corn is easier, especially if you have a press.) Btw, a perfect tortilla is a bad tortilla, imo.
@Annloveh
@Annloveh Год назад
your videos are like a warm soup in a cold day. You are truly wonderful Beryl.
@nataliapetrova4758
@nataliapetrova4758 Год назад
I love your channel so much! It brings together all of my passions: food, cooking, and learning from different cultures! Definitely going to try all of these!
@hectorquinones5579
@hectorquinones5579 4 месяца назад
Here's an interesting one from Puerto Rico: Guineitos en Escabeche. Basically pickeled green bananas with onions, peppers, and other condiments.
@nikethanavattikunta6147
@nikethanavattikunta6147 Год назад
I appreciate all the cultures through the food from your videos, can't wait to try them every once in a while!
@emmabennet888
@emmabennet888 Год назад
A pickled foods episode?!? Yes, please! So yummy and so easy/accessible to make!
@irishpixierose
@irishpixierose Год назад
I'm loving this series. Can't wait to try these recipes 😊
@BerylShereshewsky
@BerylShereshewsky Год назад
I hope you try some!!!!
@andyqv-goodvibes1900
@andyqv-goodvibes1900 Год назад
love this episode! I definitely want to try some of these!
@Mystearicia
@Mystearicia Год назад
The artcha reminds me of the Filipino atchara which uses green papaya and it's also influenced by the Indian achar 😁
@GryphonDes
@GryphonDes Год назад
Fun episode! Missed these longer form ones :D
@pinkm4ngo77
@pinkm4ngo77 Год назад
How beautiful are those flatlays for when you presented the finished plates!!! Loved the video and I always wanted to learn about pickling and preserving :) Thank you Beryl! ❤
@hollish196
@hollish196 Год назад
My best wishes for Thalissa and her family in Florida. Hope they are all well following the hurricane.
@berlynhale2962
@berlynhale2962 Год назад
I always watch your videos with my recipe notebook now . Take notes; I get a lot of inspiration 😊
@susanbrennan5511
@susanbrennan5511 Год назад
My mother lovingly bought me Ruth Reichl’s book My Kitchen Year. She knew how much I loved the old Gourmet magazines she had and then I searched flea markets and tag sales to get more of them and clipped the recipes in a sense making my own cookbook of favorite recipes. In that book was a recipe for pickled beet deviled eggs. I made them for Easter that year and she devoured them! They were so good and such a beautiful color I made them for her every year till she pasted. You reminded me of them and I thank you. Next year they will be on the table for Easter if not sooner!
@vrindakacham7421
@vrindakacham7421 Год назад
Thank you so much for bringing back the ingredients in the vedio!!
@BerylShereshewsky
@BerylShereshewsky Год назад
they are in every episode in this series!
@lizdyson3627
@lizdyson3627 Год назад
Wonderful episode Beryl. jusy bought the books from book club. can't wait to get into it.
@gwenamoredumal-is8719
@gwenamoredumal-is8719 Год назад
I haven't seen your videos for a long time. Good to watch from your channel again.
@adriennefloreen
@adriennefloreen Год назад
I love how you feature all these beautiful people on your channel, and they dress up in their favorite clothes and some set up their houses to have a pretty background, then their voices are narrating you cooking it, then you have playing cards, or your Nintendo collection, or a Rick and Morty magazine on the table by your bowl of food. And I love how you do not stare at the camera pretending you like "Home Chef" or something, and instead have links to the art behind you, your earrings, your t-shirt, etc! That is a brilliant way to get "sponsored" without having to annoy your viewers talking about how you love your "Brilliant" subscription. So, I grew up in Jersey City and frequented NYC, I love NYC for many reasons but one is you can literally buy anything there, especially food ingredients that you can find nowhere else in the USA. I love NYC's Chinatown, the last time I went there I came back to where I was staying during my visit and surprised my relatives with a box of never before seen in the USA type fruits and veggies, it included durian fruit to their dismay because it was in a small apartment, but you can see me eating it on my channel like 8 or 9 years ago. I love canned potatoes but normally don't buy them because we grow tons of potatoes where I live in California, but we are also occasionally low on cash and sometimes we get free food boxes, that contain a can of beans, a can of beets, a can of green beens or corn, and a can of potatoes and I have made "food bank stew" by just mixing these with some of the greens like kale or chard that grow in my yard and heating it up several times. The ingredients are "whatever canned veggies you have plus whatever fresh leaves grow in your yard" LOL there's my recipe. I would love to send you a recipe but I usually cook with ingredients that I grow in my yard that aren't sold in American grocery stores, but you might find in Chinatown or growing in the park as weeds. I do not know what recipe I could send you without knowing what you could get, I am sure you could get anything in NYC but you would have to know where to look. If possible you should avoid Whole Foods when shopping, too, I know they have a lot of stuff but they are a bad company for many reasons and were before they were bought out. I cannot imagine how expensive they are in NYC. You should make some recipes with ingredients you can get in NYC that are impossible to find in other places, right now in Northern California I have some "pea eggplants" and it was a specialty thing they had once (for ten dollars) and I have only eaten them before in San Francisco and New York City! They are full of seeds so next year there will be a nice field of them in my yard. So, would you know where to get pea eggplants in NYC? I'd say probably Chinatown, maybe a Thai food store, but I would learn how to say what they call them in Thai/Chinese and ask because it could still be uncommon. Get some clips of your shopping and like grabbing boxes off of shelves, some people will be astonished by the prices of the way the stores look there!
@watermelonsugaberry
@watermelonsugaberry Год назад
ok but Beryl i want to tell you that i absolutely LOVE the little tid bits and decor items you have on the station where you do that shot of plating the food. i absolutely love them, it just makes thing look so much fun and sweet and just shows the amazing amount of care and efforts you put into making your videos. 💗🌈💯
@susansimpson5857
@susansimpson5857 Год назад
Great video! It's great to know pickling is much easier than I thought!
@MiiTina
@MiiTina Год назад
I have some korean morkovka in the fridge from the "Mix Markt". You can also pickle it with just Garlic and Chili, Walnuts & Chili, Eggplants & Garlic or with Shitake Mushrooms, Chili & Garlic. I love this salad and I also often made it at Home.
@krissyyk
@krissyyk Год назад
I’m so happy to see that you tried a Nicaraguan dish! The food from there is sooo underrated
@johirata5638
@johirata5638 Год назад
ok, i am 100% going to try all of these!! and please please please do an episode on fermented stuff!!
@JaclynMorris22
@JaclynMorris22 Год назад
You should do an episode on different pickled eggs. I do mine with pickling spice, red onion and garlic. I then slice it very thin and eat it on oat-crackers with onion compote. My sister does them dill/garlic and I've made Japanese soy sauce pickled eggs and since they are made with jammy eggs you might like it better.
@lizpurvis1064
@lizpurvis1064 Год назад
What’s super cool is I was watching a K-DOC video about Koiryoin students, who are part of the Central Asia and Ethnic Korean group that the first dish discussed!
@debbielyons1704
@debbielyons1704 Год назад
So good! Gonna try one or two of these! I thought you had to peel mangoes! Learn something new every day!
@steadmanuhlich6734
@steadmanuhlich6734 Год назад
Beryl, this was an interesting video, as so many of your videos are. I appreciate that you allowed the contributors to speak/present the dish, while you show the preparation and ingredients. Well done. The carrot pickle sounds good, will try soon, and the others in time. I also appreciate when you vividly describe the flavors and sensations, as that is something that many cooking shows skip. I also appreciate when you give your honest reactions (if very spicy, hot, sour, etc.). LIKED, SAVED, Subscribed and "Bell on". Keep up the good work.
@BerylShereshewsky
@BerylShereshewsky Год назад
Wow thank you so much!!! :)
@helenrobinson8894
@helenrobinson8894 Год назад
Love your videos so much. I'm not sure we have so many pickles here in the UK or maybe it's just me but I amd definitely making some of those! Loved Tammi's voice and soooo interesting! Will definitely be giving her channel a look too. Thanks again Beryl. Have a lovely week
@eerenay
@eerenay Год назад
When I was in Nicaragua/Costa Rica, I ate a lot of Vigorón and Chilero/Curtido. SO GOOD!
@kristenungstad3252
@kristenungstad3252 8 месяцев назад
I grew up in rural Canada. Canning is a way of life here even today. It's something of a social thing too, as it can take a lot of prep work, so it's an occasion for people to gather around the table with a drink, cutting boards and knives for a visit.
@lizbratcher2919
@lizbratcher2919 Год назад
That’s so interesting that you think cold hard boiled eggs are weird/unappealing! I think here in the Midwest we eat tons of cold hard boiled eggs. Very common breakfast food. I didn’t even know about eating a warm soft-boiled egg until college. And because of your channel I now eat them with ramen :) but often we make them in big batches and grab them cold out of the fridge for a quick breakfast.
@Branwhin
@Branwhin Год назад
I've been moderately obsessed with pickled onions of late; I really must try some of these, they look delicious!
@gmofclarinet
@gmofclarinet Год назад
Pickled red beet eggs are my FAVORITE!! We tend to make them around Easter/Spring time.
@angelasieg5099
@angelasieg5099 10 месяцев назад
Thank you, Beryl. I needed to smile today
@walterjunovich6180
@walterjunovich6180 Год назад
Years ago my friend and coworker turned me on to eating pickled or hard boiled eggs with Frank's Red Hot sauce or Sriracha sauce. Totally awesome !!!
@toejammiepie
@toejammiepie Год назад
You actually did iiiit! Yay! Thanks for going on this pickling journey 😄
@sallycormier1383
@sallycormier1383 Год назад
I’m always looking for something to do with carrots because you know, you buy a bunch of carrots and before you use them all they go limp. So right after watching this I got up and made the carrot onion chilies relish(Nicaraguan) but I subbed red onion cuz that’s all I had. By the way I have some of your pickled red onions in my fridge! The jar of carrot/onion/chilies is sitting in a sunbeam and I can’t wait to try it in a couple of days. Have you ever heard of putting a wet paper towel on your cutting board before cutting onions to keep from crying? I saw it on another channel so I tried it just now. At first I was thinking how I’ll probably get bits of chopped paper towel in with the onions BUT it works and not only no tears, afterwards I picked up the paper towel and not a single cut was in it! It was like magic(very sharp knife too, I have scars to prove it ha)!!! Give it a go!
@caseyequalslegit
@caseyequalslegit Год назад
I love this whole idea as a pickle lover- as well as the featured artist!!!
@AuntyJack123
@AuntyJack123 Год назад
Thanks Beryl I love pickles and want to try all these recipes. I used to make easy potato salad with canned baby potatoes.
@Nikunikuniku583
@Nikunikuniku583 Год назад
You know its a good day when Beryl posts videos :)
@helenegrung5476
@helenegrung5476 Год назад
I am a South African, before moving to Durban on the east coast of South Africa I could not eat hot spice. Some work mates used to bring a green mango pickle to work to share. It was the beginning of my spice journey. I just cannot say no to it. We don't have carrots in it, and it is so good. Durban is an amazing food city, we have so many different cultures all mixed together.
@slumber8120
@slumber8120 Год назад
i loved this one! i want to make everything! i also always have pickled red onions in my fridge because they're good in everything; i especially love throwing them in salads. i'm excited for the upcoming fermentation vid and i'd love to see another pickle episode in the future (after you finish the rest of the pickles you already made 😂)
@katemccleary4141
@katemccleary4141 Год назад
Thanks for making pickled beet eggs! Growing up in Lancaster, PA, pickled beet eggs were a food of my childhood. I always ate them with a sprinkle of kosher salt and a toasted English muffin with butter. The warm English muffin balanced the cold yolk. I absolutely adore your channel and find so much inspiration from the people and recipes you feature. Thank you!
@briliantbg
@briliantbg Год назад
They all look so good especially the eggs. Thanks for this video :)
@ShellyS2060
@ShellyS2060 Год назад
I love pickled eggs but never thought of deviled pickle eggs. I am so making them that way!! Thanks for the idea. I'm pretty sure I'm already in love.😍
@tootles444
@tootles444 Год назад
Love this channel!!
@gailtempleton1249
@gailtempleton1249 Год назад
Yum! I love pickled things! I feel like I need to make these and have them around all the time! Especially the dish from Nicaragua, that looked amazing! And the potatoes for special occasions. Yep, holidays are going to look a little different this year! Also, I grew up with canned potatoes on the menu (not to the exclusion of fresh). Perhaps because we're from the midwest and I'm "of a certain age". :D This was a great episode!
@Alexandra-xv1qm
@Alexandra-xv1qm Год назад
So happy to see a Nicaraguan dish on the channel!! I’d love to see you try Baho (maybe in an episode about cooking with banana leaves?), vigoron, quesillo (crema and cheese with more pickled onions!), arroz a la valenciana, tres leches…so much good food to chose from!
@baileydobbs2532
@baileydobbs2532 Год назад
I definitely need a part 2…and 3 and 4 of pickled foods! And as a fellow lover of deviled eggs (I had to go make a batch after watching this), I would love an entire episode on different deviled egg recipes and even more pickled egg recipes! ❤
@attilathemom7518
@attilathemom7518 Год назад
Quick pickles are so easy and add so much flavor. So awesome to see pickled recipes from around the world using ingredients I never would have thought. As an added benefit, pickled or fermented foods are very good for your microbiome :).
@tatzenstein
@tatzenstein Год назад
Hi. I am from Brazil, and I have to make one correction to the Batatinhas recipe: the potatoes here are serv with the peel. And it is very interesting to eat it with the peel. Sorry to say it, but I am sure that also without can be very fun...
@talithaowen4304
@talithaowen4304 Год назад
Love those pickled Red Beet eggs !!! Makes great deviled egg platter for parties. So cute
@AlissaSss23
@AlissaSss23 Год назад
This is MIND BLOWING! This video started on its own just as I was preparing to eat 3 types of pickles with my lunch 😋 😳🥰
@brendanhoffmann8402
@brendanhoffmann8402 Год назад
I love pickled foods but have never even made a pickle before! I must try one of these, the Korean carrot dish from Uzbekistan sounds amazing!
@santiagoperez5431
@santiagoperez5431 Год назад
All these pickled foods made me hungry....they all look delicious!
@tatersprecious5827
@tatersprecious5827 Год назад
If only I HADN'T already seen all of Beryl's videos, I would get excited at the end when the other videos were suggested. That means I've been watching from the beginning, I guess. 😉
@BerylShereshewsky
@BerylShereshewsky Год назад
ayyyyEEEEEE!!! wooooo
@MAhmed-zs2vp
@MAhmed-zs2vp Год назад
Beryl!! You're my stress reliever! I love witching your videos because I love food, I love your happy-go-lucky personality and infectious joy in what you discover :)
@whitpoob92
@whitpoob92 Год назад
I've grown up on beet picked eggs! I think ours are a little more vinegar-y. We soak them (if they last long enough) until the purple fills the entire inside of the white of the egg. We also slice up onions, and we leave the canned beets (whole or sliced) and onion in, and those are just as delicious as the eggs! I always cut mine in half and salt and pepper them. I could also (and do) eat way more eggs than I should when they're made this way, haha. the pickled beets and beet pickled onions you also get out of it is SO good. We always fill one of those giant, empty pickle jars. Was happy to see these! Only usually see plain pickled eggs at places, not beet. Always makes me think of Easter (we'd pickle eggs with tons of our tye dyed eggs), and my grandmother who used to be the one who made them for me!
@adambrickley9088
@adambrickley9088 Год назад
Beet pickled eggs are part of my childhood, so thanks for including!
@lauragrandgenett
@lauragrandgenett Год назад
Love pickled eggs. Especially when you put a slice of beat with the egg. My mom was from Pennsylvania and we always made these for Easter.
@gabrielles1851
@gabrielles1851 Год назад
This came at the right time. I have been looking for ways to get more vegetables in my life so that I can keep my health.
@Sincyn241
@Sincyn241 Год назад
Michigan here. We also have pickled red beet eggs, but in our family it was consequence of having pickled beets in the pantry. I didn’t have an unpickled beer until I was in college. When you finish the beets, you use the juice plus a little more vinegar to pickle eggs. They still get super red/pink and sweet/sour. Pickled eggs are everywhere here, too, though. Often with pearl onions with hot peppers. All of them make a fantastic additions to potato and egg salads when finally diced. Nom!
@marshaloneagle4646
@marshaloneagle4646 Год назад
Ohhh, the Chilero Nicaraguense is on my cook list for next month. Yum!
@nuclearseahorse
@nuclearseahorse Год назад
I used to love pickled eggs. We kept a big jar of them in the pantry growing up as like hurricane food haha
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