Pickled Cabbage
Submitted by Paula Mulligan
An old-fashioned vinegar-pickled cabbage with whole cloves, mace, and allspice. A simple, shelf-stable recipe straight out of a Victorian-era American cookbook, updated for modern jars.
YIELD
6 servingsPREP
30 minCOOK
0 minREADY
1 daysThis recipe reads like it was lifted straight from a great-great-grandmother’s pickle journal, complete with the original “tie it over with leather” sealing instructions that have happily been retired in favor of glass canning jars. What you get is an honest, no-nonsense pickled cabbage with the warming spice trio of clove, mace, and allspice that defined American pickling cabinets a century ago.
The overnight salt cure is the step that separates flabby cabbage from snappy pickled cabbage. Salt draws moisture out of the leaves, concentrates the flavor, and leaves room for the vinegar brine to soak in. Hot spiced vinegar poured over the drained cabbage finishes the job, infusing every shred with warm spice and tangy bite.
Great alongside corned beef, sausages, fatty pork roasts, or piled onto a sharp cheddar sandwich.
Kitchen Tips
- Shred the cabbage finely (about ⅛ inch / 3 mm thick) for the best texture and even pickling.
- Use canning or pickling salt, not iodized table salt. Iodine clouds the brine and can darken the cabbage.
- Use white wine vinegar or distilled white vinegar at 5% acidity. Lower acidity won’t preserve safely.
- Wipe jar rims clean before sealing. Any cabbage bits caught under the lid prevent a proper vacuum seal.
- Let the jars sit for at least a week before opening to give the spices time to bloom into the brine.
Variations
- Use red cabbage and add a slice of beet for a deep purple color.
- Add a tablespoon of yellow or brown mustard seeds for extra warmth.
- Throw in a few thin onion slices and a fresh bay leaf per jar for a more savory profile.
Ingredients
Directions
Put it into an earthen dish and sprinkle with the salt, mixing it in well.
Cover with another dish and let it stand for twenty-four hours.
Drain the cabbage and take enough vinegar to cover it.
Add, for each pint, four whole cloves, two blades of mace and four whole allspice.
Boil the vinegar for two minutes and pour over the cabbage.
Seal in pint jars.
This amount makes about three pints.
The directions for sealing are to “cover it close with a cloth.
Then tie it over with leather," but we find that the glass jar method is more satisfactory.
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