Pickled Onions

Like pickled eggs are another visual and salivating aid, at least to me, to sit on the bar. They can be eaten alone but they go superbly with cheese in a Ploughman’s Lunch.

Towards the start of October onwards you should begin to see small ‘pickling onions’ in the greengrocers.

To make pickling vinegar, wrap 10g pickling spice (available from any supermarket), a couple of bay leaves and 1 tbsp sugar in muslin and tie it up with string. Put in a pan with a litre of malt vinegar. Boil for 5 minutes then remove from the heat and leave to steep overnight.
Put a kilo of unpeeled pickling or pearl onions in a large bowl and pour boiling water, straight from the kettle, over them. Leave it for a few minutes. This will make them easier to peel. Drain with a colander. Return to the bowl and cover with cold water. Now cut off the roots and peel them. It is a bit of a chore, with onions so small, so you may need a quick chug along the way. Once peeled, rinse, pat dry and return to a clean bowl, layering with plenty of rock salt as you go. Cover with a tea-towel and leave in the fridge overnight.
The next morning rinse well and drain. Put them in a 1 litre, serialised Mason jar and completely cover with the pickling vinegar. Add a couple of dried red chilli peppers. Seal with a serialised lid.

Stand down and wait for at least 6 weeks. They will keep for 6 months or more in a pantry, as long as it is cool and dark and the liquid still covers the onions. They’ll mature nicely as they go. Just don’t expect a kiss from a stranger or even anyone more intimate with your tongue.